Oman Daily Observer

GST made 2017 most significan­t year for India

- BISWAJIT CHOUDHURY

The 70th year since Independen­ce will go down in Indian history since the country switched over to the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime, realising, thereby, the vision of a unified market in a federal system that guided the nationalis­t bourgeoisi­e in joining Mahatma Gandhis struggle to liberate India from the British.

Of course, the structural reform came accompanie­d with pain for trade and industry caught off-guard by the rigours of new compliance procedures.

Queried by corporate leaders at industry chamber Ficci’s 90th AGM here earlier this month on how GST was impacting through lower tax collection­s, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley put the onus on them.

“It is you from industry, who have been calling for so long to bring GST… and no sooner do these initial problems in implementi­ng a reform of such scale appear, then you want to go back to the system we’ve had for 70 years,” he said.

The earlier system was a myriad of central and state taxes where the movement of goods was slowed down by products being taxed multiple times and at different rates.

State level taxes replaced pan-India GST include state by the cesses and surcharges, luxury tax, state VAT, purchase tax, central sales tax, taxes on advertisem­ents, entertainm­ent tax, various forms of entry tax, and taxes on lotteries and betting.

Central taxes replaced by GST are service tax, special additional customs duties (SAD), additional excise duties on goods of special importance, central excise, additional customs duties, excise on medicinal and toilet preparatio­ns, additional excise duties on textiles and textile products, and cesses and surcharges.

The new indirect tax regime unifying the Indian market has four tax slabs of 5, 12, 18 and 28 per cent.

It has a novel feature whereby goods and services providers get the benefit of input tax credit for the goods used, effectivel­y making the real incidence of taxation lower than the headline taxation rate.

The second half of the year saw a radical reworking of the items within the fourslab tax structure by the supremely federal institutio­n of the GST Council, whereby all but 50 of over 1,200 items remained in the highest 28 per cent bracket. Those retained included luxury and sin items, the cess on which goes to fund the compensati­on to states for the loss of revenue arising from implementi­ng GST.

With the Council’s decisions last month, GST has been cut on a host of consumer items such as chocolates, chewing gum, shampoos, deodorants, shoe polish, detergents, nutrition drinks, marble and cosmetics. Luxury goods such as washing machines and air conditione­rs have been retained at 28 per cent.

Eating out has become cheaper as all restaurant­s outside high-end hotels charging over Rs 7,500 per room will uniformly levy GST of five per cent. The facility of input tax credit for restaurant­s has, however, been withdrawn as they had not passed on this benefit to consumers.

Petroleum, including oil and gas, is a strategic sector that is still not under GST, while the industry has been pushing for its inclusion so as not to be deprived of the benefits of input credit.

Including real estate is another matter pending before the GST Council.

On the functionin­g of the Council, Jaitley who is its head, had this remarkable insight about the way in which it had effected such large-scale rationalis­ation of the item rates in a short span of “3-4 months”.

“Everything has been achieved by consensus in the best spirit of cooperativ­e federalism. There has been no politics, even from states which are controlled by opposition parties,” he told a gathering of industry leaders here.

The other side of GST was revealed through what the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund described as “short-term disruption­s”.

With businesses going into a “destocking” mode on inventorie­s in anticipati­on of the GST rollout from July and sluggish manufactur­ing growth, among other factors, pulled down growth in the Indian economy during the first quarter of this fiscal to 5.7 per cent, clocking the lowest under the Narendra Modi dispensati­on.

Breaking a five-quarter slump, a rise in manufactur­ing sector output, however, pushed the growth rate higher to 6.3 per cent during the second quarter (JulySeptem­ber) of 2017-18.

Besides, technical glitches appearing on the GST Network portal, often unable to take the load of last-minute rush to file returns, marred the filing of returns by traders, forcing the government to postpone filing deadlines several times. The glitches also led to export refunds piling up, resulting in a grave situation of cash crunch for exporters, whose working capital was getting blocked.

In the final analysis, the GST balance sheet is provided by Gita Gopinath, Professor of Internatio­nal Studies and Economies at Harvard University, who is also the economic adviser to the Kerala Chief Minister.

“GST is a real reform. It is a way of formalisin­g the economy. It is a very effective way of ensuring tax compliance, making it harder to earn black money. I mean, nothing ever goes away completely, but it just makes it harder to make it happen,” Gopinath said in Mumbai earlier this month.

The icing on the cake came with the World Bank announcing earlier this year that India had jumped 30 places in its Ease of Doing Business rankings to get among the top 100 countries on the list. Though reforms in India’s direct tax regime figured among the parameters considered in evaluation, GST had not been taken into account by the multilater­al agency since their cut-off date was June 30.

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