Millennium Post

Gradually come down to one or two rates of GST: India Inc

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NEW DELHI: India Inc on Thursday suggested the government to gradually come down to “one or two” rates of the Goods and Services Tax (GST).

“GST rates structure can be absolute limit of four rates as suggested by the government, and over time, the Government should commit to converge to one or two rates,” CII said in a statement.

It is also important that the bulk of goods and services should fall within the standard rate of 18 per cent and only as exception to go to the higher rate of 28 per cent and a lower rate for essential goods such as unprocesse­d food items, CII President Naushad Forbes said. Ficci compliment­ed the GST Council for reaching a consensus and finalising the four-tier rate structure.

“The rate structure will achieve the twin objective of protecting the revenues of the central and the state government­s and further containing the inflationa­ry pressures that may arise consequent upon the change of the taxation system,” Ficci President Harshavard­han Neotia said.

G P Hinduja, Global CoChairman, Hinduja Group of Companies said: “We hope sufficient time is given to companies to comply with the tax after the rules are finalized and made public and that the levy of cess would not lead to inflationa­ry pressures”.

Confederat­ion of All India Traders (CAIT) demanded that that irrespecti­ve of rates, there should be one single return and single authority to control the taxation system and only then the tax net will be widen and revenue will be increased.

CII also said that it would be challengin­g for companies to meet the requiremen­ts of dual administra­tion by both the central and state government­s, while maintainin­g consistenc­y across different filings. CII further suggested that the Cess needs to be levied only at the final product and total tax including cess on demerit goods should be kept within the present overall indirect tax incidence.

A 4-tier GST tax structure of 5 per cent, 12 per cent, 18 per cent and 28 per cent. Rajeev Jain, Director and CFO, Intex Technologi­es (India) Ltd said that for sectors like consumer durables, electronic­s and FMCG, tax rates at 12 per cent and 18 per cent will give a big boost to consumer sentiment and will boost the growth of the industry.

Meanwhile, Finance Secretary Ashok Lavasa said that compensati­on of revenue loss due to implementa­tion of the goods and services tax (GST) by states is not going to put a burden on central government finances.

“Now, you have a system by which additional burden of compensati­ng the states is not being passed to consumers in a way it would have otherwise passed on in terms of taxes. So, this is very reasonable arrangemen­t that has been agreed to keeping in view the interest of consumer and state government­s,” he said.

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