After the Central government reduced the excise duty on motor fuels,
state governments matched the move by cutting the VAT imposed on motor
fuels. Gujarat and Maharashtra have announced a reduction of 4 percent
and Himachal Pradesh has announced a 1 percent cut. Meanwhile
Uttarakhand has proposed a 2 percent cut in VAT and another 2 percent in
cess. This move helps in easing the rising prices of retail fuel and
has reignited the debate on uniform taxation on motor fuels and their
inclusion under GST.
Even as a section of the Street argues that
petroleum products (a key input for almost all industries) should be
brought under the ambit of GST, we examine the feasibility of the same
in the wake of the raging debate.
Background
International crude prices have been on the rise and
countries like India with almost 70 percent dependence on crude imports
are feeling the heat. With deregulated pricing, the entire burden of the
hike is being passed on to the consumer, who have all the reason to
feel aggrieved. Thanks to an increase in fuel taxes, they did not
benefit when crude prices were sliding. Now that crude prices are
rising, they are being forced to shell out more.
What is the furor about?
Even
after excise and VAT cuts, prices for petrol and diesel at Rs 72 per
litre and Rs 59 per litre, stand close to their three-year highs. Over
these last three years global crude prices have halved from around USD
110 per barrel to USD 56 per barrel. This effectively means that Indian
consumers are paying almost the same for petrol and diesel when crude
was at USD 110/barrel.
Taxation conundrum and price buildup
Currently,
two taxes, VAT and excise duty, are imposed on petrol and diesel. The
VAT component varies across cities and the percentage is decided by
individual state governments. Excise duty is imposed by the central
government and is a fixed amount per litre across states. Nearly half
the current price of petrol and diesel is attributable to taxes imposed
by the Central and the state government. This means the cumulative rate
of current taxes (VAT+excise) amounts to a whopping 71 percent on diesel
and 99 percent on petrol which was around a mere 15 percent at the
start of 2014.
Benefits of inclusion in GST?
Implementation
of GST on petrol and diesel prices would bring about pricing parity
across states and facilitate free movement across the country. Moreover,
petroleum products are key inputs for many industries and since they
are outside the ambit of GST, the user industries cannot claim input tax
credit (ITC) on a key raw material. Inclusion in GST would enable
companies to claim an input tax credit thereby reducing their overall
tax burden. This would specially be beneficial for oil marketing
companies.
Question of feasibility
At
present, cumulative tax rate on petrol and diesel stands around 99 and
71 percent, which are much above the highest GST slab of 28 percent.
This raises questions about feasibility of petrol and diesel under GST
in the current fiscal.
A mere Rs 2 reduction in excise duty
recently amounts to around Rs 26,000 crore reduced collections annually
(around 10 percent of total collections from fuels). The cut would
reduce the FY18 receipts by a whopping Rs 13,000 crore, which is
approximately 0.8 percent of our total budgeted receipts for FY18 and
around 2.4 percent of the year’s total estimated fiscal deficit.
A
reduction in the VAT imposed by state governments will further add to a
loss in revenue for states, although the degree of impact for states
would be lower given that VAT is charged as percentage of total fuel
price which have been rising sharply.
It is unlikely that the
government would want to tinker with the recently implemented GST
structure and introduce any slab higher than 28 percent. A straight
forward implementation of GST at 28 percent on fuel would result in a
deep hit on the government revenues.
Another possibility is to
include fuel under a demerit category (or maybe introduce a new category
name) and levy a cess to compensate for the loss of revenue (currently
Delhi government charges 0.25 percent as pollution cess on diesel).
This,
too, has its own set of problems. Currently, demerit goods attract a
cess. Petrol and diesel, on the other hand, are basic needs for retail
and commercial consumers. Given the huge difference between the maximum
GST rates and current taxation rate on petrol and diesel, the government
would require a cess of nearly 50-75 percent to make up for lost
revenue. Without such a cess, the government will have to take a huge
hit on its revenues which could impact infrastructure spending.
Although
recent steps of excise and VAT reduction stand favorable for customers
and cool down the heat around price hike for the time being, an
altogether implementation of GST seems distant. Till such time the
government manages to find an alternative source of revenue, it will
continue to play ’heads I win, tails you lose’ with the consumer.
12 Oct 2017, 06:50 AM