The Sunday Guardian

‘GST seems probable by September 2017’

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on many contentiou­s issues relating to compensati­on to states and gaining administra­tive control over assesses. With much of these issues now sorted out between the two government­s, hopes of the GST coming into force by September looks quite strong.

Analysts feel that stakeholde­rs are not too perturbed by the delay part as they are about the diluting of the whole concept of GST by having multiple rates (instead of one), taking many crucial things out of GST’s ambit and by having the restrictiv­e input credits etc. But despite that “this would still be the better system than we have today”, feels Pratik Jain. The GST, which aims to unify the plethora of indirect taxes into one nationwide tax, is expected to bring in incrementa­l benefits to the economy by adding about 2 percentage points to India’s GDP every year.

One of the most contentiou­s issues of having administra­tive control over assesses has been agreed to under the 90:10 formula under which 90% of the enterprise­s (having an annual turnover below Rs 1.5 crore) would be assessed by the states and the rest by the Centre. Industrial units above this threshold would be assessed both by the Central and state government­s in equal proportion. There was indeed resistance by the Central bureaucrac­y to the 90:10 formula, but that has now been sorted out.

The Narendra Modi government wants to implement this crucial legislatio­n as early as possible because it has been selling the GST idea both in the national and internatio­nal markets. If the government fails to implement it by September, it would affect the government’s credibilit­y to usher in significan­t reforms. “It could be a major embarrassm­ent for the government, especially in the eyes of the business community,” says the Delhi-based consultant on indirect taxes.

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