Nokia’s tax troubles mounted on Friday March 21,2014 after the Tamil Nadu Government
slapped a Rs.2,400 crore tax notice on the company, and claimed that the
devices made at the company’s Chennai plant were sold domestically
instead of being exported.
In India, exports are, by law, exempted from tax.
Mobile phones sold
domestically however are not.
The Tamil Nadu tax authorities are now
moving to assess sales tax on the export of devices from the company’s
Chennai plant, according to a statement from Nokia.
According to a company spokesperson, Nokia has filed a writ in the
Madras High Court to contest the Tamil Nadu tax authorities’ claim.
“Nokia considers the claim to be completely without merit and counter to
domestic tax laws. In India, exports are by law exempt from tax, and
Nokia has proved consistently that devices produced at Chennai are
exported abroad,” the company said in a statement.
“It is absurd that the Tamil Nadu tax authority is now claiming that
devices made in Chennai were not exported and were instead sold
domestically in India. We contend that this allegation has no basis in
reality whatsoever; it could easily be rebuffed by a check of
documentation provided to various governmental departments including
Customs,” the company added.
This is the second tax dispute Nokia has found itself in the course of
one year.
The Nokia India is currently involved in a Rs. 21,000 crore tax
evasion case with the Income Tax Department for allegedly withholding
tax norms since 2006 while making royalty payments to the parent company
in Finland.
This tax dispute has resulted in Nokia’s Chennai plant
coming under a cloud, as it will not be able to transfer it to software
Microsoft giant until the dispute is resolved.
The impending acquisition
is set to close by the end of this month.
Nokia,the Finnish handset maker has invested over $300 million at its 210-acre
plant in Sriperumbudur, which is located just outside Chennai. With
production of over 500 million units in seven years, the plant employs
8,000 people.
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