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- Recently, The Finance Bill, 2023, unveiled by the Finance Minister has proposed to amend the Section of the Income Tax Act which might affect Start-Ups funding in India.
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- About:
- The Finance Bill, 2023 has proposed to amend Section 56(2) VII B of the Income Tax Act.
- These new age firms, that offer their shares to foreign investors, may have to pay ‘angel tax’, which was earlier only supposed to be paid for investments raised by resident Indian investors.
Angel Tax:
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- Original provision:
- Section 56(2) VII B of the Income Tax Act, colloquially known as the ‘angel tax’ was first introduced in 2012.
- The provision states that:
- when an unlisted company, such as a start-up, receives equity investment from a resident for issue of shares that exceeds the face value of such shares, it will be counted as income for the start-up and be subject to income tax under the head ‘Income from other Sources’ for the relevant financial year.
- Significance of provision:
- The provision aims to deter the generation and use of unaccounted money through the subscription of shares of a closely held company at a value that is higher than the fair market value of the firm’s shares.
- Changes by the Finance Bill, 2023:
- However, with the latest amendment, the government has proposed to also include foreign investors in the ambit, meaning that when a start-up raises funding from a foreign investor, that too will now be counted as income and be taxable.
- For example, if the fair market value of a start-up share is Rs 10 apiece, and in a subsequent funding round they offer it to an investor for Rs 20, then the difference of Rs 10 would be taxed as income.
- However, with the latest amendment, the government has proposed to also include foreign investors in the ambit, meaning that when a start-up raises funding from a foreign investor, that too will now be counted as income and be taxable.
Issues
- Role of foreign investors in India’s start-ups:
- Foreign investors are a key source of funding for start-ups and have played a big role in increasing their valuation.
- For instance, Tiger Global, one of the most prolific foreign investors in India, has invested in over a third of the start-ups that have turned unicorn, with a valuation of at least $1 billion.
- Unicorns are privately held, venture-capital-backed startups that have reached a value of $1 billion.
- For instance, Tiger Global, one of the most prolific foreign investors in India, has invested in over a third of the start-ups that have turned unicorn, with a valuation of at least $1 billion.
- Foreign investors are a key source of funding for start-ups and have played a big role in increasing their valuation.
- Already lacking funds:
- The move could adversely impact financing available to the start-ups, which have already been reeling under a funding winter since 2022, industry insiders are speculating.
- The change comes as the funding for India’s startups dropped by 33 percent to $24 billion in 2022 as compared to the previous year
- The move could adversely impact financing available to the start-ups, which have already been reeling under a funding winter since 2022, industry insiders are speculating.
- May repel foreign investors:
- This could compel more startups to flip overseas, as foreign investors may not want to deal with additional tax liability by virtue of their investment in the startup.
Start-up ecosystem in India
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Source: IE
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