Khaleej Times

GST headaches never seem to end...

- Saritha Rai

bangalore — India’s new tax regime is causing widespread headaches for small merchants and the e-commerce companies they work with.

The Goods and Services Tax, which went into effect on July 1, has been touted as the biggest tax reform since the country’s independen­ce seven decades ago, aimed at replacing hundreds of regional and federal levies with a standardis­ed national tax. But retailers are discoverin­g the new system is anything but simple.

They’re battling a dizzying array of documentat­ion requiremen­ts and product classifica­tions, which affect the percentage of tax charged, that threaten to choke businesses with bureaucrac­y. Thousands of small merchants have been dropped from e-commerce sites because they can’t meet the new requiremen­ts.

Seller Archit Agarwal is still struggling to get the new rules straight after months of preparatio­n. The owner of A2A Trading sells imported wireless headphones on Amazon.com’s local site, but he’s scrambling to figure out how his existing warehouse stock should be taxed, how customer returns should be handled and how detailed record-keeping should be. In August, he’ll start filing three sets of monthly tax returns.

“The new system is overwhelmi­ng,” said the 32-year-old just days after the GST was put in place. The harried Agarwal was heading into a low-rise building in Bangalore to one of Amazon’s 16 pop-up GST Cafes. A sign outside advertises “Get GST compliant and sell online chintafree”, and dozens of sellers have come to offload their chinta, or worries , before the online giant’s panel of taxation experts.

The rate of GST varies depends on the product and service, ranging from zero to 28 per cent, as well as numerous exemptions. For example, fresh milk doesn’t incur GST, cream attracts a five per cent rate while butter and cheese are charged at 12 per cent.

While merchants didn’t always comply with their tax obligation­s under the old regime, the consequenc­es of not filing proper returns now are dire. Penalties range from fines of ₹10,000 ($155) to five years in jail. Those with large amounts of tax due will not be eligible for bail. In the past weeks, e-commerce companies big and small have bounced thousands of noncomplia­nt sellers off their websites. Some small businesses and restaurant­s have voluntaril­y dropped out because they can’t meet the new requiremen­ts.

Flipkart Online Services, the country’s largest online retailer, said “close to 95 per cent” of its 100,000 merchants are compliant, but the rest were removed before the GST kicked in. Rival Amazon said it would retain nearly all of its 200,000 merchants.

“Small e-commerce businesses are getting knocked out by GST,” said Ravjeet Singh of the Delhi-based MS Trading, which sells men’s t-shirts on both sites. “The changeover is complicate­d and the penalties for not paying timely taxes are so harsh that people are scared.”

 ??  ??
 ?? AFP ?? Indian retailers are discoverin­g that the new GST system is anything but simple. —
AFP Indian retailers are discoverin­g that the new GST system is anything but simple. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates