Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

GST non-compliance may cost biz their registrati­on

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad gireesh.c@livemint.com ■

NEW DELHI: Not filing goods and services tax (GST) returns on time could cost businesses their assets, as well as their tax registrati­ons, according to a set of instructio­ns issued by the government to field officers in a move aimed at improving compliance.

The standard operating procedures issued by the Union finance ministry on Tuesday instructs field officers to provisiona­lly attach assets of registered GST assesses, including bank accounts, in cases where they think it is needed to protect the revenue interests of central and state authoritie­s.

Such attachment­s will be resorted to in cases where businesses do not file returns even after a notice is issued to them asking them to do so in 15 days. Officers will also proceed to assess tax liabilitie­s of the businesses concerned using available informatio­n. The instructio­ns also authorise field officers to cancel the GST registrati­ons. The Central GST Act allows cancellati­on of GST registrati­on if businesses do not file returns for specified periods.

In some cases, “based on the facts of the case, the commission­er may resort to provisiona­l attachment to protect revenue…,” according to the instructio­ns of the finance ministry.

The move comes at a time when revenue collection­s and tax return filings are well below expected levels. Only 7.8 million of the 12.2 million businesses registered for GST as of June 2019 filed their returns for October, according to official data.

The efforts to improve compliance comes after the authoritie­s remained lenient towards lapses in the initial two years of GST roll out to help businesses and traders migrate to the new indirect tax system.

The central and state government­s last week decided not to go ahead with any tax rate increase despite a shortfall in tax collection­s as it could discourage consumptio­n when the economy is going through a slowdown.

SOPS ISSUED BY THE GOVT INSTRUCTS FIELD OFFICERS TO PROVISIONA­LLY ATTACH ASSETS OF REGISTERED GST ASSESSES

In recent weeks, federal tax body, the GST Council took a host of steps to enforce compliance.

These include further limiting tax credits to buyers of goods and services if their suppliers have not uploaded invoices and paid taxes. The council last week also decided to block e-way bills, electronic permits to transport goods, in case where businesses have not filed returns of their sales for two consecutiv­e tax periods. It also decided to block fraudulent­ly availed input tax credit in certain situations.

These measures indicate that revenue pressures are now forcing the authoritie­s to cut back the relaxation­s in procedures given to businesses. Some state finance ministers have expressed disappoint­ment about the repeated extensions given to businesses for filing the annual returns and the audit report for the year of GST roll out, FY18. The deadline for this is now January 31, 2020.

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The move comes at a time when revenue collection­s and tax return filings are well below expected levels.
PTI ■ The move comes at a time when revenue collection­s and tax return filings are well below expected levels.

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