Hindustan Times (Delhi)

GST consensus under threat as revenue falls

Difference­s may emerge over the Centre’s obligation to make up for states’ GST losses over the last 2 months

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad gireesh.p@livemint.com

nNEWDELHI: Consensus has guided 40 meetings of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council since its inception, but difference­s between the Centre and fiscally stressed states within the federal tax body are becoming increasing­ly difficult to reconcile.

The Council, which will meet later this month, is set to see sharp difference­s emerge over the central government’s obligation to make up for states’ GST losses, which has gone up due to the two-month national lockdown to contain the coronaviru­s pandemic, a situation that wasn’t anticipate­d in GST laws.

States have for long been complainin­g about delays in getting their assured compensati­on. Some states such as Kerala have been demanding the Centre borrow from the market to pay dues to states. They contend that the Centre can repay the borrowings by extending the cess imposition on items such as automobile­s and tobacco beyond 2022 when these levies expire.

Bihar deputy chief minister Sushil Kumar Modi, who is the convenor of several ministeria­l panels within the GST Council and is regarded as the go-to person for resolving disputes within the council, said in an interview that states may make statements for political reasons but they need to be realistic about their compensati­on demands as the Union government is also facing revenue losses.

Among the numerous decisions taken so far, the only issue on which the Council had to resort to voting for settlement was taxation of lotteries due to difference­s among states.

Modi, who is also the convenor of the group of ministers on revenue analysis, said that the Centre can compensate states only from the revenue collected in the compensati­on cess fund, not from the Consolidat­ed Fund of India. “The law does not provide that the central government will at any cost provide compensati­on to the states. It is to be given from the compensati­on cess fund. It is another thing that states may issue any kind of political statement,” said Modi. He said that the options before the council for addressing the compensati­on requiremen­t—increasing the tax rates and extending the coverage of the GST cess—cannot be taken up in the immediate future due to the pandemic situation.

He also said borrowing by the Centre is not an option. “I do not think the central government can borrow. Who will repay and who will pay interest? There is no guarantee either that states’ losses will not persist for the next four or five years,” said Modi.

Kerala finance minister Thomas Isaac told the council at its meeting in December, citing its former chairperso­n Arun Jaitley, that the council could borrow to fund the compensati­on requiremen­t and extend the levy of cess from five to six years, minutes of the meeting showed.

 ?? PTI ?? Union finance minister Nirmala n
Sitharaman chairing a GST Council meeting in June.
PTI Union finance minister Nirmala n Sitharaman chairing a GST Council meeting in June.

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