Chinese carmaker BYD faces Indian tax investigation


“India’s Directorate of Revenue Intelligence has alleged that China’s largest electric vehicle maker ... underpaid tax of 730 million rupees (US$9mil or RM40.6mil),” one of the sources said. — Reuters

NEW DELHI: Chinese automaker BYD faces an ongoing Indian investigation over allegations that it paid too little tax on imported parts for cars it assembles and sells in the country, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter say.

“India’s Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) has alleged that China’s largest electric vehicle (EV) maker, whose expansion plans have been hit by fractious relations between New Delhi and Beijing, underpaid tax of 730 million rupees (US$9mil or RM40.6mil),” one of the sources said.

Although BYD has deposited this sum after the DRI’s preliminary findings, the source added, the investigation is ongoing and could lead to additional tax charges and penalties.

The DRI is yet to issue a final notice to BYD, which can challenge the findings.

BYD in India and China did not reply to several requests seeking comment.

India’s finance ministry did not reply to an email and WhatsApp message seeking comment.

BYD is facing heightened scrutiny from New Delhi over a US$1bil (RM4.5bil) proposal to build cars locally, amid tighter rules on foreign investment from bordering nations, including China.

BYD told its Indian joint-venture partner it had considered dropping the investment plans.

Companies from China have come under the spotlight in India since 2020 when border clashes broke out between the neighbours.

Smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp has been accused of illegal remittances to foreign entities in the name of royalties, allegations it has denied and challenged in court.

India taxes imports of fully built electric cars at 70% or 100% based on the value of the vehicle, but levies 15% or 35% on imports of car parts that are then assembled locally into an EV.

Those lower rates, however, are only applicable when parts such as a battery pack or motor are imported, without being mounted on a vehicle chassis.

One of the sources said BYD had not met these conditions, making it liable to pay either 70% or 100% depending on the value of the car.

Neither the time period over which the alleged violation took place nor the number of cars affected was immediately clear.

BYD, which has already invested more than US$200mil (RM903mil) in India, markets the Atto 3 electric SUV and the e6 EV to corporate fleets and plans to launch its Seal electric sedan later this year.

The company has sold about 1,960 cars in India since starting sales in 2022, government registration data shows. — Reuters

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

BYD , India , ElectricVehicles , TaxEvasion , DRI , Investigation , China

   

Next In Business News

Industrial projects look increasingly attractive
Dutch Lady’s balancing act amid escalating costs
Demand for co-working space remains resilient
Fed dampens hopes for rate cut
F&N to use cost management measures
Changing office space requirements
Naza makes entry into green economy
CapBay aims to provide financing to more SMEs
New initiative for infrastructure needs in Perak
Ocean Fresh seeks ACE Market listing

Others Also Read