Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

More incentives for MSMEs complying with GST norms

PERKS Sops will complement the drive to integrate unorganise­d, formal sectors

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The finance ministry is considerin­g introducin­g more incentives for micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs) that comply with the requiremen­ts of the new Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime, including access to loans at discounted rates in an attempt to reward early adopters and encourage others to comply.

A senior government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said this is one of the ideas being considered in the ministry.

MSMEs have been at the forefront of the protests against GST. Many of these enterprise­s operated in the informal economy and several got away by paying a fraction of the taxes they should have. The new tax regime has hit them hard. For instance, MSMEs that were suppliers to large companies were clearly told by the latter to comply with the regime. If they didn’t, the larger companies couldn’t claim input tax credit.

The proposed incentives are meant to complement the drive to integrate the cash-driven unorganise­d sector with the formal sector that has been a major policy focus for the Narendra Modi administra­tion.

Difficulty in accessing credit is a key obstacle MSMEs face in doing business, especially as many of them do not have immovable assets to pledge. The sector was adversely affected after last year’s demonetisa­tion move.

GST Council, the federal indirect tax body led by finance minister Arun Jaitley, has been rationalis­ing tax rates and compliance requiremen­ts for MSMEs considerin­g the employment potential of the sector.

The government is also in the process of creating a registry of movable assets of MSMEs, which would enable banks to assess whether such assets are pledged with any other lenders before they sanction a loan.

Only about 5% of the MSME sector, which accounts for a total sale of ~40 trillion a year, has access to formal finance from banks, said Praveen Khandelwal, secretary general of industry body Confederat­ion of All India Traders (CAIT). “The rest of the sector is dependent on other sources such as private money lenders for finance. MSME sector is often called the back bone of the economy and what the sector needs now is a national policy to stimulate growth,” he added.

Another official in the finance ministry said the process of rationalis­ation and simplifica­tion of GST would continue. This person, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, added that the rationalis­ation, though, would depend on the tax revenue coming in. Since the GST rates were originally fixed in May, the Council has been rationalis­ing rates at every meeting. In the last meeting held in Guwahati on 10 November, it shifted 178 items including detergents, shampoo and chocolates from the 28% slab to 18%.

A third government official who asked not to be identified said that tax revenue across the three GST components (Central GST, Integrated GST, and State GST) were in line with estimates.

The initial revenue shock following the roll out of GST has eased in October with states steadily improving collection­s aided by relaxation­s in deadline, waiver of late payment fee and steps to encourage compliance.

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