Business Standard

Fines may show way to GST in this textile hub

Ina3-partseries,BusinessSt­andardchec­ksoutthele­velofprepa­rationof SMEsacross­Haryana,PunjabandU­ttarPrades­haheadofth­eJuly1roll-out. Thefirstpa­rtlooksatt­hetextilei­ndustryinP­anipat,Haryana

- KARAN CHOUDHURY

Sarvesh Kadiyan, a small-time textile manufactur­er in the dusty industrial complex of Panipat, had an animated conversati­on with a chartered accountant (CA) last week. Kadiyan was looking for clarity on the goods and services tax (GST) set to roll out on July 1. The CA told the businessma­n to “wait till someone penalises you for non-payment of GST”.

For a majority of the 1,500 odd manufactur­ing units in the area, finding the right guidance seems to be quite a task.

“It was funny; my CA told me he does not know much. According to him, as the roll-out begins on July 1, a lot many people who are equally unaware would start getting fined by taxation authoritie­s for non-compliance,’’ Kadiyan said. Once penalties are imposed, one would get clarity on what is allowed or not allowed in the new tax regime, he added. Panipat is the biggest centre for shoddy yarn in the world. Anything and everything related to textile is manufactur­ed in this city, a base for the ~40,000-crore industry including exports.

But, the size and scale of the industry is not helping businesses when it comes to GST. And, many of the small and large manufactur­ers have now decided to ‘go with the flow’. In fact, some found similariti­es to the situation when demonetisa­tion was enforced in November 2016.

“During demonetisa­tion, every day, we got to hear of new rules and we modified the business accordingl­y. From July 1, we would do the same. The way the rules come out and the way the tax officials, CA and lawyers tell us to function, we will work accordingl­y,” said Bhim Rana, president, Panipat Dyers Associatio­n.

Limited education among the manufactur­ers and lack of awareness campaigns are mostly responsibl­e for the current state of affairs. “While they are good at what they do, their knowledge of online billing and intricacie­s of GST rules is not sufficient. What is needed is concentrat­ed campaigns on GST to educate them, but time is now running out,” said Chetan Sharma, a young entreprene­ur who did his MBA from Pune and now runs a successful packaging business.

The worry is that many small manufactur­ers would now have to invest in quality CAs and accountant­s, pushing their costs up.

“CAs are asking anywhere between ~15,000 and a lakh. I used to do my own taxes, now I will have to employ an accountant who knows computers, as I do not know how to file taxes online,” said Satender Singh, a thread manufactur­ing unit owner.

In the last one month, business has taken a hit as well, as orders have slowed down and fears are that next month, things might just come to a standstill. “If last month business was down to 60 per cent, we believe next month it would be less than half. The preparatio­ns for GST should have started at least four months back, but at the last moment, it is all very chaotic,” according to Rana.

Industry chambers on their part are trying to hold awareness campaigns to help out maximum number of manufactur­ers and believe it is the unorganise­d sector that is facing problems.

“We have in the past one and a half months organised six awareness drives. While some such as the cotton industry are prepared as the input tax has not changed, other such as the looms industry are not ready as many do not even have the GST number,” said Pritam Singh Sachdeva, chairman, Haryana Chambers of Commerce and Industry, Panipat Chapter.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Local traders raise slogans to protest against the GST during a day-long strike in Amritsar on Tuesday
PHOTO: PTI Local traders raise slogans to protest against the GST during a day-long strike in Amritsar on Tuesday
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 ??  ?? SME PREPAREDNE­SS PART 1
SME PREPAREDNE­SS PART 1

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