Increasing the fear of an unravelling of the exercise of
invoices-matching, which is crucial to realising the presumed merits of
the goods and services tax (GST), like reduction of tax evasion and
cascades, three-fourths of the 60 lakh eligible taxpayers haven’t
completed the formalities of filing both the inward and outward
supplies-based returns for July till a day before the October 31
deadline. This has forced the government to give another window till
November-end "to facilitate about 30.81 lakh taxpayers" to file details
of inward supplies (GSTR-2). The triplicate comprehensive returns for
July, the first month since GST’s launch, were originally required to be
filed in the subsequent month itself, but due to the GST Network’s
technical glitches and low levels of compliance, the deadlines have been
extended multiple times. The schedule for filing these returns for
August onwards has not even been announced yet, as this was to follow
from the July-cycle learning. While invoice-matching is getting unduly
delayed, piling up a huge job for the taxmen, the consequent blockage of
input tax credits is bound to hit the working capital for large
sections of the industry.
Since the launch of GST, small and medium enterprises have faced cash
crunch, while exporters have got the refunds of July and August taxes
only recently. Of course, the government has allowed industries with
turnover up to Rs 1.5 crore to file the detailed returns on a quarterly
basis while assuring them of prompt release of input tax credits claimed
via monthly interim returns, but the deferment of invoices-matching
would mean large-scale adjustments of the tax and ITC figures later. The
government has faced much criticism for the imperfections of the GST it
launched (multiple rates, high peak rates, exclusion of real estate and
five petro- leum products etc). Also, since the GST was introduced, it
has had to make more compromises that besmirched the new tax further.
While dozens of items saw rate changes post-July, the GST Council, on
October 6, accorded virtual tax waiver for exporters till March 31,
2018, despite exemptions running contrary to the GST’s basic tenet.
Besides, units with up to Rs 1.5 crore turnover were allowed to file
quarterly instead of monthly returns, a move that would allow 90% of the
non-composition GST registrants to shift to the easier system of filing
returns every quarter, but could make prompt invoices-matching
difficult. As reported by FE on Monday, the council may allow all
taxpayers to move to quarterly mode of filing returns as it meets at
Guwahati on November 10. The composition scheme — that allows businesses
to pay taxes as a small percentage of turnover annually — is set to be
made available to units with turnover up to Rs 1.5 crore, in what could
effectively exclude 90% of the taxpayers from being part of the
multi-point destination-based tax chain.
GST Network, which is the IT backbone of GST, estimates that about 80
crore invoices would be uploaded on to the system every month. A tax
official said that even if 2-3 crore of the invoices don’t match, it
will lead to numerous disputes, which would be arduous to resolve.
"Besides, tax evasion takes place when transactions are off-book which
will never be captured through invoices. The government needs precise
and visible enforcement to minimise tax evasion," the official said. To
begin with, GST Council should have implemented matching at the GST
level where sale and purchase are matched on the basis of the unique GST
registration number of each taxpayer. Invoice matching should ideally
have been brought in a few months later after the system stabilised. Now
that some taxpayers are allowed to file returns only quarterly, the
matching should also be harmonised with it and not be carried out every
month.
These steps alone will make the process smoother," Rahul Renavikar,
managing director of Acuris Advisors said. Aditya Singhania, of Taxmann,
said: "The matching concept is a much appreciated step for allowing
input tax credit which is regulated by the GSTR 1, 2 and 3 mechanism.
But with the brilliant concept, the IT platform of GST i.e.
www.gst.gov.in should equally work in same wavelength for achieving the
objective. Due to certain bugs and frictions, coupled with totally new
forms of returns, taxpayers were unable to file the (returns) on time."
While industrialised states like Maharashtra, Gujarat and Karnataka
among others had invoice-matching systems prior to GST, although these
were not granular-level matching. A Maharashtra tax official, who
requested anonymity, said that matching at the level of VAT number -much
simpler than invoice-level matching - had enabled identification of 80%
mismatches, which enabled the tax department to take action against
hawala operations.
However, some tax officials have doubted the efficacy of
invoice-matching, saying this wasn’t much of a success in any country
with GST-type tax. "The first two month would pose immense challenges on
how to deal with invoice mismatches and the provision may eventually
have to be done away with," a revenue department officials told FE on
the condition of anonymity. The tax department is also worried that
about 40% of taxpayers who filed the returns for July have claimed
nil-tax liability. "It is indeed a large number. If enforcement is
required, we will carry it out, though not in the nature of search and
seizure. We may opt for discreet inquiries and meetings with such groups
of taxpayers, to find out the reasons for the trend," revenue secretary
Hasmukh Adhia had told FE earlier.
31 Oct 2017, 08:50 AM