Millennium Post

Twists in GST saga

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It's been a fortnight since the much-awaited launch of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) on July 1, 2017. Contrary to expectatio­ns, no disruption­s have so far been witnessed in the economy! Nor has economic activity ground to a standstill. Sure, there have been reports of protests in various parts of the country — the film and cracker industry in Tamil Nadu, textile traders in Gujarat, cloth merchants in Ludhiana, traders in Kolkata, and so on. But these have mostly been short-lived and more in the nature of minor disturbanc­es, not catastroph­es threatenin­g the continuanc­e of GST. The government, on its part, is certainly leaving no stone unturned to ensure that the rollout faces no hurdles. From directing ministers to travel from Kashmir to Kanyakumar­i for selling the benefits of GST, to publishing a series of advertisem­ents in major dailies in the run-up to the launch, to the daily blitzkrieg of full-page ads post launch on the nitty-gritties of GST, to bilingual master classes conducted by senior government functionar­ies, the government is pulling out all stops to make GST a success. Supply chains seem to be working quite well. Credit is due to the government officials who have been overseeing this difficult transition in the tax system. The technology backbone, the GSTN, has also worked without any glitches. These are still early days, and the true extent of the success will only be known when the first online GST returns are filed in September. The chances of muddles should not be ruled out. The government needs to instruct the tax department that firms who have made mistakes in their tax filings should not be automatica­lly treated as evaders. Honest mistakes are very likely. A heavy-handed approach is not needed at this juncture. GST has replaced the complex regime of indirect taxes that we've lived with since Independen­ce by a much simpler tax regime subsuming 17 taxes and 23 cesses into a single tax, to nullify the plethora of taxes on goods and services in the pre-gst era. With this, the Modi government has created history. On paper, this should be hugely positive. Particular­ly since GST ends cascading, wherein taxes were levied on goods whose prices already included an element of tax at an earlier stage and hence, added to inefficien­cies in the competitiv­eness of our goods in world markets. GST also ends the fragmentat­ion of domestic markets that results from different states levying taxes like entry tax, octroi and so on. Delays caused by the pile-up of trucks at state borders were commonplac­e in the pre-gst era. It is estimated that India lost as much as $21.3 billion annually due to transporta­tion delays and additional fuel consumptio­n. The benefits of GST are, therefore, far from trivial. If despite this, anxieties are abound, it is only because GST, as is being presently implemente­d, is still far from an ideal GST. And that is the crux of the problem. In fact, the use of price differenti­als to determine tax rates means classifica­tion disputes will continue. Thus, readymade garments below Rs 1000 are to be taxed at five per cent under GST, while those above Rs 1000 will attract 12 per cent tax – like it is happening with Khadi. Likewise, in the case of footwear where the dividing line is at Rs 500; footwear costing less than Rs 500 will be taxed at five per cent, all others at 18 per cent and so on. Most critically, the success of GST rides almost entirely on how quickly and successful­ly we are able to shift from a paper-based, sometimes informal regime to a technology-driven, paperless one. This is where the GSTN (GST Network) and the IT backbone for GST come in. GSTN is responsibl­e for registrati­on, forwarding tax returns to Central and State authoritie­s; computing and settling IGST; matching tax payment details with banking network; running the matching engine for matching, reversal and reclaim of input tax credit and so on. Preliminar­y estimates suggest GSTN would be required to handle a minimum three billion invoices a month. Unfortunat­ely, neither the ability of businesses, especially of small and medium businesses, to shift to a technology-driven regime nor the ability of GSTN to handle this huge load has been tested. For now we have a bit of a breather. The first test will come in September when the first lot of returns for July 2017 transactio­ns are filed. These are but some of the bigger challenges; there are many others ahead. Reports suggest some states are already reneging on their promise not to levy new taxes or raise taxes. Entry taxes by municipali­ties, entertainm­ent taxes by local bodies and stamp duties, for instance, are outside the purview of GST. The bottom-line is we are in for the long haul. For now, we have only crossed the first few hurdles, so the proof of the pudding will come only after eating!

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