Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Extend period of GST compensati­on: Party

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE PARTY WILL PUSH THE POLICY CHANGES AS A PART OF ITS 2024 MANIFESTO

UDAIPUR: The compensati­on period to states for any loss of revenue under the Goods and Services Tax regime, which ends in June, must be extended by another three years, given the challengin­g economic situation and poor financial health of the states, the Congress party demanded on Saturday.

India must also “reset” its economic policies, 31 years after the government ushered in economic reforms, to take into account “global and domestic developmen­ts” as well as “social inequaliti­es” and tweak the policies “for the next 10-20-30 years,” it said. The party will push the policy changes as a part of its 2024 manifesto.

Addressing the media at the Congress’s Chintan Shivir, former finance minister P Chidambara­m demanded an extension of the compensati­on period and announced that the party would “strongly disapprove” any attempt of the government to prevent the GST Council from seeking such an extension.

The GST law allowed a five-year period for compensati­ng states of any loss in tax revenues after the implementa­tion of the Goods and Services Tax in July 2017. The compensati­on window ends in June.

Thirty one years after he accompanie­d Manmohan Singh, then finance minister, in ushering liberalisa­tion through economic reforms in 1991, Chidambara­m, who was then commerce minister, now pitched for another “reset” in economic policies. “We believe that we must prepare the Indian economy and the Indian workforce to adapt to the ways in which industry, business and trade will be conducted in the 21st century, with the greater use of automation, robotics, machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce,” he said.

Recalling his first experience in policymaki­ng in 1991, Chidambara­m said, “We are now 30 years down the road. The world is changed, India is changed. A reset means taking into account global and domestic developmen­t and fine tuning the policies that have obviously given us benefits, but clearly a time for reset has come.”

“While we acknowledg­e that we have reaped enormous benefits as a result of liberalisa­tion, we have to take into account global and domestic developmen­ts, and reset our policies for the next 10-20-30 years,” he added.

He described the current state of economy as “a matter of extreme concern”, slammed the Reserve Bank of India for falling “behind the curve” in tackling inflation and said: “Inflation has risen to unacceptab­le level. The WPI (Wholesale Price Index) is at 14.55% and the CPI (Consumer Price Index) is at 7.9%. There are high taxes on petrol and diesel and high GST tax rates. The job situation has never been so low, with 40.38% job participat­ion rate and unemployme­nt rate at 7.83%.”

“The consequenc­es of the poorly drafted and unfairly implemente­d GST laws brought in by the Modi government in 2017 are there for everyone to see,” he said.

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