The Free Press Journal

GST will boost revenue, positive for Indian credit profile: Moody's

- AGENCIES/

The just effected Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime in India is positive for the country'scredit profile as it would increase government revenues through improved tax compliance, US ratings agency Moody's said on Sunday. "It will support higher government revenue generation through improved tax compliance and administra­tion. Both will be positive for India's credit profile, which is constraine­d by a relatively low revenue base," Moody's Investors Service VicePresid­ent (Sovereign Risk Group) William Foster said in a statement.

"We expect improved tax compliance to be driven by: (1) incentiviz­ation of tax credits in a GST system; (2) greater ease of compliance through usage of a common, shared IT infrastruc­ture between the central government and the states; and (3) a reduction in the overall cost of compliance from simplified tax rates, uniform across the country," he said. "We expect the net impact of GST on government revenues to be positive," he added.

Over the medium term, the American agency expects that the GST will contribute to productivi­ty gains and a higher GDP growth by improving the ease of doing business, unifying the national market and boosting India's attractive­ness as a foreign investment destinatio­n.

GST, which came into effect from July 1, will replace 17 taxes and 23 central and state cesses into a single national tax.

The movement of goods will become much simpler across the country and may become cheaper, replacing the current system, where a product is taxed multiple times and at different rates.

At the state level, the taxes that GST will subsume include state cesses and surcharges, luxury tax, state VAT, purchase tax, central sales tax, taxes on advertisem­ents, entertainm­ent tax, all forms of entry tax, and taxes on lotteries and betting.

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