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Clause 184 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025, and Section 102 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, both serve as the definitional bedrock for the operation of the General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR) within Indian tax law. These provisions establish the scope, terminology, and conceptual framework for identifying, interpreting, and applying anti-avoidance measures to arrangements or transactions that are designed to achieve tax benefits contrary to the intent of the law. This commentary aims to provide an in-depth analysis of Clause 184, elucidate its objectives, dissect its key components, and critically compare each element with the corresponding provisions of Section 102 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The analysis will also consider the practical implications for taxpayers, tax authorities, and the broader policy landscape.
The General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR) is a statutory mechanism designed to empower tax authorities to deny tax benefits arising from arrangements or transactions that, although compliant with the letter of the law, defeat its spirit and underlying policy. The primary objective of Clause 184, as with Section 102, is to provide precise definitions for key terms used in the application of GAAR, ensuring clarity, consistency, and legal certainty in its enforcement.
The legislative intent behind these provisions is to combat aggressive tax planning strategies that exploit gaps, ambiguities, or technicalities in tax statutes, often through complex multi-step arrangements or cross-border structures. By defining terms such as "arrangement," "tax benefit," "connected person," and others, the legislature seeks to cast a wide net over potentially abusive transactions, while providing safeguards against arbitrary or overbroad application.
The introduction of Clause 184 in the Income Tax Bill, 2025, signals an effort to update, harmonize, and potentially expand the definitional scope of GAAR in light of evolving business practices, international developments (such as BEPS - Base Erosion and Profit Shifting), and judicial interpretations since the original enactment of Section 102.
Clause 184(1): Introduces the definition of "accommodating party" as a party to an arrangement whose main purpose of participation is to obtain a tax benefit for the assessee, regardless of whether the party is a "connected person."
Clause 184(2) and Section 102(1):- Both define "arrangement" as any step in, or part or whole of, any transaction, operation, scheme, agreement, or understanding, whether enforceable or not, including the alienation of any property.
Clause 184(3) and Section 102(2):- Both define "asset" as including property or right of any kind.
Clause 184(4) and Section 102(3):- Both define "benefit" to include a payment of any kind, whether tangible or intangible.
Clause 184(5) and Section 102(4):- Both provide detailed, multi-pronged definitions of "connected person," covering relatives, directors, partners, members, and persons with substantial interest in business.
Clause 184(6) and Section 102(5):- Both define "fund" to include cash, cash equivalents, and rights or obligations to receive or pay cash or equivalents.
Clause 184(7) and Section 102(6):- Both define "party" to include any person or permanent establishment participating in an arrangement.
Clause 184(8): refers to the meaning assigned in section 92(5)(g) (presumably of the new Bill), while Section 102(7): refers to the Explanation to clause (vi) of sub-section (2) of section 56 of the Income-tax Act, 1961.
Clause 184(9) andSection 102(8):- Both define when a person is deemed to have a substantial interest in a business:
Minor Linguistic Difference: The change from "twenty per cent or more" to "at least 20%" is stylistic and does not alter the substantive threshold.
Clause 184(10) andSection 102(9):- Both define "step" as a measure or action, particularly one in a series, taken to achieve a particular object in an arrangement.
Clause 184(11) andSection 102(10):- Both provide an inclusive definition of "tax benefit," covering:
Clause 184(12) andSection 102(11):- Both define "tax treaty" as an agreement referred to in the relevant sections of the respective Acts [section 159(1)/(2) in the income-tax Bill, 2025 vs. section 90(1)/90A(1) in the Income-tax Act, 1961].
The definitions provided in Clause 184, mirroring and in some instances expanding upon those in Section 102, have significant practical consequences for taxpayers, advisors, and the tax administration.
Clause 184 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025, represents both continuity and incremental evolution in the definitional framework underpinning India's General Anti-Avoidance Rule. By largely retaining the structure and substance of Section 102 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, while introducing targeted expansions such as the "accommodating party," the provision seeks to anticipate and counter more sophisticated forms of tax avoidance. The comprehensive and inclusive definitions ensure that the anti-avoidance net remains robust, adaptable, and aligned with global best practices. However, the wide ambit of these definitions also places a premium on clarity, predictability, and the need for ongoing judicial and administrative guidance to balance effective enforcement with taxpayer certainty.
Full Text:
General Anti Avoidance Rule expansion: new accommodating party concept widens GAAR reach and tightens tax planning scrutiny. Clause 184 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025 largely carries forward Section 102's wide definitions for GAAR-covering arrangement, asset, benefit, connected person, fund, party, step, and tax benefit-while introducing an accommodating party concept to capture third party facilitators, updating cross references and terminology (e.g., 'tax year'), and explicitly including permanent establishments and treaty arrangements to strengthen anti avoidance coverage.Press 'Enter' after typing page number.