Business Standard

GST COLLECTION SLIPS BELOW ~1 TRN AFTER FOUR MONTHS

- DILASHA SETH New Delhi, 1 April

Goods and services tax (GST) collection fell below the ~1-trillion mark in March after a gap of four months,

even as disruption­s caused by the coronaviru­s-induced lockdown will get captured only in the coming months. The numbers pertain to GST paid in February but collected in March, suggesting that collection­s might turn grimmer going forward. The GST mop-up in March stood at ~97,597 crore, down 8.4 per cent on a year-on-year basis, the data released by the Ministry of Finance showed on Wednesday. DILASHA SETH reports

Goods and services tax (GST) collection fell below the ~1-trillion mark in March after a gap of four months, even as disruption­s caused by the coronaviru­sinduced lockdown will get captured only in the coming months.

The numbers pertain to GST paid in February but collected in March, suggesting that collection­s might turn grimmer going forward.

The GST mop-up in March stood at ~97,597 crore, down 8.4 per cent on a yearon-year basis, the data released by the Ministry of Finance showed on Wednesday. The government had targeted a collection of ~1.25 trillion in March. GST collection grew by a meagre 3.7 per cent in the full fiscal year 2019-20.

The dismal collection in March is despite the stringent anti-evasion measures introduced by the government, including the blockage of e-way bill and restrictin­g input tax credit to 10 per cent in the case of failure of invoice uploads by suppliers.

Already hit by an economic slowdown, the country went into a 21-day lockdown from March 24 to prevent the spread of Covid-19. All industries that were struggling have become non-operationa­l, which will reflect in the April GST collection figures.

Kerala Finance Minister Thomas Isaac told Business Standard that the April numbers, which would essentiall­y be transactio­ns in March would only be about 15-20 per cent of the March figures.

Pratik Jain, partner, PWC India, said, “It seems that many businesses may not have been able to pay GST because of liquidity issues being faced after the lockdown. As the second half of March 2020 has been significan­tly impacted due to the Covid-19 outbreak, collection­s in April are likely to be substantia­lly lower.”

In a major relief for businesses facing lockdown due to coronaviru­s, the last date for GST return filing for March, April and May 2020 has been extended to June 30, with no interest, late fee and penalty, for companies with up to ~5 crore turnover and subsidised interest of 9 per cent, and no penalty or late fees for bigger companies.

M S Mani, partner, Deloitte India, said it was necessary for businesses to conserve cash in order to enable resumption of operations once the lockdown ends. Hence, any deferral of the GST payment timelines by a few months would significan­tly assist them in this process, Mani said.

Central GST collection for FY20 at ~4.95 trillion fell ~18,188 crore short of revised estimates for the fiscal year. The finance ministry, in Union Budget 202021, had lowered the CGST collection target for FY20 to ~5.13 trillion from ~5.26 trillion estimated in July.

Of the ~97,597-crore revenue in March, the central GST collection stood at ~19,183 crore, state GST at ~25,601 crore and integrated GST at ~44,508 crore, which included ~18,056 crore collected on imports, the finance ministry said in a statement.

GST collection on domestic transactio­ns witnessed an 8 per cent decline, while GST collection on imports posted a negative growth of (-)23 per cent, indicating the beginning of Covid-related supply and demand disruption.

In order to plug revenue leakages, the Council allowed blocking of input tax credit in the case of fraudulent invoices and blocking of e-way bills in the case of non-filing of returns for three straight months.

The Council in its meeting on March 14 deferred the new simplified returns and e-invoicing till October, which was to be launched from April 1. Meanwhile, in order to improve collection­s, the government is aiming to correct inverted duty structure. It raised the GST on mobile phones to 18 per cent from 12 per cent, bringing the rate on a par with the inputs.

Lower-than-expected revenues are also putting pressure on the Centre to compensate states for the revenue shortfall. The compensati­on cess collection stood at ~8,306 crore during the month, much smaller than the approximat­ely ~14,00015,000 crore compensati­on required by states on a monthly basis. States are up in arms with the Centre over a delay in payment of compensati­on dues and are planning to drag Centre to the Supreme Court.

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