Grant Thornton Bharat’s PolicyCast is your window into policy, tax, and regulatory developments. Each episode features expert perspectives on issues that matter to businesses, individuals, and the wider economy.
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The June 2026 edition of the Grant Thornton Bharat Monthly Tax Bulletin provides a concise summary of key developments in direct taxes, FEMA, transfer pricing, and indirect taxes for May 2026.
The June 2026 edition of our GST Compendium analyses key judicial pronouncements, advance rulings, customs updates, GSTN enhancements, and direct tax developments influencing compliance obligations and tax positions.
Our Insights
The publication captures M&A and PE deal insights for Q3 2021
Vikas Vasal shares his thoughts on the recent changes in the global tax rules proposed by OECD-G20 nations, and how they are likely to have a far-reaching impact on the way global companies are structured and the way they do business in India.
Know about the emergence and growth of furniture rentals in India, which comes on the heels of a global shift in consumer behaviour and ideologies
Grant Thornton Bharat viewpoint on recent SEBI amendments to regulatory provisions on related party transactions
Know the key aspects of the recently-notified guidelines and rates under the Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products scheme and more.
Saket Mehra shares his thoughts with ETAuto on vehicle subscription as the latest disruption in the Indian automobile sector and the need to create an integrated ecosystem to scale up the vehicle subscription model and make it sustainable.
This edition covers significant accounting and auditing updates from August
An overview of the applicability of GST and its benefits and exceptions for freelancers.
A broad overview to foreign students on some of the important tax aspects
Conversion of Company into LLP – Tax Implications
This publication throws light on the benefits and exception of the recently announced RoDTEP scheme.
Catch the latest schemes, judicial pronouncements and more from the tax and regulatory front
Is it easier for startups than for established businesses to turn around? Just think about it..mature organisations have established not just a business, but a certain reputation, ways of working, people policies, they’ve figured out ways around the corridors of power as well as versus competition, the company is like a machine (whether well-oiled or not), bound by systems and processes. A startup turning around is like someone on a motorcycle doing a u-turn, while an established business is like a long train that has to go in a different direction all of a sudden. You can’t just switch tracks abruptly, especially if there are no tracks laid out in the new direction in the first place. You’ll just derail the whole thing. But the real pivotal (pun unintended) question that we challenged Rohit Kapoor, CEO-Oyo with is much more fundamental; ‘Why do startups need turnarounds in the first place? And is it easier, as our thinking so far seems to indicate, for startups to turn around than it is for established businesses to do the same? We also have perspectives from Siddhartha Nigam, National Managing Partner - Growth, Grant Thornton Bharat who has shared insights on how start-ups go about executing the turn-around
Understand the role and importance of digital transformation amidst the pandemic
This publication captures key M&A and PE deals for August 2021. The month witnessed 219 deals aggregating to USD 8.4 billion
What is permitted now is a one-way traffic. No changes in the tax regime that facilitate tax neutral de-SPACing, prove to be a significant dampener for an overseas direct listing.