Deccan Chronicle

GST: A new era of taxation

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India’s midnight tryst with the Goods and Services Tax (GST) opens a brand new era of taxation. The multiple taxes, like sales tax, octroi, central excise, additional excise duty, service tax, VAT and entertainm­ent tax, etc., will be thrown in the dustbin of history. They have existed almost since India’s first “tryst with destiny” as Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru called India’s Independen­ce from the British on the midnight of August 14-15, 1947. India will become more aligned with the system of one nation, one tax that prevails in advanced economies. There is some scepticism about the one nation, one tax that will unify India’s $2 trillion economy and 1.3 billion people in 29 states and six Union Territorie­s, as there are four slabs of taxes. This has to be so, considerin­g the vast disparity in the earnings of the population. India’s richest man for instance earns `15 crore a year and the minimum wage fixed by the Seventh Pay Commission is `18,000 per month or `2.16 lakh annually for government employees. The GST document, that runs into 213 pages, is expected to, as Union finance minister Arun Jaitley said, “spur growth, competitiv­eness, indirect tax simplifica­tion and greater transparen­cy”. More transparen­cy means curbing corruption. Eradicatio­n of corruption was one of the most significan­t election promises of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. However, this virtuous intent is a suspect as real estate and alcohol, that are two of the most lucrative black money generators, have been left out of the GST net. Perhaps the government will reconsider this especially since it is said that many bureaucrat­s and politician­s have their unaccounte­d money invested in the real estate sector and therefore could have had a vested interest while architectu­ring the contours of GST.

There are expected concerns of millions of small traders or mom-andpop/kirana stores as they have never paid taxes and where they did give receipts they were usually kachcha receipts. But these concerns are being addressed by the government as also trade bodies that are doing everything to educate people about GST. There are also several anomalies, like in the case of sports goods that have rubber content and are both taxed differentl­y; or the case of exporters who say that if the tax on imported raw materials is to be refunded, then why tax them in the first place.

Barring these few niggling factors, the new era has to be welcomed as it certainly is one of the most significan­t reforms since Independen­ce.

But perhaps the thoughts uppermost on the taxpayer’s mind on the midnight of June 30 will be on Mr Jaitley’s position that as more people are brought into the tax net the burden of taxes on the tax paying citizens will be reduced. Many tax free cheers to this.

The GST document, that runs into 213 pages, is expected to, as Union finance minister Arun Jaitley said, ‘spur growth, competitiv­eness, indirect tax simplifica­tion and greater transparen­cy’

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