Andrew Bonwick
Vice President of Product Development at Relm Insurance
Madhav Sheth
CEO of Ai+ Smartphone
Varun Kashyap & Sridevi Reddy
Co-Founders, Zithara.ai
Transforming Indian Offline Retail and Customer Engagement Using AI

The Narendra Modi government has decided not to appeal against a Bombay High Court ruling that Vodafone India is not liable to pay Rs 3,200 crores in additional tax in a transfer pricing case.
“The Cabinet has decided not to appeal to the Supreme Court against the Bombay High Court order of October 2014. We examined the order, discussed it with A-G…and found that the Bombay HC order was correct. There was no charging section in chapter 10 and hence the tax cannot be levied,” said Shankar Prasad, Telecom Minister.
“The Union Cabinet chaired by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in a major decision, has decided to accept the order of the High Court of Bombay in the case of Vodafone India Services Private Limited (VISPL) dated 10.10.2014. This is a major correction of a tax matter which has adversely affected investor sentiment,” said Cabinet in a statement.
The Cabinet decision will bring greater clarity and predictability for taxpayers as well as tax authorities, thereby facilitating tax compliance and reducing litigation on similar issues. This will also set at rest the uncertainty prevailing in the minds of foreign investors and taxpayers in respect of possible transfer pricing adjustments in India for transactions related to issuance of shares, and thereby improve the investment climate in the country.
The Cabinet came to this view as this is a transaction on the capital account and there is no income to be chargeable to tax. So applying any pricing formula is irrelevant.
“We welcome the Indian government’s decision, not to appeal the Bombay High Court ruling. Stability and predictability in tax matters are important for long-term investors such as Vodafone,” said Vodafone Group spokesperson.
Few days ago, the Supreme Court of India (SCI) has asked to the Bombay High Court (HC) to decide the appeal of Vodafone India Services on merits and without being influenced by its earlier judgement in 2012 on the deal between Vodafone and Hutchison. The SCI bench headed by Justice AR Dave gave directions after Vodafone’s senior counsel Harish Salve informed it that the tax tribunal had ruled in favour of the income tax department and the company has already appealed to the HC.