Business Today

Adding to the Chaos

With multiple rate structure for the same good or service, GST may create new problems even as it solves some old ones

- COLUMN/ Prosenjit Datta

With multiple rate structure for the same good or service, GST may create new problems even as it solves some old ones

As the deadline for the GST rollout approaches, the government and GST Council seem intent on making it more complicate­d than it already is. The original GST idea was to have a single rate for all goods and products. The government complicate­d it by making four different rates – 5 per cent, 12 per cent, 18 per cent, and 28 per cent – plus a 0 per cent rate for some goods, and multiple surcharges and cesses for different goods. Then it created one new rate – 3 per cent – for gold and precious gems and then another one – 0.25 per cent for uncut diamonds.

If that was not bad enough, it has also created multiple GST rates for the same good or service depending on its price, in a number of categories. Thus, the GST rate of footwear below `500 will be 5 per cent, but for shoes that are priced more than `500, the GST rate will be 18 per cent. For readymade apparels, the GST rate will be 5 per cent for anything that is priced below `1,000, and 12 per cent for clothing priced above `1,000.

Hotels and restaurant­s will see not one or two, but half a dozen different rates. Restaurant­s with a turnover of less than `50 lakh will be levied a GST of 5per cent. Restaurant­s that have a higher turnover, but do not have an AC, will shell out 12 per cent. If they provide customers with AC facilities, the charge will be 18 per cent. Five-star restaurant­s will have a luxury tax of 28 per cent tagged on. Hotels, lodges, etc., with a room tariff of less than `1,000 per night will be levied a GST of 5 per cent, while those with rooms priced between `1,001 and `2,500 will levy a tax rate of 12 per cent. If the rooms cost between `2,501 and `5,000, the rate is 18 per cent and, of course, anything above that will be considered luxury and taxed accordingl­y.

Tax consultant­s point out that this will not only create enormous confusion, it will also lead to endless disputes. Worse, it provides an incentive for tax evasion.

A footwear firm which used to make a shoe priced at `550 or `600, would now be tempted to cut costs, use cheaper material and price it below `500 to attract customers. Even if he didn’t, he could end up having classifica­tion disputes with tax authoritie­s, because he makes a range of shoes – some priced low and others high – which attract different taxes. Ditto for clothing.

In hotels and restaurant­s, it will be worse. Many hotels have dining areas both indoors and outdoors. The tax will be different (or should be different) for the customer depending on where he sits. Similarly, hotels give discounts during off season. This would mean calculatin­g taxes at different rates depending on the season and can lead to endless disputes with the taxmen.

The worst case scenario is that the goods and service provider, to avoid disputes, decides to be cautious and charge at the higher, rather than lower, rate. In which case, since GST is a consumptio­n tax, the consumer loses and pays a higher tax than she or he should.

The multiple rates show that government still wants to decide what is luxury, what is premium and what is affordable. It also amounts to double taxation for the better earning customer. The higher income customer anyway pays a higher income tax. There is little justificat­ion in charging him a higher tax also, because he can afford a better quality of product. In absolute terms, he pays a higher tax on consumptio­n anyway because the proportion­al tax amount for a higher priced good is more than for a lower priced good. Also, what is one man’s premium is another man’s luxury. For the government to decide what should be considered luxury is wrong, because it is the mentality of the nanny state.

The GST was supposed to be a clean, simple tax that solved the problems of the current multiple taxes and levies. As it turns out, it is anything but. And it will create new problems even as it solves some old ones. ~

Calculatin­g taxes at different rates can lead to endless disputes with the taxmen

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India