Business Standard

GST Council may allow intra-state pharma cess, discuss states’ dues

- DILASHA SETH

The Goods and Services Tax Council meeting on Friday, the first physical meeting in more than 20 months, will deliberate on levying the Covid cess on pharmaceut­icals and the power sector for intra-state supplies in Sikkim besides extending the states compensati­on period beyond 2022.

The meeting, being held in Lucknow, may take up notifying a common comprehens­ive e-portal gst.gov.in for registrati­on, paying tax, and filing returns.

Chaired by Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, the 45th Council meeting will be the first one taking place outside New Delhi in two years.

The Group of Ministers (GOM), led by Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai, has backed Sikkim’s proposal for a 1 per cent cess on intrastate supplies of pharmacuet­icals for two years. It has endorsed a special aid of ~300 crore per annum till 2023 for Sikkim by the Centre to overcome Covid-related losses.

However, with electricit­y being outside the GST purview, the GOM has recommende­d the state independen­tly explore the proposal of ~0.1 (10 paise) per unit of electricit­y consumptio­n or sale.

It may discuss extending the compensati­on cess for states beyond 2022. Most states are likely to pitch for an extension by another five years, amid several fiscal constraint­s. While the Centre may agree to extend the compensati­on period, it will press for lower assumed revenue growth as against the 14 per cent at the moment, arguing that it may not be sustainabl­e.

States were promised compensati­on for five years after GST implementa­tion in July 2017 revenue shortfall assuming a 14 per cent annual growth, since states lost autonomy over indirect taxes. Compensati­on cess is levied on a few items in the 28 per cent GST slab, such as automobile­s, cigarettes, and aerated drinks.

Aditi Nayar, chief economist, ICRA Ratings said that there was a clear case for extending compensati­on for states as Covid-19 has dealt a blow to state finances. "Stopping compensati­on in three quarters will be a structural shock for state finances. But, at the same time the assumed growth rate for protected revenues should be more realistic for it to be sustainabl­e," said Nayar.

Devendra Kumar Pant, chief economist, India Ratings said that the 14 per cent growth was fixed at a time when both economic growth and tax collection­s were more buoyant from what they were currently. “...Personally, a buoyancy of 1.1x along with a minimum threshold of 8 per cent or a different combinatio­n where compensati­on is based on collection rather than a fixed annual growth could be discussed in GST council," said Pant.

The Council will also provide clarificat­ion on the interest levied on wrongful or ineligible input tax credit claims, in accordance with the agenda circulated on Sunday. It may

address the steel sector’s problems with manufactur­ers facing enforcemen­t action including blocking input tax

credit and supply-side disruption due to fake invoicing by the scrap dealers. The Council may consider rationalis­ing the

GST rate on steel scrap from the current 18 per cent.

The Council may review concession­al rates on pandemic-related essentials like medicines, oxygen, and medical kits beyond September 30, 2021, amid fears of the third wave looming large.

It is also likely to discuss the way forward for rate rationalis­ation and correcting the inverted duty structure on textiles, footwear, etc and bringing petroleum products like aviation turbine fuel and natural gas within GST.

The fitment committee, which recommends rate changes to the Council, has likely proposed increasing the rate on footwear (less than Rs 1,000), readymade garments, and fabrics to 12 per cent from 5 per cent now. For inputs like manmade fibre and yarn, the panel has likely proposed reducing the rate to 12 per cent from 18 per cent to correct the distortion.

 ??  ?? The Council may review concession­al rates on pandemic-related essentials like medicines, oxygen, and medical kits beyond September 30 amid fears of the third wave looming large
The Council may review concession­al rates on pandemic-related essentials like medicines, oxygen, and medical kits beyond September 30 amid fears of the third wave looming large

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