The Asian Age

HSBC: GST fails to end cash sales

■ New tax regime has yet to deliver on its promise ■ Glitches in IT network has led to rise in cash

-

Mumbai, June 22: A year into implementa­tion, GST has not delivered on the promised formalisat­ion of the economy as yet, while the glitches in the onenationo­ne- tax regime has increased the demand for cash, says a foreign brokerage report.

“The GST regime was originally associated with formality. But so far, in our view, it has not been able to live up to that promise. nor has it brought down the demand for cash which has in fact only gone up,” British brokerage HSBC said in a report on Friday.

The report, however, noted that over the longterm, GST will lead to more formalisat­ion of the economy.

The GST was implemente­d from July 1, 2017 and since then it has undergone multiple changes including lowering of tax rates of many items and an increase in the numbers of cesses and the levy rate, which was supposed to be done away with under this tax regime.

In the short- run, the glitches in the framework, including delays in tax refunds, teething issues with the new IT network and higher tax rates for services have led to an increase in the cash- based activity, the report said, adding which is one of the factors for the rise cash circulatio­n.

“Cash in circulatio­n is rising above trend, but not because rural India is faring better, rather it is due to a revival in the ‘ informal’ sectors, thanks to the continued remonetisa­tion,” the report said.

In April, the then finance minister Arun Jaitley had claimed that GST and note ban had led to increased formalisat­ion of the economy and also cited that one crore new I- T returns were filed in FY18.

Citing corporate sales data, the report said the level of formalisat­ion of the economy has gone back to the pre- note- ban levels. “Any semblance of increased formalisat­ion of the economy following demonetisa­tion, if at all, has for now, reverted to pre- demonetisa­tion levels,” the report said.

The report said usually rural wages are the key driver of cash demand, but that relationsh­ip is broken for now. “As much as 70 per cent of rural India, whose main source of income is wages, may not be doing too well at present. As such, growing of cash in circulatio­n should be tempered. But, instead, the cash- to- GDP ratio has shot up since mid- FY18,” the report said.

The report, however, said once GST settles down, the e- way bill system matures and refunds are expedited with improvemen­t in IT systems, tax evasions will fall and the recent rise in informalit­y will diminish gradually.

Rural wages will rise on higher inflation, stronger constructi­on growth, normal rains and minimum support price increases which can put pressure on cash in circulatio­n growth, it said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India