Millennium Post

Council to consider slashing GST on common use goods

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NEW DELHI: The all-powerful GST Council may consider lowering tax rates on a host of goods such as handmade furniture, plastic products and daily use items like shampoo, and simplify return filing rules in its meeting this week.

The Council, headed by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, is scheduled to meet on November 10 to consider lowering of the 28 per cent GST rate on certain common use items, government officials said.

In further relief to small and medium enterprise­s, the panel is likely to rationalis­e tax rate in sectors where the total incidence of taxation has gone up because the goods were earlier either exempt from excise or was attracted lower VAT rates in the previous indirect tax regime.

The Council has been meeting every month since the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime, which amalgamate­d over a dozen central and state taxes, was introduced on July 1. The meetings have resulted in an array of changes to ease compliance burden on businesses as well as provided relief to consumers.

"A rationalis­ation of items in the 28 per cent tax bracket is expected. Most of the daily use items could be lowered to 18 per cent. Also tax rate on items like furniture, electric switches, plastic pipes could be relooked," an official said.

All types of furniture attract a 28 per cent tax under GST. Wooden furniture is handmade by unorganise­d sector artisans and is mostly used by middle class families and there have been demands for lowering tax incidence on them.

Also, some items of plastic attract 18 per cent GST but goods like shower baths, sinks, wash basins, bidets, lavatory pans, seats and covers, flushing cisterns and similar sanitary ware of plastics attract 28 per cent levy.

There is a need for rationalis­ation of tax rates on these items, officials said.

The plastic manufactur­ers in their representa­tion to the revenue department had said that 80 per cent of the industry is in MSME category.

Besides, the GST rate on weighing machines, compressor­s may also be rationalis­ed to 18 per cent from 28 per cent.

Officials said 90 per cent of the manufactur­ers are from small and medium industries who in the pre-gst era were exempt from excise duty on manufactur­ed value of less than Rs 1.5 crore. Hence, such machines only attracted VAT of 14.5 per cent.

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