Business Standard

Govt issues draft GST procedural rules

Council to finalise them on Friday

- INDIVJAL DHASMANA & PTI New Delhi, 26 September

Businesses within India may get online registrati­on within three days of submission of their applicatio­n under the proposed Goods and Services Tax regime, according to draft rules floated for registrati­on, invoice and payments for the new indirect tax regime by the indirect tax department.

Businesses within India may get online registrati­on within three days of submission of their applicatio­n under the proposed Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime, according to draft rules floated for registrati­on, invoice and payments for the new indirect tax regime.

The non-residents, who will come under the purview of GST, will be required to electronic­ally submit the applicatio­n for registrati­on at least five days prior to the commenceme­nt of business and deposit full tax liability in advance, according to these rules.

Experts fear that e-commerce companies may end up with multiple registrati­ons because of some provisions. Separate registrati­ons are required for multiple business verticals within a state for state GST (SGST), according to the draft rules.

The draft rules were a swift move by the Central Board of Excise and Customs (CBEC) with an eye on the April 1, 2017, roll-out of the new indirect tax regime. The rules, on which comments are sought by Wednesday, are likely to be finalised by the GST Council on Friday.

“We intend to have these rules approved by the GST Council in its meeting on September 30 so that business systems can be modified by all,” Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia tweeted.

The draft rules also provide that if a tax official fails to take action on the registrati­on applicatio­n within a stipulated time frame, the applicatio­n for grant of registrati­on shall be deemed to have been approved.

The rules also provide for suo motu registrati­on of persons who are liable but have failed to apply for registrati­on.

The draft rules came just three days after the first meeting of the GST Council.

According to the draft norms, an applicant seeking registrati­on will have to submit PAN, mobile number and email address on the common portal or through a facilitati­on centre.

The tax authoritie­s will use the PAN, one-time password and Aadhaar number to verify the details of the applicant.

In case all documents are in order, the tax official will approve GST registrati­on in three working days from the date of submission of the applicatio­n.

If there are defects in the GST registrati­on applicatio­n, the applicant has to be intimated within three working days and after receiving clarificat­ion, s/he will be granted registrati­on within seven days from the date of receiving the reply.

There will also be a provision to grant separate registrati­ons for business verticals of the same organisati­on.

The rules also provide for physical verificati­on of business premises after the grant of registrati­on.

Nangia & Co Director Rajat Mohan said, “The government is working enthusiast­ically and is moving with lightning speed in hitting the bullseye for April 2017.”

In all, the CBEC has come out with 17 rules and 26 forms for registrati­on, five rules and one form for invoice and four rules and seven forms for payment.

Invoice rules prima facie prescribed that the number of details should be mentioned in an invoice, e.g. descriptio­n of goods, HSN code of each good supplied, quantity of goods, rate (per item), discount offered, freight, amount of tax (under reverse charge), electronic reference number, etc.

These rules also prescribe the transporte­r need not carry any invoice if the supplier provides invoice reference number to the transporte­r.

Divyesh Lapsiwala, tax partner, EY India, said some of the provisions such as electronic authentica­tion for registrati­ons, special applicatio­n for non-resident dealers, and selfupdati­on of non-core details without needing an approval are positive changes.

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