Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

GST eway bill to be rolled out today, industry fears economic disruption

NEW MOVE GST Network expects 700,000800,000 eway bills to be issued per day; step to help curb tax evasion

- Remya Nair and Gireesh Chandra Prasad

NEW DELHI: The e-way bill, key to preventing tax evasion under the Goods and Services Tax (GST), will be rolled out nationwide from Thursday amid persistent concerns in some quarters that its enforcemen­t could trigger fresh economic disruption.

E-way bill, an electronic documentat­ion tracking the movement of goods, is mandatory for all inter-state movement of goods from February 1. It is designed to prevent under-reporting and evasion of taxes.

The e-way bill is a key part of the GST architectu­re. It was put on hold until after GST, which was implemente­d from July 1, stabilised.

More than 2.84 million e-way bills have been generated in the trial phase so far.

“We rolled out the e-way bill system for all states from the 17th of last month. Given the experience so far of the last two weeks, we are optimistic that the roll out will be smooth,” said Prakash Kumar, chief executive officer of the Goods and Services Tax network.

GST Network expects that around 7-800,000 e-way bills will be issued every day across the country based on rough calculatio­ns of the transit permit data issued in the old value added tax regime. More than 340,000 e-way bills were issued on January 30 alone, Kumar said.

So far, more than 670,000 taxpayers and transporte­rs have registered under the e-way bill system.

It will also be mandatory for all movement of goods within a state from June 1, although at least 13 states are likely to implement it from February 1.

An e-way bill has to be generated for all movement of goods— within or outside a state—valued at more than ₹50,000 by prior online registrati­on of the consignmen­t. The supplier and the transporte­r can upload the details about the shipment and get a unique e-way bill number.

An e-way bill will be valid for a day for a distance of less than 100 kilometres. For every 100 km thereafter, the validity will be an additional one day from the relevant date. An e-way bill will have to be cancelled within 24 hours of it being issued.

There are also safeguards in place which do not allow a consignmen­t to be held up for more than 30 minutes.

Industry is seeking a relaxation of rules.

To reduce the compliance bur“today’s den, industry lobby group Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII) wants e-way bills to be issued only for movement of goods valued above ₹5 lakh.

CII has demanded that the validity of e-way bills be extended to a minimum of 5 days and more time be given for cancellati­on. However, the GST Council, the apex decision making authority, did not accept the suggestion­s.

“Implementi­ng e-way bill is a turning point in the transporta­tion business as it will lay the foundation for the success of GST. E-way bill leaves little chance for tax evasion,” said SP Singh, senior fellow at transport research body, Indian Foundation of Transport Research and Training (IFTRT).

The combined volume of inter-state trade in all the states and intra-state trade in the 13 states committed to implementi­ng the e-way bill for local movement of goods from Thursday will account for 65-70% of all cargo movement in the country, explained Singh.

According to a logistics industry executive, who asked not to be named, truck bookings rose about 30% in the first three weeks of January from the previous month, after which bookings for the coming weeks subsided, indicating that businesses and traders wanted to build up inventory before the electronic permits became compulsory.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? An eway bill has to be generated for all movement of goods — within or outside a state — valued at more than ₹50,000 by prior online registrati­on of the consignmen­t
MINT/FILE An eway bill has to be generated for all movement of goods — within or outside a state — valued at more than ₹50,000 by prior online registrati­on of the consignmen­t

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