The investigation will mean that the real estate
firms who will now come under the scanner will have to give explanation
for their actions including any increase in price following the
introduction of GST.
in the country who did not pass on the benefits of GST policy to
consumers are likely to face investigation soon. The new development
comes after a National Anti-profiteering Authority panel received
several complaints regarding the reluctance of real estate firms to pass
on the benefits of a tax cut to their customers.
A standing
committee of officials who are attached to the recently established
National Anti-profiteering Authority (NAA) is all set to investigate the
complaints, a report in the Mint stated.
This
would mean that the builders will become the first group that would
come under the investigation of the authority which, according to a
source, will direct the Director General of Safeguards, an investigating
body within the Central Board of Excise and Customs, probe the issue.
While
in the earlier tax regime, the total tax burden was about 9 percent
without the input tax credit, the actual tax burden under the new GST
regime is quite low due to high component of tax credits.
This
meant that the builders should have reduced the EMI that the customers
were to pay them in proportion to this. However, not only are some
builders declining to provide this benefit to the consumers but are
using this opportunity to collect higher amounts.
"We have
received complaints against builders from across India. The common tenor
of the complaint is that the builders have increased the prices of the
houses citing GST. The complaints will now be looked into as the
anti-profiteering authority has now been set up," an unnamed official
was quoted as saying in the report.
The investigation will mean
that the real estate firms who will now come under the scanner and they
will have to give an explanation for their actions including any
increase in price following the introduction of GST.
However, there
are widespread concerns among experts that the existing
anti-profiteering provisions in GST will not be sufficient enough to
ensure that the benefit of new taxation system will reach the common
man. They argue that there is nothing in the present law that will
prevent businessmen from increasing the prices of products that do not
come under the Essential Commodities Act.
20 Dec 2017, 11:47 AM