Business Standard

Govt plans GST sops for digital payments

Proposes two percentage point discount to boost cashless economy

- DILASHA SETH New Delhi, 21 November

The Centre has proposed a two percentage point discount in the goods and services tax (GST) for consumers who make digital payments. The proposal is likely to be taken up in the next GST Council meeting in January. The move, if approved, will boost the government efforts to usher in a cashless economy.

The incentive will be available to business-to-consumer (B2C) transactio­ns for goods and services that face a GST rate of 3 per cent or more. The incentive will include a 1 per cent concession on the Central GST and another 1 per cent on the state GST.

“The idea is to encourage digital transactio­ns, and what better way than to incentivis­e them. The move will help increase the size of the formal economy as consumers will demand digital payment options from retailers,” an official said. It would reduce tax evasion as well, he added. The proposal was on the agenda of the previous GST Council meeting in Guwahati on November 10 but could not be taken up.

The move means that the effective GST rate for items under, say, the 18 per cent slab will come down to 16 per cent for those paying through digital mode. However, the concession will be limited to ~100 per transactio­n. This implies that goods and services bought up to ~5,000 per transactio­n will enjoy the full 2 percentage point concession of ~100. “Customers will seek digital transactio­ns from merchants, thereby increasing the level of competitio­n in the market,” said another official.

The proposal will not apply to retailers registered in the compositio­n scheme and enjoy a flat tax rate and easier compliance. Customers will be offered two prices, one with the normal GST and the other with two percentage points lower GST for digital payments. This would need some alteration in the tax computatio­n process and the return filing templates, M S Mani of Deloitte said.

"Sellers would need to segregate digital and cash transactio­ns from the beginning. This will require changes in the accounting process as well. From a consumer perspectiv­e, this would reduce the effective tax rate," he said.

The concession will make the government forgo some revenue, but improved compliance is expected to make up for it. “Consumers will see visible benefits of making digital payments in terms of reduction in payable tax,” said the official.

In 2016-17, the number of digital transactio­ns was 10.76 billion, where the average value per transactio­n (debit and credit card transactio­n) was ~1,833. Transactio­ns below ~1,000 accounted for 16 per cent of all digital transactio­ns, those between ~1,000 and ~2,000 made up 14 per cent and those above ~2,000 constitute­d 70 per cent.

In 2017-18, the number of digital transactio­ns is estimated at 18 billion. Till October, it was 10 billion.

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