Sitharaman highlights India\'s efforts to counter tax avoidance\, evasion

Sitharaman highlights India's efforts to counter tax avoidance, evasion

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi/Fukuoka 

Saturday highlighted the ongoing efforts of to counter avoidance and evasion.

She was speaking at the Ministerial Symposium on on Globally Fair, Sustainable and Modern System organised during the meeting of at in

"@nsitharaman spoke on the on-going efforts of to counter avoidance & evasion," the tweeted.

The two-day and meeting beginning Saturday is likely to focus on risks and challenges being faced by the global economy, investment in infrastructure and

The deliberations would be followed by the Leaders' Summit scheduled on June 28-29 at

The meeting of the would also deliberate on issues like increasing protectionism and its implication on global growth and trade.

On the sidelines of the G-20 meet, Sitharaman also held a bilateral meeting with her UK counterpart

The ministerial symposium was organised with the support of to discuss the challenges in modernising the international system and also ways to continue the fight against and evasion.

is a signatory to the OECD's multilateral convention that aims to check cross-border by multinational companies.

The Multilateral Convention is an outcome of the OECD/Project to tackle (BEPS), which is resorted to by MNCs through tax planning strategies by exploiting gaps and mismatches in tax rules.

It helps them artificially shift profits to low or no-tax locations, resulting in little or no overall corporate tax being paid

Post this convention, 90 countries have now implemented automatic exchange of financial account and tax information.

Further, with increasing digitalisation, the challenge now before the G-20 and countries is how to tax businesses which mostly rely on intangible assets, data and user participation.

Speaking at the ministerial symposium, said, "Due to public frustration surrounding the lower effective tax rates faced by some digital companies in particular, several countries have decided to act unilaterally, by putting temporary measures in place. Obviously, multilateralism is better than unilateralism; a common approach is always better than fragmentation."

G-20, which is a group of developing and developed nations, includes India, the US, the UK, China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, and Australia, among others.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, June 08 2019. 13:45 IST