Deccan Chronicle

It’s time to smile: GST to usher in a new era

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Ha s m u k h Adhia, India’s revenue secretary, is finance minister Arun Jaitley’s chief aide for rolling out the Goods and Services Tax. Contrary to his first name, he never smiles, at least not in public. But even he can now take a break and smile. The GST juggernaut is careening ahead. In just over a week, India would have leapfrogge­d into the league of economies which have walked the talk on rationalis­ing indirect taxes.

So what will Mr Jaitley and the GST Council have achieved on July 1, 2017?

First, this collegial team of finance ministers, across the Central and state government­s, would have fired the first, potent salvo against black money. Demonetisa­tion; tax raids; getting back overseas black money caches — all pale in significan­ce, compared to the institutio­nal impact of GST. Consider, that the most vocal protests against GST have come from dry fruit traders, cloth merchants and jewellery makers. These businesses have been traditiona­lly cash heavy. Of course, the intrepid evader will still have tax leak holes left open. Agricultur­e, food items and the business in booze remain yawning gaps in the tax revenue security architectu­re. But the message is loud and clear: the rope is shortening. So watch out!

Second, the massive discounts being offered on pre-GST clearance of the stock of consumer durables suggests that prices of these goods will reduce. An entity, empowered to investigat­e and ensure that net tax reduction benefits are passed on by manufactur­ers and dealers to consumers, is in the offing. The history of such clunky, intrusive executive action is not encouragin­g. Due to informatio­n asymmetry, determinin­g the cost breakdown of products externally, is invariably inefficien­t. Either the enforcemen­t agents get compromise­d or they end up harassing manufactur­ers and suppliers for trifling results.

But in truth, it really doesn’t matter. Inflation levels are at historic lows — below three per cent per annum; the monsoon is progressin­g well and global demand remains damp. Babus and their counterpar­ts in the public sector — around 18 million households — have all either been given or will soon get pay revisions. They are itching to spend the windfall.

Even if the entire tax rationalis­ation bonanza is retained by manufactur­ers and dealers, it will still generate surpluses for private investment — in debt servicing, realty and equity markets. Improving the revenue steam of corporate India is vital for getting over the gargantuan NPA problem, which is bad cholestero­l for growth. The good news is that most product markets are competitiv­e. Digital marketers have cut retail margins to the bone. Even the market for services is hyper competitiv­e — think telecom. This makes it tough for corporates to retain extra normal profits.

Also, undeniably, tax rationalis­ation has come at a cost. The actual transactio­n cost, for business, to comply with digital GST processes is unknown. But GST provides a huge opportunit­y to India’s IT developers to innovate low-cost compliance and oversight options — particular­ly for value segments produced by small and medium industries. These could be perfected at home and marketed worldwide as contextspe­cific solutions for developing countries. In 2013, at a conference in Washington, the World Bank president asked Nandan Nilekani why he wasn’t rolling out Aadhaar across the globe? Mr Nilekani responded that he was too busy at home and had no time left for solving the problems of the world. This single statement projected India’s enormous domestic, digital market potential far better than the glossies, which internatio­nal consultant­s and government­s routinely produce touting themselves. These digital opportunit­ies have multiplied by several degrees with GST.

Third, the agreed-upon somewhat clunky architectu­re for GST reflects compromise­s made to achieve the twin overriding concerns — protecting the poor and ensuring fiscal neutrality for all government­s. In the absence of a direct cash transfer framework, continuing tax exemptions on mass consumptio­n goods and services is a reasonable policy option. Given the federal structure and the plurality of our polity, there never was an option to the consensual approach adopted by the GST Council. Meeting the revenue concerns of state government­s has inevitably led to six GST rates. The highest rate of 28 per cent is designed to be used for neutralisi­ng any revenue loss for state government­s.

Multiple rates result in efficiency loss due to tax leakage from misclassif­ication of goods to a lower tax rate. A good example is the amorphous classifica­tion of a storage battery as a computer peripheral (lower tax rate) versus use for backup lighting needs (higher tax rate). Multiple rates also increase the accounting load for keeping track of tax credits and debits. But the economic benefits from early implementa­tion of a less than perfect solution far outweigh the opportunit­y lost from a prolonged wait for the BJP to come to power in all the states, thereby enabling a best practice single rate template to be imposed from above, China style.

Fourth, GST is good for jobs. It gives a boost to “Make in India” by withdrawin­g the tax advantage for imported manufactur­ers. Importers pay Central state tax at four per cent as special additional customs duty. But domestic products are taxed at the rates of state sales tax, which are generally higher. This disadvanta­ge for domestic production will vanish with GST. Imports, in addition to customs duty, will pay additional customs duty at the GST rate applicable for domestic products.

Finally, the finance minister has consistent­ly adopted a firm but nuanced, practical stance on the implementa­tion schedule. Recognisin­g that small-scale industry and traders are lagging in preparatio­ns, he has agreed to defer the filing of returns by two months. Assurances have also been given that the GST rates could be adjusted if the net tax burden gets distorted or gets unbearable. A government that is open to negotiatin­g beneficial outcomes for all stakeholde­rs and still retains the will to keep the national interest foremost is quite clearly operating at the taxrelated good governance frontier. Smile, please. The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

A government that is open to negotiatin­g beneficial outcomes for all and still retains the will to keep the national interest foremost is operating at the tax-related good governance frontier

 ?? Sanjeev Ahluwalia ??
Sanjeev Ahluwalia

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