Business Standard

Revenue concerns may push back further GST cuts

- DILASHA SETH

With revenue concerns surfacing, a reduction in goods and services tax (GST) rates for consumer durables in the 28 per cent slab may take longer than expected.

With almost three months to go for the fiscal year to end, pruning the 28 per cent slab again may not happen in the next GST Council meeting in January. The reduction in rates for more than 200 items in the November meeting had raised expectatio­ns that white goods would be taken out of the 28 per cent slab.

According to officials, the January meeting will not discuss rate reduction and the focus will be on stabilisin­g revenue collection.

“The meeting in January is unlikely to look at reducing rates. A decision will be taken after the Union

Budget is presented in February.

The revenue position will become clear after that,” a senior official in the Council told Business

Standard.

The focus was to meet the revenue collection target, he added.

The Centre and the states should collect ~91,000 crore a month, according to the target set on the basis of the Budget

Estimates of the Union government and specific formula for the states.

The formula is taken from the compensati­on being given to the states, assuming their revenue collection will grow 14 per cent over the base year of 2015-16.

Fiscal uncertaint­ies were voiced after the collection­s touched their lowest in October at ~83,346 crore and a further slowdown is expected after the impact of the massive rate reduction in the November meeting is accounted for.

“With almost three months to go for the fiscal year, the focus is on improving revenue collection­s,” another official said.

The GST rate for 176 items, including detergents, shampoos, and beauty products, was reduced from 28 per cent to 18 per cent, while on two others to 12 per cent at the November 15 meeting, leaving only 50 items in the highest bracket.

Union Finance Secretary Hasmukh Adhia has asked states and union officers to review revenue collection­s in the first five months compared to the correspond­ing period last year.

The slowdown in revenue collection prompted the Council in its meeting on Saturday to do a nation-wide rollout of the electronic way bill from June 1 next year to plug revenue leakages and tighten enforcemen­t. The roll-out of the bill for inter-state movements of goods would be advanced to February 1 from April 1 decided earlier.

“Revenue collection­s have been erratic and are yet to settle down in view of changes in rates and transition­al provisions. The government may take some more time to analyse the impact of the changes before it embarks on further streamlini­ng the GST rate structure,” said Bipin Sapra of EY.

Saloni Roy of Deloitte said after the statement that the GST rates of 12 and 18 per cent could be combined to make a single rate, there had been hopes that “we may see another rate revision, possibly downwards like the one witnessed in the mid-November”.

“However, considerin­g that GST collection­s are yet to stabilise this rate rationalis­ation may happen only after we see GST revenue collection­s achieving some stability,” said Roy.

The GSTN has introduced the facility for tax officers of all states and union territorie­s to examine and monitor the details of all returns and ledgers.

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