Business Standard

For media and entertainm­ent, GST means pain now, gain later

The industry may have to spend more on compliance initially, but it will benefit from improved transparen­cy in the long run

- VANITA KOHLI-KHANDEKAR

Last Monday, over 1,000 cinema screens in Tamil Nadu downed their shutters indefinite­ly. They were protesting a local body tax of 30 per cent, over and above the Goods and Services Tax (GST), which came into effect on July 1. By Thursday, the state government had agreed to relook local taxes and theatres re-opened on Friday.

This is just one of the challenges India’s ~126,200-crore media and entertainm­ent industry faces as GST rolls out across the country. “The first six to eight months will be a challenge. But the gains in the long term far outweigh the initial hardships as GST will allow us to move from unorganise­d to organised sector,” says Shrikant Bhasi, founder and chairman of Carnival group. “It forces us to automate. Earlier, even small invoices were billed from the headquarte­rs in Delhi, but now if the expense is at multiple locations, it has to be billed from there in order to get input credit for GST,” says Gautam Sinha, CEO, Times Internet.

Bhasi and Sinha have put their finger on the first big gain that GST could bring: transparen­cy and therefore more revenues. Take, for instance, cable TV, which covers about 100 million of India’s 180 million TV homes (the rest are DTH and other technologi­es). Almost 80 per cent of the estimated ~24,000-crore that cable operators collect, leaks out of the system. Just about 20 per cent goes to broadcaste­rs, making for a structural­ly skewed TV business that is abjectly dependent on ad revenues.

Since GST forces matching of input and output across the supply chain, cable operators will have to start showing their revenues and pay taxes on it. If that happens, it could release anything between ~15,000 and ~20,000 crore into the television ecosystem.

The other gain could be better margins in several segments. “About 30 per cent of our expenses every year are VATable. But we never got benefit of VAT paid on purchases of goods and equipment for sets. Under GST, we can set it off,” says Sanjay Dwivedi, group CFO, Balaji Telefilms.

Many of the gains and the challenges depend on the segment that a company operates in and its ability to deal with tedious process and paperwork associated with GST.

“TV is pan India, but radio has licences that are specifical­ly meant for certain geographie­s. So radio will need to be more compliant,” says Uday Pimprikar, tax partner, EY. For instance, earlier companies needed to be centrally registered. Now “you need to have registrati­on in each of the states you have operations in,” says N Subramania­n, CFO, Entertainm­ent Network India Limited (ENIL). Its brand Radio Mirchi has 50 stations in 22 states. It will now need to register in each of these states. This will put pressure on margins since costs go up especially in small towns which are not big ad revenue generators. Subramania­n reckons that registerin­g, putting in people and a framework for GST compliance in each state will add an estimated ~4-5 lakh per person, per annum to fixed costs at every location.

Multiple registrati­ons also complicate transfer of services among offices of the same company since under GST each registrati­on is treated as a distinct person. Subramania­n shares an example: Imagine a company headquarte­red in Mumbai releases an ad that ENIL carries across its 22 stations across India. In the pre- GST era, ENIL would have raised one bill from Mumbai — the city where ENIL is headquarte­red. However, now each station will raise a bill on the Mumbai office, which, in turn, will raise one on the client. This creates more than just procedural issues. If the ad was worth ~1 crore, how much was apportione­d to each station was a matter for internal accounting before GST. Now the tax authoritie­s could potentiall­y question why Chennai or Delhi billed, say, only ~10 lakh. Typically, apportioni­ng is done based on estimates of market size and other variables that the taxman is not aware of. This could potentiall­y lead to unnecessar­y litigation.

Then there are newspapers, the selling of which “is a very unorganise­d business. The level of literacy, accounting and book-keeping is low in dealers. We will have to train them,” says Aloke Poddar, CFO, Prabhat Khabar. Pimprikar points to film production which benefits from the ability to set off the service tax it pays on talent and production against GST on revenues. But this raises another set of worries. “As long as I paid service tax, it was all right. Now if the artiste doesn’t pay it and file his returns, I can’t set it off. The process has got completely inter-linked,” says Anup Vijai, COO, Contiloe Films.

This is a genuine worry across the industry .“Much depends on the server capacity and how robust it is. If it is not working or if the output credit doesn’t match the input, the difference will be taxed,” adds Poddar. “GST will open a Pandora’s box (of issues),” saysRKAgar­w al, CFO,Ja gran Prakashan.

Sunjoy Wadhwa, chairman, Sphereorig­ins, a TV production firm, sums it up: “It will be some time before we understand the repercussi­ons.”

“Earlier, even small invoices were billed from the headquarte­rs in Delhi, but now if the expense is at multiple locations, it has to be billed from there in order to get input credit for GST” GAUTAM SINHA CEO, Times Internet

 ??  ?? Cinema theatres in Tamil Nadu are worried about local taxes in addition to GST
Cinema theatres in Tamil Nadu are worried about local taxes in addition to GST
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India