Barack
Obama has unsettled India’s IT barons. In a statement phrased for
effect, the US President told US companies that he proposes to revise
tax laws that allow them to pay less taxes if, according to him, you
“create a job in Bangalore, India, than if you create one in Buffalo,
New York.” The specific way in which the issue was phrased set off
consternation in India, with media speculation on its implications
for the information technology and IT-enabled services industries.
The cause for concern is obvious. Exports account for an overwhelming
66 per cent of revenues in India’s much-celebrated and pampered IT
and business process outsourcing industries. Of these exports, NASSCOM
figures suggest that the US accounted for 60 per cent of revenues
in financial year 2008 (followed by UK with just 19 per cent). This
concentrated export success is substantially due to the industry’s
access to a cheap English-speaking workforce. So any effort to erode
the wage cost advantage or prevent outsourcing through buy-American
clauses would damage exports to the industry’s largest market and
reverse its decade-and-a-half-long success.
The fact of the matter, however, is that the tax reform measures currently
being proposed by the Obama administration are not directed at eroding
wage advantages or blocking outsourcing. The Obama reference was to
a deduction for American companies when they invest in subsidiaries
outside the United States. As a statement from the US Treasury makes
clear, currently, a company that invests in America has to pay U.S.
taxes on the profits from that investment as soon as they arise. But
if the company invests overseas through a foreign subsidiary, it does
not have to pay U.S. taxes on its overseas profits until those profits
are brought back to the United States, if they ever are. Yet they
can avail of immediate deductions on their U.S. tax returns for all
of the expenses that support their overseas investment.
This amounts to providing a tax advantage to companies who invest
overseas relative to those who invest and create jobs at home. Thus,
the Treasury argues, “a company that invests in America has to pay
immediate U.S. taxes on its profits from that investment. But if the
company invests and creates jobs overseas through a foreign subsidiary,
it does not have to pay U.S. taxes on its overseas profits until those
profits are brought back to the United States”, if they ever are.
The difference can be substantial. A company investing in the US can
deduct the interest expenses on the debt it incurs to finance that
investment and save the 35 per cent tax it would have otherwise paid
on every dollar of costs so deducted. But as and when it makes a profit
it would have to pay a 35 per cent tax on those profits. A company
investing abroad would also be able to deduct the interest expense
on funds borrowed to finance such investment. But it will only have
to pay a 10 per cent tax on profits from such investment till such
time as it brings those profits back and shows it in the revenues
of the parent firm. The proposed reform would change rules surrounding
deferral of taxes on overseas profits, so that companies cannot claim
deductions in their U.S. tax returns to support offshore investments
until they pay taxes on their offshore profits. The Treasury estimates
that this provision, which would take effect in 2011, would yield
as much as $60.1 billion between 2011 and 2019.
In itself this proposal seems completely acceptable inasmuch as it
merely opposes special tax privileges for companies that choose to
invest abroad to increase profits. But by posing it in terms of jobs
at home and jobs overseas and making a specific reference to Bangalore,
the President clearly aims at getting some political mileage. The
Bangalore reference not merely appeals to nationalist sentiment, but
combines it with an opposition to concessions to corporate America
at the expense of American labour. This works because the numbers
employed overseas by US companies is significant. And investments
in India and China epitomise the shift overseas in order to reduce
costs. According to reports (Business Line May 7, 2009), the top five
or six US IT services firms employ over 2.5 lakh professionals in
India, with estimates of employment in India in subsidiaries of General
Electric, I.B.M. and Citigroup, placed at 14,500, 74,000 and 10,000
respectively. These are numbers that are small, even for one country,
but enough to excite emotions at home.
However, only US companies that invest in India would be affected
by the new measures and not all companies that outsource to India.
There are two types of companies that invest in India. First there
are those that have set up captive facilities in Indian subsidiaries
to undertake software production for the parent, offer software services
to the parent firm, manage customer care or handle back-office operations.
Their intent is to outsource to a captive plant to reduce costs. To
the extent that such cost savings show up as profits of the Indian
subsidiary which are lightly taxed here because of the special concessions
offered by the Indian government to the IT and IT-enabled Services
(ITeS) sectors, these companies stand to benefit from the currently
prevailing US tax law. When the proposed changes take effect, they
would lose that benefit and India’s competitive edge as a low cost
location would be partly undermined. But, as has been noted by many,
the competitive edge which comes from India’s lower wage rates is
so large that the loss of the tax advantage should not deter captive
outsourcing.
The second set of companies that would be affected comprises of US
companies which have set up Indian subsidiaries to undertake production
and/or manage marketing and distribution for sales in the Indian market.
These companies account for a large share of the Indian market for
IT hardware and packaged software which was growing rapidly till recently.
If and when the current slowdown bottoms out and the recovery begins,
the profits earned by these companies from the Indian market would
be substantial. Hence, these companies are unlikely to walk away from
the Indian market just because they would have to pay the same rate
of tax on their Indian profits as they pay on profits earned at home.
Their home market has reached saturation whereas the still nascent
Indian market for hardware and software is bound to grow. In fact,
if these companies do walk out it would serve India well because it
could help correct the imbalance where Indian firms are successful
in the software and services export market, whereas foreign firms
dominate the domestic hardware and packaged software market. Unfortunately
this revival of India’s hardware industry is unlikely to result from
Obama’s call to end tax discrimination in favour of investment overseas.
If the new measures are more a threat to the profits earned by US
companies than to the phenomenon of outsourcing itself, what accounts
for the sense of unease that pervades the Indian industry’s and media’s
response to the Obama declaration? There are three factors that possibly
play a role here. First, the Obama statement could not have come at
a worse time for India’s IT and ITeS industry. After two decades of
rapid growth, in the high two digit levels, the global recession is
expected to reduce growth to the single digit level. While performance
varies many companies are showing much lower sales and net profits
in recent quarters than a year or two before. And the years of persistently
rising hiring seem to have ended. With exports, especially to the
US, underlying the earlier boom, the possibility that a recession
that is already hurting may generate a backlash against outsourcing
and exports is disconcerting.
Second, the potential adverse fall-out of the recession that the Obama
declaration highlights also brings to the fore the vulnerability of
the industry that has always been swept under the carpet. That vulnerability
stems from the dependence of India’s IT success on software and services,
on exports, and on principally one single overseas market. It was
ignored in the good times, but has to be reckoned with today.
Finally, Obama’s moves challenge an aspect of policy which the IT
and IT services industries in India have substantially benefited from:
tax concessions which discriminate in favour of one set of players.
The corporate tax concessions which have made the IT and IT services
industries the ones subject to the lowest effective tax rate have
played a major role in sustaining the profitability and stock market
success of these firms and the wealth status of their principal shareholders.
Obama’s actions question whether such concessions which discriminate
in favour of one set of capitalists is good policy. That is a larger
question that India’s IT barons would prefer not to face in today’s
environment, if ever at all.