Business Standard

Hiccups in GST portal continue

- INDIVJAL DHASMANA

Now a year old, the goods and services tax (GST) portal has drawn both praise and criticism.

Made operationa­l on November 8 last year, it had covered all the states by March 2017 in terms of registrati­on and given out provisiona­l identifica­tions to taxpayers, much before the GST roll-out in July, say officials.

However, tax filers had to face a number of issues with the portal. The system crashed a couple of times in September, which led to the setting up of a group of ministers (GoM) to examine the reason and solutions, led by Bihar Finance Minister Sushil Modi.

“The journey has been both exciting and challengin­g,” says Prakash Kumar, chief executive of GSTN, the informatio­n technology network for the new levy. Many blame continuous changes in the GST laws for gaps on the portal, not GSTN itself. The GoM had identified 27 technical glitches on the portal, which it wanted Infosys, which had won a contract to maintain GSTN for five years, to fix by endOctober.

However, only 18 of these had been operationa­lised by the deadline. Kumar refuses to call these glitches. He tells Business Standard, “First of all, these are not glitches. There were lots of functional­ities they (GoM) asked us to incorporat­e or make available. They wanted certain new things to be added or certain others to be expedited on the portal.”

He terms these as priority items the GoM had identified. “Of that, two-thirds were completed by that date. Most of the remaining ones will be completed by the time the GoM meets next,” says Kumar.

Others say GSTN should be given more time to prepare itself. Bipin Sapra of consultanc­y EY says GSTN has had to provide a compliance portal for an evolving and complex law; more time is required to get the system right. “It makes sense to give GSTN the due time by maximising the compliance­s for the next six months and allowing the portal to reach its true potential,” he adds.

Rshmi Khetrapal, founder of Countmagic, a GST software company, says though creation of the portal and implementa­tion of the taxation system created initial hiccups, the move has over time been accepted and appreciate­d by accountant­s and businesses, across sectors. GSTN had crashed in September when the initial deadline of the July returns were approachin­g. GSTN officials explained that a tax filer had submitted around 2.5 million invoices; in each, he gave the receivers’ numbers. The GSTN system had a mechanism whereby filers have to first put the tax identifica­tion number (TIN) and then details of all invoices relating to that number. For instance, if you have 5,000 invoices relating to a particular buyer, you put the TIN of that buyer and then those invoices.

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