Tax Management India. Com
Law and Practice  :  Digital eBook
Research is most exciting & rewarding
  TMI - Tax Management India. Com
Follow us:
  Facebook   Twitter   Linkedin   Telegram
TMI Short Notes

Home TMI Short Notes Bills All Notes for this Source This

Meaning of International Transaction : Clause 163 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025 Vs. Section 92B of the Income-tax Act, 1961


Submit your Comments

  • Contents

Clause 163 Meaning of international transaction.

Income Tax Bill, 2025

Introduction

The regulation of "international transactions" between associated enterprises is a cornerstone of global tax compliance and transfer pricing frameworks. In India, this concept has been codified since 2001 u/s 92B of the Income-tax Act, 1961, forming the basis for the application of transfer pricing rules to cross-border dealings. With the proposed Income Tax Bill, 2025, Clause 163 seeks to redefine and possibly expand the scope of "international transaction" in Indian tax law. This commentary provides a detailed analysis of Clause 163, its objectives, and practical implications, followed by a comparative evaluation vis-`a-vis Section 92B of the Income-tax Act, 1961, including an in-depth examination of each item and provision. The aim is to elucidate the continuity, changes, and potential impact on taxpayers and administration.

Objective and Purpose

The legislative intent behind both Section 92B and Clause 163 is to prevent tax avoidance through manipulation of prices in transactions between associated enterprises, particularly where at least one party is a non-resident. By defining "international transaction" in an inclusive and expansive manner, the law seeks to ensure that cross-border transactions are conducted at arm's length, thus protecting the Indian tax base from erosion due to profit shifting.

The historical context reflects India's commitment to aligning with global best practices, particularly the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines, while also addressing domestic tax avoidance concerns. The evolution from Section 92B to Clause 163 is indicative of the need to modernize, clarify, and potentially expand the ambit of international transactions in light of new business models, intangible assets, and complex financial arrangements.

Detailed Analysis of Clause 163 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025

1. Definition and Scope of International Transaction

Clause 163(1) provides a comprehensive and inclusive definition of "international transaction." The essential elements are:

  • Transaction between two or more associated enterprises.
  • At least one party is necessarily a non-resident.

This definition is then further expanded by an inclusive list of transaction types:

(a) Tangible Property Transactions

Covers purchase, sale, transfer, lease, or use of tangible property, including buildings, vehicles, machinery, equipment, tools, plant, furniture, commodities, or any other article, product, or thing. The provision is broad, ensuring coverage of all physical goods and assets.

(b) Intangible Property Transactions

Includes purchase, sale, transfer, lease, or use of intangible property, such as rights regarding land use, copyrights, patents, trademarks, licences, franchises, customer lists, marketing channels, brands, commercial secrets, know-how, industrial property rights, exterior designs, practical and new designs, and any other business or commercial rights of similar nature. The language is intentionally wide to capture evolving forms of intangible assets.

(c) Capital Financing

Encompasses lending and borrowing of money, including:

  • Long-term or short-term borrowing, lending, or guarantee.
  • Purchase or sale of marketable securities.
  • Any type of advance, payments, deferred payment, receivable, or any other debt arising during the course of business.

This provision ensures that all forms of financial arrangements, whether direct or indirect, are within the transfer pricing regime.

(d) Provision of Services

Covers a wide array of services: market research, market development, marketing management, administration, technical services, repairs, design, consultation, agency, scientific research, legal, or accounting services. This ensures that both core and ancillary services are included.

(e) Business Restructuring or Reorganisation

Specifically includes transactions involving business restructuring or reorganisation, regardless of whether such transactions have any immediate or deferred impact on profits, income, losses, or assets. This is a significant inclusion, reflecting global trends to bring such transactions within transfer pricing scrutiny even if the effect is not immediately apparent.

(f) Cost Sharing Arrangements

Includes mutual agreements or arrangements between associated enterprises for allocation or apportionment of, or any contribution to, any cost or expense incurred or to be incurred in connection with benefits, services, or facilities provided or to be provided. This targets cost-sharing agreements, which are often used by multinational groups for shared services, research and development, or other group-wide functions.

(g) Residual Clause

Covers "any other transaction having a bearing on the profits, income, losses or assets of such enterprises." This catch-all ensures that no relevant transaction escapes the ambit of the law due to technicalities.

2. Deemed International Transactions

Clause 163(2) addresses indirect arrangements, providing that a transaction between an enterprise and a person other than an associated enterprise ("other person") shall be deemed to be an international transaction between associated enterprises if:

  • There exists a prior agreement in relation to the transaction between such other person and the associated enterprise; or
  • The terms of the transaction are determined, in substance, between such other person and the associated enterprise;

and the enterprise or the associated enterprise or both are non-residents, regardless of the residency of the "other person."

This anti-avoidance provision is designed to prevent circumvention of transfer pricing rules through indirect dealings or interposed entities.

3. Definition of Intangible Property

Clause 163(3) elaborates on what constitutes "intangible property," listing twelve broad categories:

  1. Marketing related intangibles: trademarks, trade names, brand names, logos.
  2. Technology related intangibles: process patents, patent applications, technical documentation, technical know-how.
  3. Artistic related intangibles: literary works, copyrights, musical compositions, maps, engravings.
  4. Data processing related intangibles: proprietary software, software copyrights, automated databases, integrated circuit masks and masters.
  5. Engineering related intangibles: industrial design, product patents, trade secrets, engineering drawings, blueprints, proprietary documentation.
  6. Customer related intangibles: customer lists, contracts, relationships, open purchase orders.
  7. Contract related intangibles: favourable supplier contracts, licence agreements, franchise agreements, non-compete agreements.
  8. Human capital related intangibles: trained workforce, employment agreements, union contracts.
  9. Location related intangibles: leasehold interests, mineral rights, easements, air rights, water rights.
  10. Goodwill related intangibles: institutional goodwill, professional practice goodwill, personal goodwill, celebrity goodwill, going concern value.
  11. Methods, programmes, systems, procedures, campaigns, surveys, studies, forecasts, estimates, customer lists, technical data.
  12. Any other similar item deriving value from intellectual content rather than physical attributes.

The list is non-exhaustive and designed to adapt to new forms of intangibles arising from business innovation.

Practical Implications of Clause 163

The broad and inclusive definition in Clause 163 is likely to have significant compliance and administrative implications:

  • Wider Coverage: More transactions, especially those involving intangibles and indirect dealings, will come under transfer pricing scrutiny.
  • Increased Documentation: Taxpayers will need to maintain extensive documentation and justifications for a wider range of transactions, including cost-sharing, business restructuring, and financial arrangements.
  • Administrative Complexity: Tax authorities will have greater latitude to examine transactions, potentially increasing litigation and the need for clear guidance.
  • Alignment with Global Standards: The comprehensive scope aligns with OECD guidance and international best practices, enhancing India's credibility in global tax administration.

Comparative Analysis: Clause 163 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025 vs. Section 92B of the Income-tax Act, 1961

1. Structural and Language Comparison

Both Clause 163 and Section 92B are structured to provide an inclusive and non-exhaustive definition of "international transaction." The language and illustrative lists are substantially similar, with minor differences in structure and emphasis. Clause 163, however, demonstrates an effort to streamline and clarify the scope, possibly in response to interpretational issues and evolving business practices.

2. Associated Enterprises and Non-residency Requirement

Section 92B defines an "international transaction" as a transaction between two or more associated enterprises, "either or both of whom are non-residents." Clause 163 modifies this to "one of which is necessarily a non-resident," which could be interpreted as a clarification rather than a substantive change, ensuring that at least one party must be a non-resident for the provision to apply.

