Hindustan Times (Delhi)

GST Council to trim items in top tax slab

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad gireesh.p@livemint.com Reuters feedback@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Federal indirect tax body the goods and services tax (GST) Council is set to trim the list of items in the highest tax slab of 28% by shifting some items of common use as well as products made predominan­tly by small and medium enterprise­s (SMES) to a lower tax slab.

The tax rate fitment committee, a panel of central and state officials assisting the Council, is combing through the list of items in the highest slab to identify such items, two people with knowledge of the developmen­t said on condition of anonymity.

The Council wants to address the public perception of high tax rates on certain items of common use as well as give further relief to SMES, which are labour-intensive. India is home to 56 million SMES, according to data available from the ministry of micro, small and medium enterprise­s.

“Besides, SMES contribute only about 5% to indirect tax revenue. Hence giving relief to them may not hit revenue collection. The idea is to ease the pain, not to dilute GST structure,” said one of the two people cited above.

The revenue department follows the thumb rule that 80% of the tax payers contribute only 20% of tax revenue, while the remaining small section of assessees account for the lion’s share of tax proceeds.

The challenge before the Council is that tax rates apply uniformly to every business irrespecti­ve of their sales. “The same product may be manufactur­ed by large industry players as well as SMES. In such cases, a rate cut will affect revenue receipts from the bigger players too although they need no such relief,” said the second official cited above, who also spoke on condition of anonymity.

The official added that the eventual goal is to retain only so-called sin goods such as cigarettes, the consumptio­n of which the state wants to discourage, in the highest tax slab. However, the pruning of the items in 28% slab may be a gradual exercise as the Council has to also take into account revenue considerat­ions as tax evasion is common in the country, said the official.

MS Mani, partner-gst, Deloitte India, said there is need for a relook at some of the commonly used products that have been classified under the 28% tax bracket.

The GST Council chaired by finance minister Arun Jaitley will meet in Guwahati, Assam on November 9 and 10 to consider further changing the liberal quarterly tax filing scheme called compositio­n scheme meant for small businesses. MUMBAI: State Bank of India, the country’s top lender by assets, will cut marginal cost-based lending rates (MCLR) across maturities by 5 basis points, effective Wednesday, in what will be its first lending rate cut in 10 months.

SBI, which accounts for more than a fifth of India’s banking assets, will lower the 1-year MCLR to 7.95% from 8%, according to a notificati­on on Tuesday.

The RBI last year unveiled the MCLR, which sought to remove much of the discretion commercial banks have to set lending rates. But to its frustratio­n, the pace of bank lending rate cuts has lagged the reduction in policy rates, which fell by a total 200 basis points since January 2015.

The RBI is keen for banks to lower lending rates further to accelerate credit growth and private investment in an economy growing at its slowest in more than three years. Bank loans last financial year grew at their slowest pace in more than six decades.

Flush with deposits after a surprise scrapping of high-value notes last year, banks led by SBI had last sharply cut lending rates under the MCLR system in early January.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? SBI accounts for over a fifth of India’s banking assets
MINT/FILE SBI accounts for over a fifth of India’s banking assets

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