Deccan Chronicle

GST good, but nitty gritty remains

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The July 1 rollout of the “one nation, one tax” GST regime does not seem such a frightenin­g prospect now. The Centre, the states and several stakeholde­rs seem to have thrashed out several issues in fixing the rates for close to 1,400 goods and services although many anomalies remain to be sorted. A single tax subsuming several taxes and levies of different authoritie­s promises a far simpler life for manufactur­ers, traders and sellers even though our way of taking corrective measures to tackle the incongruit­ies might prove quite exasperati­ng. The major question the GST regime would have to answer is whether the insatiable demands of states for revenue can be fulfilled given the great spirit of give and take that has marked the progress of national decision making thus far in favour of GST which, not without reason, is labelled as the biggest tax reform since Independen­ce. The finance minister is promising a revenue neutral switchover in the new system, but the fact remains that there is much more to be done as the GST is still a work in progress.

Some quixotic aberration­s have popped up already like guns attracting lesser tax than hybrid automobile­s. While armaments may attract the 28 per cent slab, hybrid vehicles may face a whopping 43 per cent levy including the luxury top-up tax. The four rate bands for services also carry the warning that the road ahead is going to be extremely complicate­d for certain service industries like telecom and restaurant­s. The invidious nature of trying to tax Peter for even the bare necessitie­s while sparing Paul is nowhere more apparent than in the restaurant business with different rates for those establishm­ents which provide air-conditioni­ng and those that don’t. It is the underlying philosophy of posing as pro-poor that places this issue in poor light. Taxing telecom at a higher slab could become a burden for everyone in the country including, most of all, the debt-riddled telecom services providers.

The proof of the pudding is in the eating and it remains to be seen how inflationa­ry the single tax system is going to prove. The fear that parts of the services sector, including newspapers that have attracted a five per cent tax on their lifeline of advertisem­ents, are being taxed a bit on the higher side cannot be brushed away, more so since the services sector accounts for more than half of India’s $2 trillion economy.

There is room for optimism even if it must be said now that competitiv­e taxing by states cannot be allowed to sneak in on any pretext. Only if the underlying principle of federalism works will GST be the elixir...

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