The invoice matching mechanism in the goods and services tax
(GST) to be rolled out from 1 July will help curb fake bill frauds,
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has said, in a letter to a Congress
leader.
Jaitley
said the model of invoice matching for eligibility of input tax credit
of the recipient has been adopted in the GST design after much
deliberations in the GST Council. "One of the most important advantages
of adopting this model is for curbing the possible tax evasion on
account of fake invoice frauds," the finance minister said in response
to the concerns raised by Congress Rajya Sabha MP Digvijaya Singh.
Singh, in his letter to Jaitley, had said multiple tax returns would
have to be filed by businesses leading to compliance burden.
Jaitley further said that in the proposed GST design, the registered
person is required to file only his initial return on 10th of the next
month (return for outward supplies) while other returns on invoice
matching and availing of ITC credit are auto-populated.
These
auto-populated returns, he said, will be communicated between the
supplier and the recipient through the common portal GSTN. "Therefore,
there is only one GST return with internally auto-populated returns for
invoice matching and availing of input tax credit," Jaitley added.
The Integrated GST model was adopted to ensure input tax credit is
transferred from the originating state to the destination state. It is
through the invoice matching and automated return mechanism that the
government can ensure eligible input tax credit is accurately
transferred between the states, read the Jaitley’s letter to the
Congress leader.
The much-delayed GST is scheduled to be implemented from 1 July , which will subsume most indirect taxes.
09 May 2017, 02:06 PM