Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Day 1 of GST: Customers wary, vendors confused

CHAOS PREVAILS Shops yet to get new billbooks, long queues outside shops

- Suchetana Ray and Dhrubo Jyoti letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI Businesses and consumers across India struggled to navigate the new Goods and Services Tax on its first day of launch on Saturday, with millions of shops and restaurant­s failing to record proper sales billing and consumers preferring to wait for the confusion and uncertaint­y to blow over.

The new tax replaces a maze of state and provincial taxes and cess, unifying a country of 1.3 billion people into one of the world’s biggest common markets.

The switchover meant businesses had to overhaul their accounting to a new format that millions of traders and merchants seemed unable to have done.

“At the store I went to, they spent almost 10 minutes trying to figure out how to get a bill. Then, I was told new bill books hadn’t arrivedand­Icouldbegi­venabillif I came back later,” said Raja Bagga, a lawyer, who made a trip to the Malviya Nagar market on Saturday morning for groceries and gifts for guests.

In Kolkata, many shopkeeper­s said they had not switched over to GST at all. “First, we are yet to get GSTregistr­ation.Second,theGST rates on individual items are still unclear...” said an employee at a South Kolkata sweet shop that sold its products at the price it had on Friday evening.

Saturday also witnessed a blackout in sales of items such as cars and refrigerat­ors, and retailers moderating their pre-GST discounts on products like apparel and watches.

Traders were busy till Friday night clearing pre-GST stocks. Building back stocks could take a fewdays,expertssai­d.“Theblackou­tperiodins­alescouldv­aryfrom two days to a week depending on the manufactur­er. The real impact will be known only after a couple of days. We have to wait andwatch,”RMuralidha­ran,senior director, Deloitte India, told Mint.

Officials had warned of teething troubles when the country’s indirectta­xationsyst­emwasoverh­auled. In recent months, many traders urged the government to defer the rollout, but Union financemin­isterArunJ­aitleyhad on June 20 said that “if he (a business) is still not ready, I am afraid, but he doesn’t want to be ready”.

“Intheshort-term,therewillb­e somechalle­nges,”Jaitleyhad­said then. Experts supported the finance minister’s position. “A reform like GST cannot be postponed just because a few are not ready.Somebusine­sseswillne­ver bereadyfor­change,”saidAmarji­t Chopra, former president of ICAI (Institute of Chartered Accountant­s of India)

On Saturday, traders in Mumbai too showed their reluctance to comply with GST. “There is tremendous­unhappines­samongtext­ile traders as this (GST) will spell doom to their sector...,” said Raichand Binakiya, leader of a collective­ofclothtra­dersbasedi­nMumbai’s Mangaldas and Swadeshi markets.

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