PIO1 said:
FEMA is what you can invest in, and Income Tax is how much tax you pay. They are two separate things.
This is very true.
FEMA as the name suggests is an act to deal with Foreign Exchange Management related regulations.
Apart from giving definitions of significant terms it also provides regulations related to following topics -
7.1 Borrowing or Lending in Forex
7.2 Borrowing or Lending in Rupees
7.3 Branch or Office in India
7.4 Capital account transactions
7.5 Currency
7.6 Deposits
7.7 Derivative contracts
7.8 Export - import in forex
7.9 Export of goods and services
7.10 Forex accounts by resident person
7.11 Guarantees
7.12 Immovable property in India
7.13 Immovable property
7.14 Insurance
7.15 Investment in firm or proprietorship in India
7.16 Possession & retention of forex
7.17 Postal order and money orders
7.18 Realisation, repatriation or surrender of forex
7.19 Receipt & payment
7.20 Receipt from or payment to non-resident
7.21 Remittance of assets
7.22 Rupee transactions with Nepalese and Bhutanese
7.23 Security Issue by person resident outside India
7.24 Transfer or issue by non-resident
7.25 Transfer or issue of foreign security
Bank Accounts for Non-Resident Indians
Foreign Exchange Facilities for Residents
Doing Business in India
Regulation & Management of Foreign Exchange
Contravention and penalties
Adjudication and appeal
Miscellaneous
RBI notifications
And practically for all purposes other than taxation definition under FEMA is used when terms Resident in India, Resident outside India and Non Resident Indian are used.
Income Tax provides among other things for Residential Status, what's taxable income as per residential status and tax calculation accordingly.
PIO1 said:
This is interesting: If you settle in India, even if you are a foreigner (e.g. US National, not of Indian origin), you are treated like a resident by FEMA and Income Tax!!! They don't care about your visa etc.
There are other things you can't do but a foreigner can have a farm and a PAN card if they settle in India!
FEMA defines Resident in India and Resident Outside India. Nationality / Visa etc does not matter. Once we digest this then everything else falls in place.
This is similar in case of many other countries. e.g in the UK residents whether UK citizens or not are given concession in college fees, medical treatment, ISA investment etc. UK citizens if not resident in the UK aren't allowed these.
PIO1 said:
OCI and PIO have no bearing on tax, but they can help procedurally with FEMA investments. Even then, if you don't have a PIO or OCI card, I think you can argue successfully that you are a "person of Indian origin" in the FEMA sense if you can prove you were once Indian, or your father or your father's father was Indian at one point.
OCI and PIO card dont have an impact on tax. But PIO status does have. Essentially OCI / PIO card holders and also PIOs otherwise are treated as non-resident Indians.
Section 2 of the Income Tax Act does not define 'NRI'. However, for Chapter XIIA, Non Resident Indian has been defined as an individual being a citizen of India or a person of Indian origin who is not a resident. A person is considered to be of Indian Origin if he or either of his parents or his grand parents was born in undivided India.
So PIOs (whether holding PIO cards/ OCI or none) Resident Outside India are treated as NRI and enjoy special exemptions under IT Act e.g. interest on certain accounts / securities etc.
OCI / PIO card is not required under FEMA to prove that one is Person of Indian Origin. What's important is to pass the tests of PIO definition under applicable regulations. Remember PIO is defined differently under FEMA deposits regulations and FEMA immoveable properties regulations.
PIO1 said:
182 days does effect you. Even with/without PIO/OCI, you are a resident under FEMA IT if you hit this number. "Resident" under IT and "Person Resident in India" under FEMA. So what does PIO/OCI give a resident of India? Not much - the same rights as a foreigner without visa and registration hassles.
Correct. One minor correction though -
if you hit this number. "Resident" under IT and provided you also pass the intention of stay test "Person Resident in India" under FEMA
Very true that PIO card / OCI dont give much compared to the noise made about it by various GOI agencies / ministries.
PIO / OCI gives different rights e.g. employment / stay in India without a visa, admission to Indian educational institutions under NRI quota etc which are not covered by FEMA.