The government’s attempt to make startup valuations realistic through taxation coincides with an investment downturn. It risks diverting capital and entrepreneurship to friendlier jurisdictions. The cohort of India‘s unicorns was unduly tilted in favour of incorporation abroad even before the imposition of angel tax on foreign investors. The original purpose of the tax was to curb pooling of unaccounted capital in the startup ecosystem. This was, subsequently, revised to include investor protection. Both these objectives will be met. But a tax is not the best way to go about it.
Particularly when the bets are on ideas. Investors with an appetite for risky innovation have their own yardsticks for valuing infant businesses. These need not conform to the officially acceptable definition of fair value. The government may be within its rights to know where the money is coming from. But it is introducing market imperfections by trying to set prices of companies. This increases constraints under which locally incorporated startups operate. Such interventions can also slow innovation in India, a market that offers enormous scope for deploying technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) based on the richness of data it is expected to generate.