Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Jaitley signals further GST rate cuts, hits out against politicisi­ng tax reform

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad and P Suchetana Ray gireesh.p@livemint.com n

NEW DELHI: Finance minister A run Ja it le yo n Monday signal led further cuts in the Goods and Services Tax( G ST) rates and appealed to businesses top ass on the benefit of the recent reductions to consumers .“The tax rate rational isat ion process will continue. Already, you have a situation today where every taxpayer can say that he has a bigger market and more reasonable tax rates.”

The minister, however, qualified thattherat­e cuts will be presaged on revenue collection­s and then went onto point out that the tax burden on most items is less than what it used to be.

In an interactio­n with the me di a,Ja it ley dismissed political charges that the tax rate rationalis­ation announced by the GST Council last Friday was designed to influence assembly polls in Gujarat and defended the fourrate G ST structure, saying that in a country like India, basic food items and luxury and sin goods cannot be taxed at the same rate.

The minister urged the industry to pass on benefit of the tax rate cuts to consumers .“This will also help bring down inflation.”

Jaitley, who chairs the federal indirect tax body the GST Council, which also consists of members from states and union territorie­s with legislatur­es, clarified that the relief measures and tax cuts that the Council announced at its 23rd meeting in Guwahati last week were part of an ongoing rational is at ion exercise based on an approach paper that guides tax rate revisions in the GST era.

The Council’s decisions appeared to acquire a political hue as parties sought to link the Constituti­onal body’s policy response to taxpayers’ difficulti­es in the new regime with next month’s assembly election in Gujarat, where the main opposition Congress and the ruling B JP are locked in a direct fight.

“This is juvenile politics to either link it (Council decisions) to elections or to political demands. Effectivel­y today, almost all items in the goods category are better off today( in terms of tax incidence) than what they were prior to 1 July...The GST Council has been very pragmatic and flexible. We respond to market realities,” said the minister.

Congressvi­ce-presidentR­ahul Gandhi said the party would continue to fight for an 18% cap on the highest GST slab instead of the current 28%, and vowed that the party would get the job done “if the ruling BJP doesn’t”, Mint reported on Saturday.

“Those who are speaking of a single rate GST, have no understand­ing of the tariff structure. Tax rate on food items have to be nil, while items used by common man should be at the lowest rate of 5%. Luxury goods and sin products and items that are hazardous to environmen­t and health cannot be taxed at the same rate ,” the minister said. Food items cannot be taxed at the same rate as aluxury yacht, he added.

Responding to the compliance burden of businesses, especially small and medium enterprise­s and exporters, the Council has allowed continuati­on of some of the pre-GST era incentive schemes and suspended till the end of the current year the rigorous invoice matching of suppliers and buyers and the reverse charge mechanism that makes big businesses responsibl­e for tax filings for items sourced from smaller units. “Once the system stabilises, some of the steps planned in the original design would obviously be nudged back into the system,” Jaitley said.

 ?? PTI/FILE ?? FM Arun Jaitley
PTI/FILE FM Arun Jaitley

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