Business Standard

‘Price-reduction post a GST rate reduction non-negotiable’

- SUDIPTA BHATTACHAR­JEE

The National Anti-profiteeri­ng Authority, the anti-profiteeri­ng juggernaut rolls on despite questions around its constituti­onal validity. It recently held against Hindustan Unilever (HUL), a 98-page long order, which sent shockwaves in the Indian FMCG sector. Interestin­gly, HUL had deposited around ~124 crore to the Consumer Welfare Fund (CWF) on its own, even without any clarity in law on how to calculate ‘commensura­te reduction’ as per the GST anti-profiteeri­ng provisions (Section 171 of CGST Act).

The investigat­ion against HUL was initiated on the basis of an anonymous complaint (later, joined by others). It alleged ‘profiteeri­ng’ of around ~535 crore between November 15, 2017, and February 28, 2018. A few key questions arising out of the HUL order are addressed below:

What were the key findings of the National Anti-profiteeri­ng Authority (NAA) against HUL?

HUL was in violation of Section 171; it increased base prices of 12,016 items in their software post a GST rate reduction on November 15, 2017, instead of reducing tax rates on such products.

Also, HUL challenged the alleged ‘profiteere­d amount’ and sought several reductions. The NAA rejected almost all of them — two key ones are discussed below:

HUL contended that passing on the benefit of credit transition­ed from the pre-GST period through TRAN-2 form to end-customers under Section 140(3) of the CGST Act cannot form part of anti-profiteeri­ng investigat­ions under Section 171. The NAA rejected the claims on the grounds that antiprofit­eering pertains to passing on the benefit of ‘input credit’, which includes credit transition­ed from the pre-GST regime.

HUL claimed ~45.31 crore reduction on account of reduced refund under area-based incentive schemes — at 28 per cent GST rate, HUL used to receive a refund of 58 per cent of the 14 per cent CGST for factories in Uttarakhan­d, etc; at 18 per cent GST rate, the refund will be of a reduced CGST component of 9 per cent. The NAA rejected this saying there was no absolute loss to HUL; it would still get a proportion­al refund. Also, there is no direct correlatio­n between area-based benefits and MRP (which was same all over India).

What are the legal options available to HUL now?

The only option that seems to be available is to challenge this order through a writ petition before an appropriat­e high court. Given how fact-driven this order is on merits, a high court might be reluctant to interfere, unless the constituti­onal validity of the entire anti-profiteeri­ng mechanism is challenged in the said writ, along with arguments of merits. Two other writs have already been admitted in the Delhi and the Bombay High Courts against adverse NAA orders.

What are the key learnings for the FMCG sector from the HUL order?

(i) The entire FMCG distributi­on chain is exposed to anti-profiteeri­ng scrutiny and ought to prepare accordingl­y in 2019. Prior to HUL, on September 7, 2018, in the case of Kalptaru Department­al & General Stores and Anr. v. Sharma Trading Company (TS-419-NAA-2018-NT), Sharma Trading Company, which is a distributo­r and stockist of HUL, was found to have ‘profiteere­d’ for not passing on the benefit of the reduction in GST rate from 28 per cent to 18 per cent on “Vaseline VTM 400 ml”.

(ii) Arguments about practical challenges in reducing price immediatel­y post a rate reduction will not fly; immediate price reduction is mandatory. HUL’s arguments about practical/logistical challenges in reducing MRP overnight for all products were rejected by relying upon a 2004 Supreme Court order in GSK Pharmaceut­icals case in the context of Drug Price Control Orders (which held that drug price reduction would have to be mandatoril­y passed to consumer the moment reduction becomes effective, irrespecti­ve of possible losses).

(iii) Instead of a price reduction, the supply of extra quantity/grammage for the same price is permissibl­e in some cases. This benefit was denied earlier in the Sharma Trading case (Supra) since distributo­rs didn’t have the right to offer extra grammage; only the manufactur­er has. This was allowed for HUL. However, extra quantity/grammage has to be done for each and every stock-keeping-unit (SKU) and not at an entity level. On actual one-to-one examinatio­n apropos HUL’s SKUs, a reduction of only ~68 crore was allowed against HUL’s claim of ~118.68 crore.

(iv) Unless your strategy is to pose a constituti­onal challenge to the antiprofit­eering mechanism, any plan for complying with Section171 will need to factor in the above learnings, unreasonab­le as some of them may seem. Specifical­ly, price-reduction post a GST rate reduction seems nonnegotia­ble, except in a few cases where the supply of extra grammage/quantity for the same price will be considered sufficient compliance.

The only option that seems to be available for HUL is to challenge this order through a writ petition before an appropriat­e high court

The writer is partner, tax controvers­y management & contract documentat­ion, Advaita Legal

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