Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

GST will continue to be rationalis­ed, simplified: Goyal

- R Sukumar and Shishir Gupta letters@hindustant­imes.com

ON TRACK Minister says Centre has been ‘nimblefoot­ed’ in its response to glitches, govt could exceed tax receipt target It’s (GST) a demonstrat­ion that we can make bold and powerful reforms in this country... a demonstrat­ion of India’s federal structure at its best. It’s a demonstrat­ion that PM Modi is trusted, even by government­s of opposition parties. PIYUSH GOYAL, finance minister

The federal government will continue to simplify and rationalis­e the Goods and Services Tax regime, finance minister Piyush Goyal said in an interview.

Describing GST as a “gamechangi­ng” reform, he added that an extrapolat­ion of the April tax revenue would suggest that the government could comfortabl­y exceed its tax receipt target for the year.

GST came into effect exactly a year ago, on July 1, 2017, replacing myriad taxes and, more importantl­y, taking away the power of the states to levy taxes and instead bestowing this power with the GST Council, a body composed of the state finance ministers and the union minister. A year later, it is “a demonstrat­ion of India’s federal structure at its best”, Goyal said.

“It’s a demonstrat­ion that we can make bold and powerful reforms in this country.”

The number of assesses is also an indication of the “formalisat­ion” of the economy, he added. The number of indirect tax assesses has increased around 40% to around 11 million.

GST hasn’t exactly been glitch-free. There was outrage in the early days of the tax over the rates on some products.

The e-way bill, aimed at making interstate movement of goods hassle-free, created a huge backlog when it was first implemente­d.

And there is still some confusion over the annual returns, the reverse charge mechanism and invoice matching. Goyal said the government’s response has been “nimble-footed” and described GST as an evolving tax regime. The GST Council has reduced the tax on around 400 products, he pointed out, the experience with the e-way bill, after the initial trouble, has been good, and a committee is evaluating the reverse charge and the invoice matching mechanism.

NEW DELHI:

Since the time GST was launched, it has also come in for criticism for having five tax slabs.

Goyal said it would be unfair to tax a product meant for the rich (“a BMW”, he said) at the same rate at which a product meant for a poor man “in rubber slippers” was charged, but said that if revenue collection­s improved, and tax receipts stabilised, the council could evaluate lower rates on all products. Former finance minister, and now union minister, Arun Jaitley, who was in charge when GST was implemente­d has hinted on at least a couple of occasions that the council could consider reducing the number of slabs.

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