No one knows yet if the implementation of the goods and
services tax (GST) will be inflationary. The Government would like us to
believe it will not be. Because multiple taxes at the Central and State
levels are to be subsumed into GST, and full credit allowed for taxes
paid through the value chain to businesses, the cascading effect would
mostly end when the new taxation regime replaces the existing one. The
lower impact of cascading taxes would normally have a calming effect on
prices and even lower several prices, thus cooling inflation. Taxes on
services would be higher and so there would be some inflationary push
from services consumption.
However, consumption is
not limited to tax-paid items and services from the formal sector. A
large part of the economy is cash-based, where invoices are rarely
issued by the seller of goods or provider of services. This holds true
for business-to-consumer transactions and for business-to-business also.
Many businesses choose to buy from such vendors as it means getting
things cheaper. GST disincentivises evasion and increases compliance.
Vendors who are not GST-compliant run the risk of losing business
because those buying from them will not get input credit for taxes paid.
Therefore, to protect their business and maintain revenue growth, it is
expected many vendors will embrace GST.
While that
would be good for the entire value chain, someone must bear the taxes on
all such goods and services. Since GST is a consumption tax, it will be
the final consumer of that good or service, namely, the household that
would bear the tax. That could push up the prices of some items in the
household basket. Consequently GST, even after lowering taxes on many
items, may increase the inflationary pressure felt by a household —
particularly by those in the lower income groups that are more likely to
be consumers of informal sector goods and services.
05 May 2017, 10:54 AM