Mauritius
- Biggest Source of FDI in the past
In a 15-year period
from 2000-2015, the highest amount (34%) of total Foreign Direct Investment
into India was from Mauritius, valued at US$ 93.6 billion. In Reality, this
cannot be true as one can understand by the scale and size of Mauritius Economy.
In India there is a common saying that Western and Northern Indian Traders and Politicians
use Mauritius, BVI, Cayman whereas the in the South its often Singapore,
Hongkong and UAE!
Some
Examples of Round Tripping
Sterlite-Twinstar-Volcan
According to the show
cause notices issued to Sterlite, investigations by the income tax department
revealed that the company was engaged in business of copper, telephone cables,
aluminium and nonferrous items. It was alleged that out of the total equity of
4.25 crores, shares of face value of Rs. 10/- each, worth Rs. 12.5 crores were
held by promoter directors and that one Twinstar Holding Ltd, an offshore
company registered in Mauritius, held about 30 lakh shares. It was alleged that
the three promoter directors were engaged in the business of investments and
Twinstar Holding held hundred percent capital investment in three other
companies to the extent of Rs 73 crores; Twinstar Holding was incorporated in
Mauritius, on 12-01-1993, with issued capital and paid up capital of US $ 100,
as a subsidiary of M/s Volcan Investments Ltd; the latter was incorporated in
Bahamas on 25-11-1992. M/s Volcan
Investments had a share capital of US$ 2. It was alleged that Shri D.P.
Agarwal, the respondent in WP 17483/2006, was a director of Twinstar Holding
Ltd. During the search and seizure operations, it was discovered that Twinstar
Holdings was actually operating from Middlesex, UK; the documents indicated
remittance of Rs.34,50,25,280/- to the company, M/s Sterlite for subscribing to
certain debentures, immediately after incorporation of the company on
12-01-1993.
The Enforcement
Directorate alleged that the total investments of the DP Agarwal group, who are
individual respondents, apart from the company, much exceeded the funds
invested by the Mauritian company, Twinstar; a large proportion of shares were
partly paid-up {WP(C) No.17467/2006 and connected matters} so that a large
number of shares could be acquired with lesser funds.
In the process of
voluntary liquidation of the investment companies of Sterlite, alleged the
petitioners, the overseas corporate body i.e. Twinstar became the holding
company with controlling interest in Indian companies. In this process the
promoters of Sterlite effected book adjustments which amounted to write off of
Rs. 23 crores. The book adjustments by Sterlite and its group companies
effectuate it a gift of Rs.33.82 crores to Twinstar this was besides family
members of the promoters of Sterlite gifting shares worth Rs. 7.22 crores to
the Mauritius company.
Chartered Accountants:
Owners or Fronting the Investors
KSK Energy, is
incorporated and registered in Mauritius, and is a wholly-owned subsidiary of
KSK Power Ventur plc, an Isle of Man incorporated entity that is currently
listed on the London Stock Exchange. We are a listed subsidiary of KSK Power
Ventur plc. Our individual Promoters, Mr. S.Kishore and Mr. K.A. Sastry, prior
to setting up the Company, have been involved in the development of power
projects in various advisory and consultant roles. The company is on trial at
the National Company Law Tribunal as a non-performing asset. It is very
difficult to trace the actual beneficial owners.
Case
of a Current State Chief Minister
The investigation
relating to M/s Sandur Power Company Ltd., it is stated by the CBI that Y.S.
Jagan Mohan Reddy was the Director of this Company from 16.06.2001 to
11.01.2010 and the prime accused. M/s Sandur Power Company Ltd. was incorporated
on 23.10.1998 by M.B. Ghorpade and subsequently, Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy joined
the company during June 2001 along with the Board of Directors, viz., Harish C.
Kamarthy and JJ. Reddy. It is alleged by the CBI that the Company is closely
held by Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy. The CBI also highlighted various share
transactions amounting to Rs. 124.60 crores with two Mauritius based companies,
viz., M/s 2i Capital and M/s Pluri Emerging Company by M/s Sandur Power Company
Ltd. It is projected by the CBI that the above said amount is of Y.S.Jagan
Mohan Reddy, which was routed through the Mauritius based companies. It is also
highlighted that the role of Nimmagadda Prasad who is currently under judicial
custody is also being investigated for the same. Vijay Sai Reddy, along with
Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy, was the brain behind this conspiracy inasmuch as Vijay
Sai Reddy had floated fictitious companies in Chennai so as to enable round
tripping or routing monies into M/s Sandur Power Company Ltd. from India and
foreign countries through companies falsely created in Chennai as well as in
certain foreign countries.
Key
Observations in the Case by the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court
observed, “Economic offences constitute a class apart and need to be visited
with a different approach in the matter of bail. The economic offence having
deep rooted conspiracies and involving huge loss of public funds needs to be
viewed seriously and considered as grave offences affecting the economy of the
country as a whole and thereby posing serious threat to the financial health of
the country.” The court went on to state “While granting bail, the court has to
keep in mind the nature of accusations, the nature of evidence in support
thereof, the severity of the punishment which conviction will entail, the
character of the accused, circumstances which are peculiar to the accused,
reasonable possibility of securing the presence of the accused at the trial,
reasonable apprehension of the witnesses being tampered with, the larger
interests of the public/State and other similar considerations.”
What is POEM?
POEM is the place where the ‘key management and
commercial decisions that are necessary for the conduct of business of an
entity as a whole are, in substance made. The Finance Bill, 2015 introduced the
concept of POEM for determination of residence of companies by way of amending
Section 6 of the Act replacing the words ‘control and management’ by “place of
effective management, at any time”
Using POEM rules, the government
amended the tax treaty with Mauritius in 2016, removing the tax arbitrage on
capital gains. Under POEM rules, overseas subsidiaries are treated as domestic
entities for tax purposes if they are controlled and managed from India.
The key principle is
that while determining the POEM, the concept of substance over form should be
used. Further. even though an entity has more than one place of management, it
can have only one place of effective management at a given point of time and should be determined
in light of the guidelines as prescribed by CBDT.
Using
FAQ as a means to Fix
The Government also surreptitiously
used the FAQs of its website to monitor round-tripping practices by such Indian
Parties. The FAQ (Q64) contemplates a twofold ban on Indian Party seeking to
use automatic route for investments under the ODI Regulations viz., (i) Indian
Party is not permitted to set up a subsidiary in India through its overseas JV
and/or WOS, and (ii) Indian Party is barred from acquiring a WOS or invest in a
JV that already has investment in India (“Restricted Activities”).
Shifting
from Mauritius? The recent case of Nirav Modi
It is alleged that Nirav
Modi used 13 companies in UAE to round trip millions according to the ongoing prosecution
in United Kingdom. The diamantaire with a surname of the Prime Minister, who
fled from the country to escape legal action and potential imprisonment is said
to have used 13 companies in UAE, 6 in Hong Kong for purpose of round tripping
money. He was arrested by Scotland Yard in March 2019 on an extradition warrant
by India over charges of fraud and money laundering. Though lodged at the Wandsworth
Prison in London and denied bail five times, he has been valiantly trying for
asylum in Britain, while the Indian Agencies have been seeking extradition. The
lawyer representing the Crown Prosecution Service recently made a statement in
the court that he had in connivance with some of the PNB officials, embezzled
around $2 billion and bribed a Punjab National Bank official that Nirav had
also threatened to kill a witness if he gave any statements against him.
Ultimately
People Pay Out
Such instances of
fiscal frauds lead to siphoning off funds from the projects, despite many of
them inflating their capital costs and fleecing the banks. Some years ago, the
RBI governor remarked that the in India the projects or companies become “sick”
but not the promoters. Thirty four power projects with were identified as
stressed by the finance ministry and it has now become a state and public
burden and various schemes Pariwartan or Samadhan have been evolved by the
Government to save them using public money or the bankruptcy code. The same is
the case with the losses of banks like the Punjab National Bank, for which the
ordinary citizen ends up paying in the form of bank charges.
Need
Complete Rethinking
There are atleast three aspects we need to seriously rethink domestically
·
Do we need FDI? Covid-19
has made it clear, that this kind of FDI based large capital, large
infrastructure and distant supply chains are vulnerable and small farming
communities with biodiversity and indigenous communities have sustained better.
While this is what Gandhiji broadly advocated even before independence are we
even ready?
·
How do we reform our Political Systems and
Elections as they have become extremely Capital Intensive and significant corruption and convoluted systems are
necessary for political funding? We have been witnessing to the bonds and other
devious ways in recent times.
·
Most Products produced by MNCs have local,
small scale or state sector alternatives with better use of domestic resources
which require faith in our own abilities and fiscal responsibility. How can we
move the communities to this direction?
And further unless strong collaboration between countries, civil
societies, journalists, and legal experts across the globe to push for
punishing and penalising the perpetrators, the illicit money will find many
ways!
The three points to ponder about better India
ReplyDelete1.FDI may be required on select sectors and definitely not from tax havens ,round tripping hawala .
It may not be required in stock exchanges as it is they who make or break the market and most retail investors suffer.
2.Political reforms all parties are interested in status quo in this matter.Public feel are political parties are bad and indifferent. They have no interest even to vote they have to be coaxed,paid.I have long been advocating electrol reforms basic as
A.Only one among the elected representative must be the PM,CM
B.CANDIDATES MUST CONTEST from one constituency only.
C.in case of death within one year bye election be held in all other cases the runner up be made the MP.
3.With more retail giants entering small farmers to serve may have to follow the dictacts of retail company.Initially they may get decent returns without much hassles
But going forward they will be trapped and may be the farmers have to give up for they would not get support from Govt or public
These are thoughts on the issue