Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Extend compensati­on period or raise GST mop-up share: States

- Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Several states have urged the Centre to either extend the five-year revenue compensati­on period beyond June 30 or substantia­lly raise their share in the goods and services tax (GST) collection­s, even as the GST Council on Tuesday agreed on a slew of measures to reduce compliance burden and to rationalis­e tax rates, two people aware of the developmen­t said.

States are concerned about their finances as the five-year protection against any revenue shortfall will end after June 30. Opposition-ruled states such as Delhi, Punjab, and Kerala are more vocal about it, the people said, requesting anonymity.

“While Chhattisga­rh has sent a letter to the chairperso­n in this regard, West Bengal has cautioned that the Centre must respect the views of all member states in the spirit of cooperativ­e federalism,” one person said.

In a letter to the GST Council’s chairperso­n and finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, Chhattisga­rh minister TS Singh Deo said the state “suffered huge revenue losses” under the GST regime, which were made good through the existing mechanism of compensati­on.

In the letter dated June 27, he proposed “to continue with the 14% protected revenue” provision or provide states a larger

share in the revenue pool. “If the protective revenue provision is not continued then the 50% formula for CGST [Central GST] & SGST [State GST] should be changed to SGST 80-70% & CGST 20-30%.” He could not attend the meeting after testing Covid positive.

At the time of its launch on July 1, 2017, the GST law assured states a 14% increase in their annual revenue for five years, and also guaranteed that their revenue shortfall, if any, would be made good through the compensati­on cess levied on luxury goods and sin products.

The legally binding five-year period of compensati­on will end on June 30 unless extended by the ongoing 47th GST Council that will conclude on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Amit Mitra, the principal chief adviser to the chief minister of West Bengal and former finance minister of

the state, on June 28 wrote to Sitharaman giving reference of the recent Supreme Court ruling that recommenda­tions of the council are not binding on its members. The GST Council is chaired by the Union finance minister and the states’ FMs are its members. “In the backdrop of this extremely significan­t observatio­n of the Hon’ble Apex Court, it has become extremely important for the GST Council to invariably arrive at a consensus for taking any decision,” he said in the letter. Earlier, on

June 11, he wrote to Sitharaman seeking to extend the compensati­on period by three to five years. HT reported the same on June 25.

The second person said the matter related to compensati­ng states for their revenue shortfall beyond the initial five-year period could be taken up at the council’s meeting on Wednesday.

 ?? ANI ?? The 47th meeting of the GST Council will end today.
ANI The 47th meeting of the GST Council will end today.

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