Business Standard

CONFUSION OVER GST COLLECTION­S

Government does not put out reconciled tax numbers on accrual-basis, making any trend analysis difficult

- NITIN SETHI & ISHAN BAKSHI

The National Democratic Democratic Alliance (NDA) government celebrated one year of GST on July 1. Earlier, in April, Arun Jaitley had rejoiced when monthly gross goods and services tax (GST) collection­s crossed the ~1 trillion mark for March 2018. He called it a “landmark” and claimed that “GST collection­s would continue to show a positive trend” in the coming months.

But collection­s for April fell marginally to ~940 billion.

In response to the April collection­s, finance secretary Hasmukh Adhia then said, “Some people are comparing the April collection figure with March which is not correct. April is traditiona­lly the month of lowest monthly collection.”

The collection­s for April worried Adhia. He shot a note to the central government’s tax officials saying that the “performanc­e of central government officers is worse than the state government barring a couple of states.”

In a rare show of defiance, the revenue officials retorted, saying it was erroneous to compare collection­s for April with previous months on account of seasonalit­y in collection­s and other factors.

Now, the Controller of General Accounts shows that net collection­s for Central and Integrated GST collection­s for May are worse than that in April.

These contradict­ory trends, bundled with disagreeme­nts within the government over the trend in GST collection­s, raise the question: How well is GST really doing?

Is the limited data put out by the Centre sufficient to pass a judgement on the trends in GST collection­s, particular­ly that of the Centre?

The answer to the first question is difficult to come by because the answer to the second question is ‘no’.

The government does not disclose month-wise granular data on an accrual basis – i.e. show the tax collection­s, net off refunds, set-offs and readjustme­nts – against the relevant month they accrue. It shows them on a cash basis – reflecting them in the month the collection­s are made or delayed refunds are adjusted.

GST for a specific month is collected till the end of the next month. This collected amount has to be set off against refunds, adjustment­s and reapportio­nment of IGST into CGST and SGST. Reconcilin­g all these accounting transactio­ns for a particular month provide the real picture. But the government reflects GST collection­s and the adjustment­s as and when they take place – even when many of these adjustment­s occur months after the period they pertain to, such as export refunds.

With a centralise­d and online database for the entire country and the GSTN at its command, the government could provide reconciled data on accrual basis.

Business Standard asked for month-wise data for all components of GST on an accrual basis through RTI. The ministry claimed that it did not hold the informatio­n. It forwarded the applicatio­n to the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs. The board is yet to reply. Business Standard also emailed direct queries to the ministry. The ministry did not respond.

The intrinsic complexity and rolling nature of GST input credit and refunds, coupled with haphazard implementa­tion in the first year, compounds the challenge of assessing the month-onmonth improvemen­t or trends in tax collection­s based on the informatio­n the government currently puts out.

Settling the GST components

The GST regime has four components. central GST, state GST, integrated GST and compensati­on cess. While they are collected at one shot, the Union government gets to keep the central GST and is apportione­d a part of the integrated GST, which is imposed on inter-state transactio­ns.

But, the money collected as integrated GST in 2017-18 has not been apportione­d regularly. In fact, by the end of 2017-2018, ~1.69 trillion remained unresolved, shows the Controller General of Accounts.

Take another example. CLSA, an investment firm’s analysis of figures released by government, shows that for the month of March 2018, Rs 505 billion was collected as IGST and Rs 284 billion was apportione­d to CGST and SGST. But even from this analysed informatio­n, one cannot tell in which months the apportione­d IGST actually accrued.

The government expects the apportioni­ng of IGST to states and the Centre to improve by the end of this fiscal.

Refunds and input credit

Under the GST regime, businesses are able to claim several types of refunds on the GST deposited. A large part of these refunds arise from exports. But settlement of export-linked refunds has been a big problem so far. The government recently started special drives to ensure refunds pending for months to be resolved. Refunds being made in 201819 could also pertain to 201718. If accounts were available on accrual and net-off basis, the net collection­s for various months in 2017-18 would show a reduction for each of such refunds.

The Controller General of Accounts’ monthly numbers on tax collection come closer to reality. But with refunds and settling of IGST taking longer than the time CGA takes to finalise accounts for a particular month, even these do not reflect the true picture.

The difference between CGA’s net tax collection numbers and the gross early estimates put out by the finance ministry can be vastly different. Take the example of CGST collection­s for January 2018 in February. The CGA shows CGST collected (including apportionm­ent from IGST) was ~431 billion. The finance ministry’s press release said it was ~255.6 billion.

A tax expert told Business Standard that any input credit rolling over from month to month on a steady click in a stabilised GST regime could be ignored to see underlying trends. Particular­ly when the credit from the previous indirect tax regime tapers off. But the outstandin­g and undivided IGST does pose a challenge in understand­ing how well GST has done so far, he said.

Even through this period of patchy implementa­tion government statistics could have been better. All tax transactio­ns are digitised and on a central database. But the government is not yet sharing this data with the public.

GST for a specific month is collected till the end of the next month. This collected amount has to be set off against refunds, adjustment­s and reapportio­nment of IGST into CGST and SGST

 ?? SOURCE: PTI ?? PUTTING HEADS TOGETHER: Finance Minister Piyush Goyal and Finance Secretary Hasmukh Adhia (R) during the 'GST Day' celebratio­n in New Delhi on Sunday
SOURCE: PTI PUTTING HEADS TOGETHER: Finance Minister Piyush Goyal and Finance Secretary Hasmukh Adhia (R) during the 'GST Day' celebratio­n in New Delhi on Sunday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India