Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

‘GST Council to look at pruningexe­mptionlist’

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad gireesh.p@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: The next meeting of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council will consider pruning the list of tax-exempt items and fixing the anomaly of raw materials getting taxed more than certain finished products, revenue secretary Tarun Bajaj said. The council will approach these issues while sticking to the overall principle of tax stability.

However, the current tax rate on four-wheelers (28%), which also attracts a GST cess meant for financing states, will have to continue for a few more years, Bajaj said on Wednesday at a virtual annual meeting of the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII) that deliberate­d on Aatmanirbh­ar Bharat, or self-reliant India.

The GST Council is expected to meet in the next few weeks, but a date is yet to be finalized. Bajaj said the government’s policy is to give “a stable and a predictabl­e tax regime”.

Acknowledg­ing the industry grievance that tax on automotive sector is high, Bajaj said, “There are a lot of things I also get the temptation to tinker (with). But I would say we need stability and some kind of predictabi­lity there so that the whole indirect tax regime stabilizes.”

“On tax rates, I quite agree with you on the automotive sector. You are talking about twowheeler­s, but I would say the four-wheelers are charged not only 28% GST, but we also charge a cess which is much more, and as I see it, it will continue for a few more years,” Bajaj said.

He said the revenue-neutral rate of GST was 15.6%—the weighted average rate needed for the transition to the new indirect tax regime in 2017 to be a revenue-neutral affair to the exchequer—but the current rate is 11.4% or 11.5%, Bajaj said, citing a Reserve Bank of India study.

The rates have come down at the macro level, but in a few sectors, it has gone up, and one has to look at the solutions to bring down the rates which are very high, and take out certain items that are under exempted items and rectify the inverted duty structure, he explained.

Bajaj’s comments indicate that in order to lower the tax rate on certain items, the list of exemptions have to be limited and the anomaly of having to make tax refunds in the case of items such as footwear and fertilizer­s where the final products are taxed at a rate lower than that on raw materials. This has been discussed in the GST Council meetings for a long time but has not been implemente­d.

“So, we need to do that, and I am sure that in the coming GST Council meeting when we give this agenda, I am sure we will be able to get those things,” Bajaj said.

He told businessme­n that the central government has already lowered the corporate tax rate for businesses not availing of tax breaks and for new factories being set up by 2023, but the animal spirits of the industry were still missing.

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