3. Types of Transactions Covered

Type of Transaction Section 92B of the Income-tax Act, 1961 Clause 163 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025 Analysis
Tangible Property Purchase, sale, lease, or use of tangible property (building, machinery, etc.) Purchase, sale, transfer, lease, or use of tangible property (building, machinery, etc.) Clause 163 adds "transfer," making the language slightly more inclusive.
Intangible Property Purchase, sale, lease, or use of intangible property (IPRs, know-how, etc.) Purchase, sale, transfer, lease, or use of intangible property (IPRs, know-how, etc.) Similar, with "transfer" explicitly added in Clause 163.
Capital Financing Lending, borrowing, guarantees, marketable securities, advances, deferred payments, receivables, debts Lending, borrowing, guarantees, marketable securities, advances, deferred payments, receivables, debts Clause 163 is more granular, splitting the provision into sub-items.
Provision of Services Market research, development, management, technical, repairs, design, consultation, agency, scientific research, legal, accounting Market research, development, management, technical, repairs, design, consultation, agency, scientific research, legal, accounting Wording is largely the same; no substantive change.
Business Restructuring Business restructuring or reorganisation, regardless of effect on profits, income, losses, or assets at the time or in the future Business restructuring or reorganisation, regardless of effect on profits, income, losses, or assets at the time or in the future Wording is virtually identical.
Cost Sharing Mutual agreement/arrangement for allocation or contribution to costs/expenses for benefits, services, facilities Mutual agreement/arrangement for allocation or contribution to costs/expenses for benefits, services, facilities Substantially the same.
Residual Clause Any other transaction having a bearing on profits, income, losses, or assets Any other transaction having a bearing on profits, income, losses, or assets Both have a catch-all provision.

4. Deemed International Transactions

Both Section 92B(2) and Clause 163(2) contain provisions to deem certain transactions with non-associated enterprises as international transactions if:

  • There is a prior agreement between the "other person" and the associated enterprise; or
  • The terms of the transaction are determined, in substance, between the "other person" and the associated enterprise,

and at least one of the enterprise or associated enterprise is a non-resident.

The language in Clause 163 is more precise, specifying "irrespective of whether the other person is a non-resident or not," which aligns with the 2014 amendment to Section 92B(2).

5. Definition of Intangible Property

Both provisions, especially after the 2012 Explanation to Section 92B, contain an identical, detailed, and illustrative list of intangible property, covering:

  • Marketing, technology, artistic, data processing, engineering, customer, contract, human capital, location, goodwill related intangibles
  • Methods, programmes, systems, procedures, campaigns, surveys, studies, forecasts, estimates, customer lists, technical data
  • Any other similar item deriving value from intellectual content

Clause 163(3) essentially reproduces the Explanation to Section 92B, ensuring continuity and clarity.

6. Notable Differences and Emphases

  • Structural Clarity: Clause 163 is more systematically arranged, with sub-clauses and sub-items, enhancing readability and precision.
  • Granularity: The 2025 Bill breaks down capital financing into specific sub-items, possibly to avoid interpretational disputes.
  • Explicit Inclusion of "Transfer": Clause 163 adds "transfer" to both tangible and intangible property, broadening the scope slightly.
  • Modernization: Clause 163 reflects current business realities and addresses ambiguities that have arisen in litigation and administration u/s 92B.

Practical Implications and Stakeholder Impact

The practical implications for taxpayers and the tax administration are significant:

  • Increased Compliance Burden: The comprehensive scope requires taxpayers to maintain detailed transfer pricing documentation for a wider range of transactions, including cost-sharing, financing, and intangible transfers.
  • Greater Scrutiny of Intangibles: The explicit and detailed enumeration of intangibles reflects the growing importance of intellectual property and non-physical assets in the modern economy, necessitating sophisticated valuation and documentation.
  • Anti-Avoidance Focus: The deemed international transaction provisions target indirect arrangements and the use of third parties to circumvent transfer pricing rules.
  • Potential for Litigation: The breadth of the residual clause and the inclusion of business restructuring may lead to disputes regarding the scope and applicability of transfer pricing provisions.
  • Alignment with International Standards: The provisions position India as aligned with OECD and global best practices, facilitating cross-border cooperation and dispute resolution.

Conclusion

Clause 163 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025 represents a deliberate and thoughtful evolution of the definition of "international transaction" in Indian tax law. While it largely retains the framework established under Section 92B of the Income-tax Act, 1961, it introduces greater clarity, granularity, and alignment with contemporary business practices. The inclusive and expansive approach ensures that all relevant cross-border dealings between associated enterprises, especially those involving intangibles and financial arrangements, are subject to transfer pricing regulations. For taxpayers, the changes underscore the need for robust compliance systems, comprehensive documentation, and proactive engagement with tax authorities. The provisions also signal India's commitment to global tax transparency and anti-avoidance measures, while leaving scope for further judicial and administrative interpretation as business models and tax strategies continue to evolve.


Full Text:

Clause 163 Meaning of international transaction.

 

Dated: 24-4-2025



Submit your Comments

 

 

Quick Updates:Latest Updates