NEW DELHI:
A group of ministers or GoM has been set up under Assam finance minister Himanta Biswa Sarma to make the composition scheme more attractive and to revisit the goods and services tax rates on restaurants.
The GST Council, chaired by finance minister Arun Jaitley
and consisting of his state counterparts, had on Friday constituted the
GoM, which will submit its report within two weeks. The other members
are Bihar deputy chief minister Sushil Modi, Jammu and Kashmir finance
minister Haseeb Drabu, Punjab finance minister Manpreet Singh Badal and
Chhattisgarh minister of commercial taxes Amar Agrawal, according to an
office memorandum.
With only 15.5 lakh of the total 98 lakh businesses registered under the GST
regime opting for the composition scheme, the GST Council decided to
set up the GoM to examine measures to make it more attractive.
Businesses with turnover of up to Rs 1 crore can opt for the
composition scheme and they can pay taxes in the range of 1-5% and file
returns quarterly.
The GoM has also been tasked with
revisiting tax structure of different categories of restaurants with a
view to rationalising or reducing the rates. Currently, GST is levied at
12% on non-AC restaurants while it is 18% in case of airconditioned
ones.
The GoM will examine whether the AC restaurants pass on the benefit of
cost reduction under GST to consumers and if they don’t, whether they
should be disallowed input tax credit claims.
To make the
composition scheme more attractive, the GoM will look into whether
turnover of exempted goods can be excluded from the total turnover
threshold for levying tax under the composition scheme. It will examine
whether the scheme can be extended to taxpayers dealing in inter-state
supplies of goods and whether the manufacturers opting for it can be
given the benefit of input tax credit.
The GST Council, in
its last meeting, hiked the threshold for benefits under the composition
scheme to Rs 1 crore, from Rs 75 lakh set earlier.
09 Oct 2017, 08:57 AM