Millennium Post

No consensus yet

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Reports indicate that the Goods and Services Tax Council on Saturday failed to arrive at a consensus on the issue of assessee jurisdicti­on between the Centre and the states. In other words, the Council has yet to reach a decision on how the Centre and states would divide the authority on implementi­ng the new indirect tax regime. The Union minister said the next meeting on December 11-12 would focus on the completion of approval of the drafts, and take up cross empowermen­t law. The last few meetings held by the Council have been inconclusi­ve as well. Even as the ongoing row over the Modi government's abrupt demonetisa­tion of high denominati­on currencies brought in its trail simmering discontent among several State satraps particular­ly from West Bengal and Delhi, the revised draft laws have touched on raw nerves of the compensati­on issue. Most of them increasing­ly feel that their fiscal autonomy is being whittled down under the garb of cooperativ­e federalism to stay dependent on the largesse of the Centre. “The Centre and states had reached an understand­ing in the initial meetings of the council that the states will have sole control over assessees till Rs 1.5 crore turnover,” according to a report in Business Standard on Sunday. “Over this limit, both the Centre and states will have power in case of goods. In the case of services, the Centre will have sole power over assessees till the time state officials have enough skills to tax services. However, this understand­ing was broken later after some states argued that they also impose a tax on certain services, such as entertainm­ent tax, and have powers over assessees in services as well. The division of administra­tive powers between the Centre and the states has been hanging in the balance since then. The Centre, on the other hand, is now pressing for cross empowermen­t for all assesses or those who would be scrutinise­d,” the report added. For States disadvanta­ged by the advent of GST and looking for fair compensati­on, the revised draft laws unequivoca­lly said the final compensati­on to States would be subject to CAG (Comptrolle­r and Auditor General) vetting States' claims of revenue loss. Even as quarterly payment of compensati­on to states is forecast, the Centre has also laid claim to any excess amount that might accrue to the GST Compensati­on Fund. The earlier proposal was to disburse such surplus solely among the States. These moves are not in the best interest of cooperativ­e federalism the NDA government so grandly proclaimed to underpin.

Beyond the question of administra­tive controls, there are serious concerns over the rollout of GST from April 1, given the impact of demonetisa­tion on the finances of state government­s. Bengal Finance Minister Amit Mitra raised this issue a few days back in an interview to an Indian news channel. “We expected a huge destabilis­ation of the fiscal architectu­re of the country with GST. State taxes will fall significan­tly, and that is why we sought that the centre should compensate us for five years,” Mitra said in an interview to NDTV. “We all supported GST under the premise that this would be the only destabilis­ation factor. We did not know that there will be a much bigger destabilis­ation in the form of demonetisa­tion that will be let loose on the country.” Some have attributed Mitra's opposition to the Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee's staunch opposition to demonetiza­tion. This is a gross misreading of Mitra's apprehensi­ons. Unlike other opposition parties, the TMC has been one of the biggest supporters of GST Bill proposed by the current ruling dispensati­on at the Centre. However, the introducti­on of demonetiza­tion has crippled key industries, particular­ly constructi­on, textiles, transporta­tion, hotels and small manufactur­ers. Consequent­ly, tax collection­s from these sectors have also fallen. With the consequent loss of revenue for the states after the implementa­tion of GST, the fears articulate­d by the Bengal finance do carry some weight. His contention is that the Centre must implement GST at a time when revenues accruing to the states do not decline significan­tly. Close on the heels of Mitra's comments, Jaitley said earlier this week there was no question of going back on GST. “I am here to clarify that GST will be implemente­d. I read some comments about demand for a reconsider­ation of GST. But if somebody goes through the constituti­onal amendments, he or she will understand there is no scope for such reconsider­ation,” said Jaitley. He went on to add that the existing tax system is valid only for another year. Reports indicate that the government hopes to clear supporting legislatio­n for the reform in this session of parliament.

The GST envisaged by this council of central and state finance ministers empowered to administer the tax is a far cry from the One Indirect Tax, One Rate and One Registrati­on motto articulate­d by the Centre. It has now become an indirect tax system with four levels (5 percent, 12 percent, 18 percent and 28 percent) and numerous exemptions. Economists have lamented the concession­s ceded to state government­s by the Centre. In a recent column for Bloomberg, Mihir Sharma, a columnist on business affairs wrote: “It's still possible that, over time, the government will realise its mistake and cut down the number of exemptions, the number of different rates and the amount of paperwork required. That will require India's elected politician­s, in both New Delhi and state capitals, to look carefully at the data, be nimble and ignore the protestati­ons of their bureaucrat­s. The alternativ­e is that the GST will simply not make enough of a difference to India's absurdly complex tax system to shift the country's growth trajectory. It would be -- as one economist put it -- a ‘name-changer, rather than a game-changer'." Nonetheles­s, after nearly three decades in the wilderness, this government has almost managed to bring numerous stakeholde­rs on board for a piece of legislatio­n that is an improvemen­t, if only marginally, on India's notoriousl­y complex indirect tax system. Progress is a slow burner.

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