The quantity of Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT)-registered startups finding exemption from the controversial Section 56(2)(viib) of the Income Tax Act, also recognized as angel tax, has jumped 93.4 per cent from December 31, 2019, beneath the Startup India programme launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in January 2016. From a total of 1,867 startups becoming intimated with regards to the receipt of declaration in Form 2 as of December 31, 2019, the quantity elevated to 3,612 startups as of February 3, 2021, according to the information shared by Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Som Parkash in a written reply in the Lok Sabha on Wednesday. Form 2 is the declaration by a Startup for exemption beneath Section 56(2)(viib).
“There are not more than 10,000-12,000 active startups in the country that are filing data with the Registrar of Companies. And so, going by that number, if the share of exempted startups has increased from nearly 1,900 to over 3,600, it is a fair enough jump. Importantly, these startups need not raise angel capital to get the exemption. They can always get it without it even as they may raise funding at a later stage. I would expect the jump to 5,000-6,000 exempted startups in another 12-13 months,” Sachin Taparia, Founder and Chairman, LocalCircles told TheSpuzz Online.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in August 2019 had announced an exemption for DPIIT-registered startups from the 30 per cent angel tax levied for getting investment against the issuance of shares “which exceeds the Fair Market Value of such shares.” Startups, in order to seek an exemption, are needed to declare the investment in Form 2 {as per circumstances specified in notification quantity G.S.R. 127 (E)} dated February 19, 2019, of DPIIT. The angel tax was introduced by the then Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee in the FY13 price range to quit dollars laundering by levying it on startups that raised equity funding at a price tag more than and above the fair valuation of the shares sold even as the premium has to be becoming paid by investors viewed as as revenue. As of February 24, 2021, 44,534 startups have been recognised by DPIIT, according to Parkash.
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On the other hand, the quantity of startups funded by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) registered 62 option investment funds (AIF) via Rs 10,000 crore Fund of Funds for Startups (FFS) elevated from 320 as of February 18, 2020, to 391 as of January 31, 2021 — 22 per cent development. FFS launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2016 beneath the Startup India programme had committed Rs 43,76.95 crore to 62 AIFs as of January 31, 2021, up from 3,123.20 crore to 47 AIFs, as of March 2020. The quantity invested in startups also elevated from Rs 3,378.47 crore in 320 startups to Rs 5089.55 crore in 391 startups.
Moreover, the quantity of startups exempted beneath Section 80IAC of the Income Tax Act stood at 329 till December 2020, up from 254 startups in FY20, as per the year’s annual report by DPIIT. The recognised startups beneath the section are exempted from paying the revenue tax on the profit earned for a period of 3 years out of seven years considering the fact that the incorporation of the business.