Deccan Chronicle

GST an ‘RSS tax’, ‘bad word’ for people: PC

Former finance minister calls it a ‘very different animal’

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New Delhi, July1: Former finance minister P. Chidambara­m on Sunday came out all guns blazing again-st the GST regime on its first anniversar­y, terming it an “RSS tax” that had led to an increase in tax burden and become a “bad word” among the people.

The senior Congress leader, while slamming the Goods and Services Tax (GST), said it is a “very different animal and not a true GST”.

“GST means one tax rate only. If (it has) multiple rates, call it 'RSS tax'... It is an undeniable fact that GST has not yet had a positive impact on economic growth,” Chidambara­m told reporters at the party's office here.

“The design, structure, infrastruc­ture backbone, rate or rates and implementa­tion of the GST were so flawed that GST has become a bad word among business persons, traders, exporters and the common citizens,” he said.

“The only section that appears to be happy about the GST is the tax administra­tion that has acquired “extraordin­ary powers that frighten” the average business person and the common citizen,”

“It is widely perceived that GST has increased the tax burden of the common citizen. It has certainly not reduced the tax burden as was promised.”

Every step taken by the BJP government, starting from the GST Constituti­on Amendment Bill, with regard to the tax was deeply flawed, he alleged.

Chidambara­m claimed that the government even ignored the advice of the chief economic adviser on many aspects of the GST, notably on the rates.

Underlinin­g that the Congress was the original proponent of the GST and it was first proposed by the UPA in 2006, the fourtime finance minister said experts should be given a free hand in overhaulin­g the indirect tax structure.

“Mr Fixits have been at work in reforming the GST. As the original proponent of the GST, the Congress party hopes that the task of thoroughly overhaulin­g the GST will be entrusted to experts.”

He also gave a number of suggestion­s for better implementa­tion of the indirect tax regime, including bringing petroleum products under its ambit.

The tax rates should be gradually reduced to a single rate with exemption for truly “merit goods and services” (that add to the welfare of the society), he said, adding that a single rate must not exceed 18 per cent.

“Only one return must be required to be filed once in a quarter. The process of refund must be streamline­d and refunds must be expedited, releasing blocked capital,” Chidambara­m said.

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