There are at least three issues here. One, high royalty is iniquitous to minority shareholders. It is like a super dividend to the foreign shareholder. It reduces the net profit, and therefore causes the valuation of the Indian venture to fall. Also, since royalty is a commercial arrangement, minority shareholders have no say in it. They are seldom told the reason why it has been changed. Shareholder activists have, therefore, started demanding that royalty payments ought to be decided in the annual general meeting of shareholders, and any change must be cleared by 75 % of the shareholders. Two, the negotiations for royalty are often between the foreign promoter and the managers it has put in place. These managers have no incentive to drive a hard bargain; if they do, they could simply lose their jobs. It is, in that sense, a negotiation between non-equals. That’s perhaps the reason why multinational corporations have been able to extract favourable royalty terms from their Indian ventures. Three, royalty makes the government lose out on tax revenue.
The government ought to see the overall impact of its liberalised royalty regime, and then take corrective action. Royalty is paid for the use of the foreign partner’s technology, trademark or brand name. The government must scrutinise how real the technology transfer is and if the brand name of the foreign partner is indeed helping the Indian company charge a premium in the marketplace. Royalty has been a bone of contention between Indian business leaders and their overseas partners for a while. Several collaborations have fallen apart because of squabbles over royalty.