KOLKATA:
The government on Friday asked phone companies to cut prices of
telecom services by rejigging costs to factor in the benefits of
increased tax credits under GST.
"Telecom companies
are required to re-work their costing and credits availability, and
rejig their prices and ensure the increased availability of credit is
passed on to customers," the finance ministry said in an official
statement.
According to the ministry, the additional input
tax credits (ITCs) that the telcos would enjoy under the goods and
services tax regime would be "as much as 2 per cent of the turnover of
the telecoms industry". Telcos, it said, would clearly benefit under
GST. "At present, they are neither eligible for credit of VAT paid on
goods nor of special additional duty (SAD) paid on imported
goods/equipment, but under GST, they would avail of integrated GST
(IGST) paid on domestically procured goods as also imported goods," the
finance ministry said.
Mobile carriers, however, disputed
the government’s observations, asserting that the increase in GST rate
for telecom services to 18 per cent from 15 per cent, is far more than
the effective rise in tax credits. Such a scenario, they said, would see
postpaid users shelling out 2-3 per cent more on their monthly phone
bills, while prepaid users would see a reduction in their talk-times
once GST kicks in.
"The notion that the increase in the
(GST) rate of 3 per cent is by and large getting compensated by a
reduction of cascading tax costs (on account of the fact that state VAT,
entry taxes and SAD on procurements have been subsumed) is
misconceived.
The total quantum of benefit accruing to
telecom companies on account of reduction in cascading taxes is on an
average merely around 0.7-1 per cent of revenues," said Rajan Mathews,
director general of Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI),
which represents Bharti Airtel, Vodafone India, Idea Cellular and new
entrant, Reliance Jio Infocomm.
This, he said, is since
"bulk of the tax costs incurred by telcos for procurement of goods is
central sales tax (CST) which is at the rate of 2 per cent against C
forms and entry tax is applicable only in selective states".
According to Mathews, the value of such procurements is in single
digits as compared to revenues. Furthermore, a number of key inputs such
as diesel, electricity duty etc. that are consumed by telecom companies
continue to be outside the GST regime, which is why, the telecom sector
would continue to reel under significant cascading taxes even under the
GST regime.
A tax expert at a Big Four consulting firm
backed the view, saying the total benefit by way of increased tax
credits to most telcos is unlikely to exceed 0.5 per cent of revenues as
against increase in the tax rate by 3 per cent, which would compel
telcos to raise call charges and data rates, post-July.
Mathews had recently said a higher GST rate of 18 per cent would make
services more expensive and further stress an already bleeding sector.
The finance ministry, however, maintained that telcos would enjoy the
benefits of full input tax credits (ITCs) under the GST regime, which
they do not currently enjoy.
From July, "telecom services
will attract 18 per cent GST, which is a pure value added tax (VAT) as
full ITCs of inputs and input services used in the course or furtherance
of business by the telecom service providers would be available," said
the ministry. Further, it said, telcos can also avail of input tax
credits of service tax paid on assignment of spectrum by the government
in calender 2016 for a period of three years.
According to
the government, since the entire credit can be taken in the same year
under GST regime, the balance two-third credit of the previous year
would be admissible in the current financial year itself ". Such
multiple incentives, it said, would hugely benefit telcos, in that,
their liabilities to pay GST through cash would stand reduced to about
87 per cent of what they paid last fiscal.
But Mathews said
"it would not be correct to state that perceived benefit of taking
credit in the same year instead of over 3 years had reduced the cost of
telecom companies, given the miniscule amount of interest benefit that
would actually come out of it over the current quantum of input tax
credit."
27 May 2017, 08:56 AM