Rolling a truck of vegetables into Gujarat, the state once governed by
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, requires a bribe of 500 rupees to 2,000
rupees even with your papers in order, according to Rakesh Kaul,
vice-president of Caravan Roadways Ltd., which has about 400 trucks
plying India’s pot-holed road.
But getting past the state
tax collectors into Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state, will
cost you more: Upwards of 20,000 rupees, Kaul says. The penalty for not
paying off the right people is steep fines from factories whose raw
materials are stuck at state borders sometimes for as long as five days.
That’s why he and other companies are cheering the July 1
implementation of India’s biggest tax reform since independence in 1947.
The move will replace more than a dozen levies with a new goods and
services tax. That should help reduce the immense power India’s myriad
middlemen wield at state borders, free up internal trade, make it easier
to do business and widen the country’s tiny tax base.
"Even if your documents are correct, they will find some small error and
hold your vehicle," Kaul says in his New Delhi office, located in a
dusty trucking depot where hundreds of drivers sit near their brightly
painted trucks in the 42-degree Celsius (108-degrees Fahrenheit) heat.
"Once GST is there, all that is gone."
Common Market
The new tax would be Modi’s most significant economic reform since
coming to power in 2014. Yet with less than two weeks to go before its
implementation, the government is still refining the details, announcing
on Sunday it would relax initial filing requirements for July and
August amid concerns businesses were not ready. Despite the last-minute
tweaks, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley confirmed Wednesday the tax would roll out on July 1.
While India already boasts one of the world’s fastest growing major
economies, architects of the reform say it will stoke efficiency and
growth by creating a common market of 1.3 billion consumers, a
population greater than the U.S., Europe, Brazil, Mexico and Japan
combined.
QuickTake explainer on the new GST
Take the border crossings: Lorry drivers in India lose 60 percent of
transit time to road blocks, tolls and other stoppages, which means
logistics costs are up to three-times higher than international
benchmarks. While truck drivers may still need to stop to have their
goods checked, cut that time in half, and logistics costs could fall by
up to 40 percent, according to a 2014 World Bank report.
There’s no shortage of hyperbole when it comes to describing the GST
changes, which took more than a decade of protracted negotiations before
Parliament pushed it through. The government’s chief economic adviser
Arvind Subramanian described it as "transformational."
"The
GST is super important," he said in an April interview. "It is also a
daring, bold experiment in what I call the good governance of
cooperative federalism."
Four Brackets
The GST rollout comes less than a year after the government’s surprise
move in November to remove 86 percent of currency in circulation -- a
decision that contributed to a sharp slowing in growth during the
January to March quarter. While the GST is seen as a leap forward in
simplifying India’s system, getting the reform across the line has
required compromises: India will have four tax brackets instead of the
flat rate many other countries have.
Air conditioners,
refrigerators and makeup will be taxed at 28 percent, for example, while
toothpaste lands at 18 percent. Plane tickets attract a 5 percent GST
rate, but business class tickets are 12 percent. Staples such as food
grains and fresh vegetables are not taxed, while education and health
services will continue to be exempted.
"India is obviously a
huge and complex country in which governments’ ability successfully to
implement major reforms is limited," said Ian Hall, acting director of
the Griffith Asia Institute.
’Different Countries’
The incoming GST will also force companies to consolidate their supply
chain among fewer, larger facilities, says Vineet Agarwal, the managing
director of Transport Corp. of India Ltd., which has about 10,000
trucks and around 11 million square feet of warehouses.
Currently, companies operate smaller factories and warehouses to take
advantage of tax breaks offered by various states, as well as to avoid
transporting goods over too many borders. "Literally, almost all states
act like different countries," Agarwal said.
One of the
biggest goals of the GST is to widen the tax net in an economy where
more than 90 percent of workers are employed informally. Companies will
need to be in the tax system and prove they paid taxes to claim a credit
against their costs. Pressure to comply will increase along the line
and the black economy should shrink.
Inevitable Disruption
Still, the tax may throw up losers. Manufacturing states may initially
suffer as the extra revenue is generated in more populous consuming
states. There are also sectors untouched by the new tax, including
alcohol and real estate. Thousands of tax staff will also need to be
trained and complex new IT systems adopted.
"There will
inevitably be disruption as a result of the implementation of the GST,"
said Samir Saran, vice president of the New Delhi-based Observer
Research Foundation.
To be sure, India isn’t alone in
introducing a new tax that crosses jurisdictions and territories. More
than 150 countries have a value added tax or GST including Canada,
Australia and the European Union, according to Deloitte.
The optimistic case is that initial ruffles are soon smoothed over,
according to Eswar Prasad, a professor at Cornell University in Ithaca,
New York. "As in the case of the recent demonetization gambit, any
disruption in commerce and economic activity is likely to be
short-lived, while the longer-term benefits could be significant," he
said.
Big companies will be prepared, Agarwal at Transport
Corp. says, but he frets about the smaller, informal businesses.
"There’s going to be chaos," he says.
That informal
workforce includes Babu Ram Rajput, a 28-year-old trucker in jeans and
sandals who regularly drives goods across a vast swathe of north India.
"I have not got any training," he says, holding up a sheaf
of tattered, dirty documents related to his current cargo. "I only know
that GST is coming."
21 Jun 2017, 12:40 PM