Business Standard

Knots yet to be untied

- INDIVJALDH­ASMANA

The Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council has eased procedures to help small and medium industry players, but assessees still face problems in filing returns. This was reflected in declining tax collection­s, though other factors such as rate cuts and use of integrated GST (IGST) also played a part in subdued collection­s, particular­ly in October and November.

The number of filers has been rising. However, the proportion of filers to assessees kept dwindling before it rose again in October and reached the level of July in November. Also, filers have not been able to file the correct amount of taxes and input tax credit due to complicate­d filing procedures.

ClearTax Chief Executive Officer Archit Gupta said there should be changes in the format of GSTR1, a form for filing supply returns. For instance, it asks assessees their expected turnover, which is difficult to answer, particular­ly for small and medium enterprise­s. If a trader opts for monthly returns, he cannot go back to filing quarterly ones. Similarly, he said, GSTR3B asks tedious questions — a summary form for inputoutpu­t returns. For instance, it asks filers if they have reverse input tax credits.

Sudhir Singh, managing director of Marg ERP Ltd, said companies were still dealing with teething troubles. “Transition is still in process; it is not yet complete.”

Vishal Raheja of Taxmann said the due date for filing GSTR-1 was January 10 for all assesees irrespecti­ve of their turnover being above ~1.5 crore or not. But, the GSTN portal was opened for this filing just two weeks ago and many businesses would not be able to file all returns before this deadline.

The government is assuming that businesses would upload the invoices on the portal on a day-to-day basis. But, small- and medium-sized businesses are not equipped with informatio­n technology resources to do this.

The GSTN portal had crashed in early September when the filing of returns were on for July. Raheja said it was expected that the portal would work smoothly but it was still not free of glitches. “The summary of GSTR-1 return is still taking too much time to generate and figures are not reflecting on the portal instantly. It is taking several hours after uploading. The government should ensure that all these difficulti­es are removed to make it more compliance-friendly.” In fact, the government extended the deadline for filing GSTR-1 for the first four months of the GST roll out by 10 days to January 10.

Pointing to the November GST collection­s, which fell to the lowest in the first eight months of the roll-out, M S Mani of Deloitte said: “While the decline on account of rate reductions is understand­able, the fact that there is a decline in compliance would be a matter of concern.”

The Council had eased many procedures. For instance, it allowed those with an annual turnover of up to ~1.5 crore to file returns and pay taxes quarterly from October, raised the eligibilit­y for compositio­n scheme from ~75-lakh annual turnover to ~1.5 crore. It also cut GST rates for those under the compositio­n scheme. The Council also put off filing input returns and input-output returns till March 31, 2018.

Meanwhile, a committee headed by GST Network Chairman A B Pandey was tasked with simplifyin­g these forms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India