GCC India Advisory.
Global Capability Centre setup and ongoing operations: entity structuring, transfer pricing, FEMA compliance, payroll and ESOPs, Virtual CFO support, multi-state GST, and statutory and tax audit coordination — for the foreign companies establishing or operating GCCs in India.
Our work in this practice
Global Capability Centres are the Indian operational entities of foreign companies, established to deliver in-house services back to the global parent across engineering, research, finance, operations, customer support, and increasingly knowledge-intensive functions including AI/ML model development, product management, and strategic functions. The GCC sector in India has grown to over 1,800 entities employing more than 1.8 million professionals.
The GCC operating model has a distinctive regulatory and structural profile. The entity is typically a Wholly Owned Subsidiary of the foreign parent, operating under a cost-plus services arrangement where the Indian entity recovers operating costs plus a benchmarked markup from the parent. This structure intersects with transfer pricing regulations, FEMA, the GST framework (typically zero-rated for export of services), labour law, the Income Tax Act, and the Companies Act.
Entity structuring for GCC setup is typically the WOS route, with capital structure calibrated to the parent's funding rhythm, initial operating losses through ramp-up, and long-term operational pattern. Specific considerations include SEZ registration for service exports (with associated incentives under Section 10AA, substantially phased down post-2020 sunset), STPI registration framework (continuing relevance for export of services classification), and multi-state GST registrations.
Transfer pricing is the operational core of GCC compliance. The cost-plus services arrangement between the Indian GCC and the foreign parent must be at arm's length under Section 92 of the Income Tax Act. The defensible cost-plus markup for typical engineering and back-office services is 8% to 12%, supported by benchmarking studies of comparable Indian IT services providers. Annual compliance covers Form 3CEB, local file documentation, master file documentation where consolidated revenue exceeds INR 500 Cr, and Country-by-Country Reporting where group revenue exceeds €750 million.
FEMA compliance covers inward remittance of funding from the parent (typically equity injections under FDI, with Form FC-GPR filed within 30 days of allotment), outward remittance of dividends or service fees (subject to applicable withholding and Form 15CA/15CB), and reporting requirements including the Annual Return on Foreign Liabilities and Assets and Authorised Dealer reporting.
Payroll and ESOPs for GCC employees follow Indian employment frameworks: salary structure aligned with income tax provisions, statutory contributions (PF, ESI, Professional Tax), Gratuity and Bonus Act provisions, and the ESOP framework under the Companies Act 2013 and Section 17(2)(vi). For Indian employees of a foreign parent, the foreign parent's ESOP plan is operationalised through the Indian subsidiary with perquisite tax position on exercise, FEMA framework for the grant, and eventual sale or repatriation framework.
Multi-state GST registrations are required for GCCs operating across multiple Indian states. The service tax treatment of GCC services to the foreign parent is typically zero-rated under the GST framework as an export of services, subject to realisation of consideration in foreign exchange and the Letter of Undertaking (LUT) filed annually. Refund claims for input tax credit on procurement are a standing workstream. Statutory audit, tax audit, transfer pricing audit, Company Secretary compliance, and the Virtual CFO function provide integrated operational accountability.
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Each engagement begins with a structured workshop covering your specific facts, timeline, and constraints. We respond with an option analysis and indicative fee within five working days of the initial discussion.