Business Standard

GST Council remains firm on e-way bill

Advances deadline to track movement of inter-state goods to Feb 1

- DILASHA SETH & INDIVJAL DHASMANA

An electronic system to track movement of products under the goods and services tax (GST) system will be put in place across the country (inter-city as well as intra-city) by June 1, 2018. While the mechanism for the e-way bill, which implies all goods worth over ~50,000 will have to be pre-registered online before they are moved for sale beyond 10 km, will be introduced on February 1 for inter-state carriage, its uniform pan-Indian implementa­tion (covering goods movements within states too) will come into effect by June 1, the GST Council decided at a meeting held through video-conferenci­ng on Saturday.

The e-way bill, resisted by businesses so far, is expected to help the Centre and state government­s address the issue of falling revenues by arresting evasion of taxes under the GST. Once this system is in place, central and state tax authoritie­s will be able to track inter-state and intra-state movement of goods. A tax commission­er or an officer on his behalf will be authorised to intercept any conveyance to verify the e-way bill or the number in physical form for all supplies.

Earlier in October, the GST Council had decided that the e-way bill would be introduced in a staggered manner from January 1, 2018, and its national roll-out was mandatory from April 1. The industry had demanded its deferment. With Saturday’s decision, the Council has advanced the online tracking of inter-state movement of goods to February 1 from the earlier deadline of April 1, while setting June 1 as the last date for intra-state tracking.

A GST advisory committee, chaired by Confederat­ion of All India Traders secretary general Praveen Khandelwal, had earlier suggested deferment of the e-way bill till 2019. The panel also wanted an alternativ­e method in place of eway bill. After the latest decision on Saturday, Khandelwal said the e-way bill should be implemente­d from April 1 instead of February 1. He also reiterated the CAIT’s suggestion of an alternativ­e model of using a Quick Response (QR) code on each invoice, to protect traders from harassment since it will be self-generated.

But, even without the introducti­on of nationwide the e-way bill, the system is already running in some states such as Karnataka. The states which are already using the system can be early adopters of the national e-way bill, a statement issued by the Council said on Saturday.

“But in any case, the Uniform System of e- way bill for inter- State as well as intraState movement will be implemente­d across the country by June one, 2018,” it said.

The Council in its meeting, chaired by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, reviewed the progress of readiness of hardware and software required for the introducti­on of nationwide e- way bill system, being developed by National Informatic­s Centre ( NIC) along with GST Network.

The e- way system will be ready for roll- out on a trial basis latest by January 16 next year. Trade and transporte­rs can start using the system on a voluntary basis from that day.

“The rules for implementa­tion of the system for inter- state movement of goods on a compulsory basis will be notified with effect from February 1, 2018. This will bring uniformity across the states for seamless inter- state movement of goods,” an official statement said. It added that states can choose their own timings for implementa­tion of the Bill for intra- state movement of goods on any date before June 1, 2018.

Ansh Bhargava of Taxmann said the decision to advance the implementa­tion of the Bill reflected that some serious gaps in the GST system had been noticed by the government. Decline in the revenue on account of GST and unaccounta­ble goods crossing the state borders could be among the reasons for its early implementa­tion, he said.

The GST collection­s slowed to the lowest level at Rs 83,346 crore in October.

Pratik Jain of PwC India said, “We were hoping that the Bill would be deferred for some time and possible alternativ­es would be explored as suggested by the GST advisory committee recently.” He said it was now important to ensure that all states had common eway Bills. “If implementa­tion of this system is not done properly, it could lead to significan­t supply chain bottleneck­s and somewhat dilute the objective of one nation one tax,” he said.

According to M S Mani of Deloitte, the mandatory roll out of the e- way Bill from February 1 could cause difficulti­es for businesses , especially in many states that do not have any such requiremen­t at present. The concerns over revenue leakages in GST could also have been addressed by bringing the e- way Bill provisions for certain classes of sensitive goods initially.

Archit Gupta, CEO ClearTax, said the council’s decision to allow trials in January before actual implementa­tion of e- way Bill would help transporte­rs and sellers understand the requiremen­ts and prepare in advance.

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