Business Standard

Centre mops up GST cess of ~990 cr in Apr

Govt had collected ~8,874 cr a yr ago

- DILASHA SETH & INDIVJAL DHASMANA

States’ woes on the goods and services tax (GST) compensati­on front seem to be aggravatin­g. This is because the Centre managed to collect only ~990 crore as compensati­on cess in April 2020, almost a ninth of the ~8,874 crore mopped up a year ago. These figures were released by the Controller General of Accounts.

The subdued collection would further increase states’ problems unless the GST Council, which meets next week, decides to borrow from the market.

The Centre had pegged compensati­on cess at ~110,500 crore in the Budget for 2020 -21. This comes to ~9,208.3 crore a month on an average. It is widely acknowledg­ed now that the Budget numbers have gone awry after outbreak of coronaviru­s. On the other hand, the monthly GST compensati­on requiremen­t is estimated at ~20,250 crore i n 2020 -21 against ~13,750 crore last year.

The Centre has, so far, not distribute­d compensati­on to states for the entire FY20. On Thursday, it distribute­d compensati­on to the tune of ~36,400 crore to states for three months up to February 201920. The GST compensati­on of ~1,15,096 crore for the period April-november 2019 was released earlier. This stands against ~95,551 crore collected as cess in the compensati­on fund in 2019-20.

The Centre used the ~47,271 crore surplus cess from 2017-18 and 2018-19 for distributi­ng the excess amount last year.

As such, it had ~142,822 crore in its cess kitty but gave ~151,496 crore to states. This means, it paid an extra ~8,674 crore to states. March dues are yet to be paid.

Analysts attributed the muted compensati­on cess collection­s in April to the deferring of GST payment for March, April and May to Juneend. The government had earlier announced that registered GST payers with aggregate annual turnover of less than ~5 crore can pay taxes and file GSTR-3B (summary inputoutpu­t returns) due in March, April and May by the last week of June. For such taxpayers, no interest, late fee or penalty was to be charged.

Those with an annual turnover of at least ~5 crore can pay taxes till May 5 for March activities, without bearing any interest cost.

However, if it is paid after this date and by June 30, an additional nine per cent interest a year will be levied. This interest rate is half of the current rate of 18 per cent.

The compensati­on mechanism to states under GST has come under strain due to the inadequate collection amid the bleak consumer demand even before the outbreak began. That is why the GST Council, in its March meeting, took up a proposal on whether it can borrow from the market to meet the states’ need for compensati­on. The issue was who will stand guarantee for such borrowings.

Abhishek Jain, tax partner at EY, said, “Funds through the compensati­on cess have not been enough to adequately compensate states for the revenue loss. With limited avenues to augment GST collection­s, the central government has been mulling ways to pull together amounts for compensati­ng states on revenue loss.”

Assam finance minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said while the idea to have the GST Council borrow from the market was mooted in the last council meeting, it may not be a feasible idea.

“The GST Council is neither a sovereign body nor a sub-sovereign body. So, even if you take loan, somebody has to give a guarantee. If the central government gives guarantee to loans, it can itself borrow,” he said.

Assam collected just 20 per cent GST of the average monthly trend in April, Sarma said. “In May, we collected around 40 per cent. People pay as and when they are required to pay and not necessaril­y in the next month,” said Sarma.

He added that the state will collect 75 per cent of its receivable­s in June. “The first quarter will be bad but with the impetus we are getting from the Centre, things will go uphill from here,” Sarma said.

West Bengal finance minister Amit Mitra said the Centre should borrow to compensate states as it will anyway have to give a sovereign guarantee.

“Alternativ­ely, the Centre should consider paying states from the Consolidat­ed Fund of India. States are in a very bad shape. West Bengal collected only 13 per cent GST revenue in April compared to the same period last year,” he said.

Kerala finance minister Thomas Isaac said the GST Council should be allowed to borrow from the market to pay states and simultaneo­usly extend the compensati­on cess by another year in order to repay debt.

“We have to manage the crisis. So, at least, the Centre should pay what is due to us, like the GST compensati­on cess. The Centre can allow the GST Council to borrow and pay and extend the cess for one more year,” he said.

He expected a 15 per cent decline in state’s GDP in FY21.

GST revenue was about 7 per cent of the monthly average in April at ~150 crore-~200 crore against the ~3,000 crore average collection, he said.

Meanwhile, Bihar saw a shortfall of 86 per cent in GST collection in April.

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