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Xiaomi, vivo in Hot Water Over Tax Scandal

The tax evasion spotlight primarily falls on the key players in the Indian smartphone market, including Oppo Mobile, Vivo India, and Xiaomi Technology….reports Asian Lite News

The controversy surrounding Chinese handset manufacturers continues to grow in India, with Xiaomi and vivo recently getting implicated in an FIR filed by the Special Cell of Delhi Police against NewsClick founder Prabir Purkayastha and others.

In July this year, Minister of State for Electronics and IT, Rajeev Chandrasekhar, had informed the Parliament about tax evasion totaling approximately Rs 9,000 crore, spanning Customs duty and GST, detected between 2018-19 and 2022-23. 

The tax evasion spotlight primarily falls on the key players in the Indian smartphone market, including Oppo Mobile, Vivo India, and Xiaomi Technology.

These Chinese mobile handset brands, collectively registering an estimated turnover of Rs 1.5 lakh crore in India during 2021-22, employ over 75,000 individuals in their manufacturing operations, with an additional 80,000 workers handling sales and operations. 

The minister had said that many of these companies have established their own manufacturing units, with some collaborating with contract manufacturers like Bharat FIH Limited and DBG Technology (India) Private Limited, which have set up Electronics Manufacturing Services (EMS) operations in India. 

Distribution of mobile handsets is predominantly managed by Indian companies, although some Chinese firms, such as Oppo and vivo, engage Chinese distributors as well.

The tax evasion statistics reveal significant financial discrepancies among these companies. Oppo Mobile India Pvt Ltd allegedly evaded Rs 5,086 crore in taxes, including Rs 4,403 crore in Customs duty and Rs 683 crore in GST.

Vivo faces accusations of evading taxes worth Rs 2,923.25 crore, including Rs 2,875 crore in Customs duty and Rs 48.25 crore in GST.

Xiaomi Technology India Pvt Ltd is said to have evaded Rs 851.14 crore, with Rs 682.51 crore attributed to Customs duty and Rs 168.63 crore to GST.

In its FIR against NewsClick founder-editor Prabir Purkayastha and others, the Special Cell has alleged that big Chinese players, like Xiaomi and vivo, incorporated thousands of shell firms in India in violation of PMLA/FEMA norms for illegally infusing foreign funds. 

“Further, Prabir Purkayastha, Neville Roy Singham, Geeta Hariharan, and Gautam Bhatia (key person) conspired to create a ‘Legal Community Network’ in India to campaign for and put up spirited defence of legal cases against the aforementioned Chinese telecom companies in return for benefits by them,” says the FIR in possession with IANS.

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OPPO, Vivo, Xiaomi join hands for data migration

Google Drive service is unavailable on handsets sold in the mainland Chinese market and most users in China rely on third-party data transfer apps….reports Asian Lite News

Three Chinese technology brands, OPPO, Vivo and Xiaomi, have joined hands to allow users to transfer data between their devices to take on the growing Apple’s market share in the country, the media reported on Friday.

The three smartphone makers announced the pact on their Weibo accounts, saying their users be able to move system and app data “seamlessly to a new handset belonging to any of these brands,” reports South China Morning Post.

In 2019, Oppo, Vivo and Xiaomi set up a wireless transfer protocol that mirrors Apple’s AirDrop function.

Google Drive service is unavailable on handsets sold in the mainland Chinese market and most users in China rely on third-party data transfer apps.

However, Apple iPhone users can directly move data to a new iOS device via the iCloud service or a Bluetooth and Wi-fi connection.

“The new partnership between Xiaomi, Vivo and Oppo, which jointly control nearly half of China’s smartphone market, comes after the country last year saw its steepest fall in smartphone sales in a decade,” the report mentioned.

However, China’s smartphone market recorded a good start to the new year and at the start of 2023, the sales quickly increased week over week to reach above 7 million.

In four out of five weeks, the sales stayed above 6 million, a level seldom reached in 2022 when the pandemic haunted China’s cities from time to time.

The Chinese New Year season also started earlier than usual this year, helping the weekly sales walk out of the trough at the beginning of 2023, reports Counterpoint Research.

Apple remained China’s biggest original equipment manufacturer (OEM) in January in terms of sales share and its sales increased about 6 per cent YoY.

The smartphone market in China has contracted after 2017 in terms of YoY sales growth. Q4 2022 recorded a 15 per cent YoY decline, hitting major OEMs’ confidence and further darkening market prospects.

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