"Not only the FIIs but also foreign companies, which have no place of residence in India and are earning income of royalty and interest - they are all sort of told that MAT will not be applicable to them, and accordingly we will be making some amendments, as and when we go to the Parliament," Union Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia told reporters here.
In the meantime, the government has already told the assessment officers not to go ahead with the taxation measures, he added.
The Budget 2015-16 had already exempted FIIs/FPIs from paying the levy on gains made after April 1.
On September 24, the Finance Ministry had decided to exempt foreign companies which do not have a permanent establishment from payment of MAT to boost investor confidence.
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"Of course, we will have to think about those people who did not declare (their black money and assets stashed abroad) and we would be sort of working on that," Adhia said.
However, the government would not harass those who have already disclosed their black money and assets stashed abroad, Adhia said.
"It was a window of opportunity to them to make declaration about their assets or investments in foreign country, and we have stuck to it. We have closed the window now. Whatever declarations made by them we accept, and those are the ones who would not be harassed at all," he said.