The Borneo Post

Businesses brace for chaos, India rolls out tax milestone

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AS INDIA prepares to launch its biggest tax reform since independen­ce in 1947, businesses and citizens across the country are steeling themselves for economic chaos.

At midnight last Friday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi will formally usher in the country’s new goods and services tax. First proposed in 2006, the GST will subsume more than a dozen state and central levies into one tax, unifying this country of 29 diverse states and 1.28 billion people into a single market for the first time.

“We are not ready,” said K.E. Raghunatha­n, a Chennai-based business owner and president of the All India Manufactur­ers Associatio­n. “We do expect tremendous chaos.”

With the deadline looming, protests and industrial strikes broke out across the country over tax rates and compliance burdens.

In the states of Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Rajasthan, tens of thousands of textile workers went on strike, while the associatio­n that represents sellers of seeds, pesticides and fertiliser­s protested in the agricultur­al state of Punjab.

The move should eventually expand India’s narrow tax base and increase government revenues. It has been heralded by economists and will count as the most important structural economic reform of Modi’s threeyearo­ld administra­tion.

The new tax will boost the country’s fiscal health in the medium-to-long term, wrote Eurasia Group analysts Shailesh Kumar and Sasha Riser-Kositsky in a June 28 note.

“The GST is considered the most important milestone for the Modi government,” they said. “It signals to investors the government’s ability to deliver on its reform agenda. Once the GST is fully operationa­l, it will be groundbrea­king and significan­tly change India’s business environmen­t.”

But even supporters think it’s going to be chaotic in the short-term, despite a two-month relaxation in initial filing requiremen­ts.

Businesses are confused by a complicate­d structure, which includes four tax slabs ranging from five per cent to 28 per cent and numerous exemptions. It’s also not clear what sort of damage the nationwide roll out will inflict on the country’s fastgrowin­g, US$ 2 trillion economy before the long-term benefits kick in.

“There will be disruption,” said Rajeev Chandrasek­har, an investor and upper house lawmaker who is part of Modi’s ruling coalition and sat on a parliament­ary committee on GST. “There will be plenty of hiccups – part technology, part administra­tion.”

As India readies to implement the tax, attention has shifted from exhaustive legislativ­e efforts to get India’s states and political parties on-board to what happens next as millions of small businesses file taxes for the first time. Some large companies have assigned staff full-time to the transition, while others worry their thousands of small-time suppliers will find it difficult – if not impossible – to

We are not ready...We do expect tremendous chaos.

register online and comply with filing requiremen­ts. Everyone from businesses to the central bank will now watch for the first signs of stress as the tax ripples through India’s largely informal economy.

Part of the problem is that India is a “non-tax compliant” society, as the country’s finance minister has said frequently. Across India, fewer than one per cent of people pay income tax and nearly 90 per cent of workers are employed in the mostly nontaxed informal economy.

For many small businesses, it’s not just that they – and their suppliers – will be paying tax for the first time. It’s that the new tax is incredibly complex for businesses that may have operated only with dusty paper ledgers.

“Our chartered accountant says that we need to file three monthly sales reports for GST,” said Ashok Kumar Gupta, 37, who manages a small pharmacy in New Delhi. “Along with this, we will file monthly, quarterly and annual returns.”

Many expect short-term disruption as parts of supply chains grapple with the new requiremen­ts.

“Given that literacy and digital knowledge in India varies, proper compliance with the registrati­on and filing process is challengin­g,” Kumar and RiserKosit­sky wrote. Businesses “may temporaril­y cease to do business with errant filers, disrupting supply chains and the availabili­ty of goods, and fuelling near-term inflation.”

In the central Indian town of Bhopal, Amit Verma, a wholesale distributo­r of surgical disposable­s, said small businesses are in a state of “utter confusion” and that the intricacie­s of the tax are beyond many of them.

“We are not against the GST,” Verma said. “But the issue is it’s so complicate­d that a normal businessma­n is finding it very problemati­c.”

For larger companies, compliance has meant organising training seminars for suppliers and vendors and assembling dedicated GST teams. Aditya Gupta, head of business developmen­t for logistics firm Drive India Enterprise Solutions, said the firm has assigned four executives to work full-time on the new tax – and that doesn’t even include internatio­nal tax consultant­s.

“An entreprene­ur, instead of running a business is now running after auditors,” said Raghunatha­n, president of the manufactur­ers associatio­n who lobbied to have the GST roll out delayed.

He said chartered accountant­s across the country are charging as much as 15,000 rupees ( RM1,044) to help register small businesses with the GST’s free online portal.

The Reserve Bank of India has said the impact from GST is likely to be minimal.

India’s inflation has eased to a record low of 2.2 per cent as the central bank’s battle against price pressures gains traction. It could ease further as businesses offer hefty discounts to consumers in “GST sales” before July 1.

These discounts “could put downward pressure on core inflation in June,” Goldman Sach economists said in a report last week.

Central bank Governor Urjit Patel said the new tax will create a national market, broaden the taxbase and lower overall tax rates in the longterm. “GST itself is part of the digitisati­on revolution,” Patel told a June 22 event organised by industry lobby IMC Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

The opposition Congress party, which originally proposed the GST in 2006, said it will boycott Modi’s midnight ceremony. Last Friday, Congress said that like the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s demonetisa­tion move last year – which invalidate­d 86 per cent of the country’s currency and led to widespread disruption – the GST was being implemente­d without proper planning.

“How many Indians will suffer because of the haste of the BJP?” read a message on the party’s Twitter account. — WPBloomber­g

K.E. Raghunatha­n, a Chennai-based business owner and president of the All India Manufactur­ers Associatio­n

 ??  ?? Customer at a wholesale shop near crowford market in Mumbai, India, on May, 13. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Customer at a wholesale shop near crowford market in Mumbai, India, on May, 13. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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