rates on 150-200 items are likely to be cut from 28 percent, with the
GST Council set to approve sweeping changes including simpler
procedures and a single return filing form for small firms in its next
meeting on Friday.
Top sources in the finance ministry told
Moneycontrol that the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) is steering the
proposed changes aimed at reducing tax and compliance burden for
millions of small traders, ease rules and cut rates on many goods and
services that currently fall under the 28 percent slab.
The GST
Council—the apex body for decision making headed by finance minister
Arun Jaitley—will review the return filing process in its next meeting
that will be held in Guwahati.
A group of ministers (GoM) headed
by Bihar Finance Minister Sushil Modi will present a paper to the
Council, proposing crucial changes in the return filing process, an
official said.
To
make the return filing process simpler, especially for small taxpayers,
the GoM may recommend filing of only the summary return form GSTR3B,
and doing away with filing GSTR1, GSTR2 and GSTR3.
GSTR3B is a summary form, which a business is supposed to file for July to December before the 20th of the next month. However, a taxpayer does not have to provide invoice level information in the form.
Currently,
businesses have to file returns in GSTR1 (outward supplies or goods
that they sell), GSTR2 (inward supplies or inputs and raw material that
they buy) and GSTR3 (finalisation of outward and inward supplies of
taxable items) and one annual return.
Last month, the Council
approved a proposal to allow small tax payers with a turnover of less
than Rs 1.5 crore filing quarterly returns, compared to the earlier
requirement for filing monthly returns to reduce compliance burden.
The
government has also, time and again, extended return filing dates. Last
week, the date for filing GSTR2 form for July, was extended till
November 30 from October 31. July GSTR-3 returns for July were also
extended by a month to December 11.
Since its implementation from
July 1, the new indirect tax system has faced criticism owing to the
teething troubles including lack of clarity on return filing, errors in
invoice matching, and major technical snags on the information
technology portal GST Network (GSTN), among others.
According to
Pavan Peechara, CEO of a GST Suvidha Provider Adequare, filing of just
GSTR3B should not be looked as a permanent option.
"Filing of
GSTR3B needs to be continued beyond December but it should not be looked
at a permanent option. Filing of just GST3B would indicate going back
to the self-declaration and audit intensive method, replacing the
proposed transparent sharing of data via filing GSTR1,2 and 3," Peechara
said.
Apart from easing the return filing process, rates of daily
use items such as furniture, geometry boxes, furniture, cocoa products
will be shifted to a lower tax bracket, another government official
said.
"An exhaustive list is being prepared by the fitment
committee (an officials’ panel that proposes GST rates for goods and
services). A major overhaul in rates is expected. Changes in rates may
not be restricted to moving non-sin goods out of the 28 percent bracket.
It could be across other slabs tax (12 and 18 percent)," a senior
government official said.
The fitment committee is currently doing
the math, as shifting a product into a lower tax slab could have
revenue implications. The officials will present its recommendation to
the GST Council in its next meeting.
The GST Council has addressed
a number of issues, particularly providing relief to small and medium
enterprises (SMEs) and exporters grappling with procedural irritants,
delayed refunds and technical glitches on returns filing.
GST,
billed as the country’s biggest indirect tax overhaul, has consolidated a
dozen of state and centre duties into one single levy. All goods and
services have been fitted into four broad slab structure -5, 12, 18 and
28 percent—along with a cess on luxury and demerit goods such as
tobacco, pan masala and aerated drinks.
The Council has till now
rationalised rates of over 100 items and non-sin items under the 28
percent slab could also be brought down to a lower rate.
The
reduction in rates will be a significant step towards simplification of
GST to support the trader community ahead of the election in Gujarat
that will be held in two phases—December 4 and 11.
Sources said that
the SMEs have been hit by the implementation of the new indirect tax
system and crucial steps will be taken to mitigate their challenges.
09 Nov 2017, 06:23 AM