Business Standard

Niggles remain

GST continues to suffer from inadequate planning

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The many niggling problems associated with the hurried deadline for implementi­ng the goods and services tax (GST) are beginning to manifest themselves in ways that could add significan­tly to the costs of doing business in India. The glitches caused by the functionin­g of the e-way bill system and the delays in exporters receiving integrated GST (IGST) refunds are yet to be sorted out, even as several new issues are sending firms into a tizzy. The first is a somewhat strange ruling from the Authority of Advance Ruling (AAR) in Karnataka that the activities performed by a company’s head office — such as accounts, HR, IT and other administra­tive duties — will be treated as supply and the GST be imposed on the salary cost of employees working in the head office. Although the branch office is entitled to claim full input tax credit, the cost of compliance, not to forget the inevitable inconsiste­ncies between company and tax authoritie­s in valuing head office costs, is surely unnecessar­y when the head office and branch office form a single tax-paying entity.

The Karnataka authority has argued that the ruling follows the letter of the GST Act, which treats head office and branch offices as distinct legal entities, but this is principall­y to fit in with the destinatio­n-based nature of the GST. As tax experts have pointed out, it is inconsiste­nt with the spirit of the law. A similar issue that flows from the nature of the GST has arisen with respect to ex-factory sales across states. A company in one state that decides to, say, source its products from a factory in another state could be liable to pay the IGST, which could raise compliance costs and headaches for manufactur­ers across the board for no good reason.

The classic problem that has afflicted Indian taxation systems from the start — that of inverted duty structures, in which duties on final goods are lower than input rates — appears to have afflicted the GST as well, and, in this case, may impact the National Democratic Alliance’s Make in India programme. Recently, multinatio­nal locomotive manufactur­ers such as GE, Alstom and Bombardier lobbied the government on this issue. Their contention is that the duty on locomotive­s is 5 per cent whereas duties on input range between 18 and 28 per cent. In a ruling in July, the GST Council had allowed refunds in cases where duty structures were inverted — in the case of the railways only such refunds are restricted. This means that the wagon makers will have to bear the cost of the extra input tax, a bizarre situation for a country that is hoping to attract more foreign direct investment in heavy engineerin­g.

To be sure, these issues may well be sorted out at the GST Council’s upcoming meeting in September. But the broad fact is that the introducti­on of the GST, with all its feted reliance on technology, has not really changed the character of the taxation regime in India. The old system of appeal and subjective interpreta­tion remain embedded in the system. Many of these issues might have been resolved if this complex and revolution­ary system had been tested thoroughly before it had been introduced. But the advanced implementa­tion has only served to underline the faults of a taxation system that could have marked a paradigm shift for India.

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