The Free Press Journal

Cabinet clears ordinance to allow hike in GST cess on cars

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The Cabinet Wednesday cleared promulgati­on of an ordinance to increase the cess on mid-size, large cars and SUVs from current 15 per cent under the new GST regime. The proposal before the Cabinet was to hike the cess rate on these cars to 25 per cent. "The proposal of imposition of higher cess has been cleared," a source said after the Cabinet meeting.

The GST Council had on August 5 approved raising cess on SUVs, midsize, large and luxury cars that had become cheaper post GST rollout on July 1. But raising the cess requires an amendment to the Schedule of section 8 of the GST (Compensati­on to a State) Act, 2017.

The highest pre-GST tax incidence on motor vehicles worked out to about 52-54.72 per cent, to which 2.5 per cent was added on account of Central Sales Tax, octroi etc. Against this, post-GST the total tax incidence came to 43 per cent. So, to take the tax incidence to pre-GST level, the highest compensati­on cess rate required is 25 per cent. Prices of most SUVs were cut between Rs 1.1 -3 lakh following the implementa­tion of GST, which subsumed over a dozen central and state levies like excise duty, service tax, and VAT from July 1. With the increase in cess, the cuts will be reversed. Under GST, a cess was levied on demerit goods like cars, tobacco, and coal to create a corpus for compensati­ng states for any loss of revenue from their taxes like VAT being unified with central levies like excise duty and service tax in the GST.

Cars attract the top tax rate of 28 per cent. On top of this, a cess of 1 to 15 per cent is levied for the creation of the state compensati­on corpus. The GST Council, the apex tax rate setting body under the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime, may in its next meeting on September 9 decide on the date when the increased cess will be applicable.

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