Economy, asked by ilmairfan3, 1 year ago

A person residing in England for a business, having an Indian
passport and Indian citizenship will be treated as a
(a) Resident of England
(b) Resident of India
(c) Resident of England and India (d) Non-resident​

Answers

Answered by HanishKhatri
3

Answer:

resident in India

Explanation:

because the person has Indian citizenship

Answered by viratgraveiens
3

A person residing in England for business purposes but having Indian passport and citizenship would be considered as Non-Resident.Hence,the correct answer would be option d) or Non-resident.

Explanation:

Since the person already has an Indian passport and citizenship,he or she will be considered as "non-resident" or neither a resident of England or India.To be eligible for a resident of India,an individual has to reside in India for employment or business or other other purposes with exception of someone who resides abroad for the same purposes.

Now,to be eligible for being a resident in England,an individual has to simply stay in England for more than 183 days in any tax year.It is usually determined on the basis of 3 factors:the duration of the stay for any individual in England,at least 3 ties in England for the tax year or presence of the individual in the country for more than 30 days without the end of each day.All these details are missing in the question,therefore,we cannot ensure that the person is a resident of England.

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