What is taxing for some in India has become brisk business for others.
With seven weeks to go before the nationwide Goods and Services Tax
is implemented, Indian companies are rushing to bring in experts to
help prepare their accounting and information technology systems for the
tax-system overhaul. That’s created a windfall for international
professional services firms, including PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP and KPMG LLP.
Providing advice on everything from taxation regulations to business
finance will generate as much as 150 billion rupees ($2.3 billion) in
extra consulting fees, according to a council member of India’s
accounting regulator, the Institute of Chartered Accountants
of India. PricewaterhouseCoopers said it’s pulled in a specialist from
Australia to help bring Indian companies into compliance with the new
taxation regime, which starts July 1.
"We are helping our clients’ transition to GST
in phases," said Pratik Jain, a partner leading the firm’s indirect
taxes arm in India, in a telephone interview. The firm has a team
focused on GST-driven demand that’s drawing on advice from abroad "plus a
pool of international experts when needed," he said.
Representatives from Ernst & Young LLP and KPMG said they are also
fielding calls for help from businesses struggling to assess the impact
of the GST’s implementation and how best to implement computer-based
systems to manage their supply chain, procurement and accounting
processes.
KPMG India
KPMG India has a team of more than 1,100 people with skills across
GST, IT and supply chain management to support about 400 clients from a
wide range of industries transition to the new tax system, said Sachin
Menon, a partner and the firm’s national head of indirect taxes.
International experts have also been drawn in to help clients, he said.
The complex process of converting an economy
with more than 1 billion consumers into a unified, common market has
bolstered demand for enterprise resource planning, or ERP, said Ashish
Mittal, co-founder of EasemyGST, an IT service provider in Gurugram near
Delhi.
"We are in touch with 1,000 companies of which half
have agreed to go with us," Mittal said. About 200 inquiries were from
medium to small businesses, he said.
Helping companies be
fully compliant with the new system is difficult, as detailed guidelines
aren’t yet available to provide the necessary clarity,
PricewaterhouseCoopers’ Jain said.
"Corporate clients want
more detailed guidelines and illustrations based on specific sectors,"
he said. So far, clients have indicated that guidelines for getting
credit for taxes paid are more restrictive, and lack of clarity on
registration of taxpayers with multi-state operations is "a huge issue"
under the new system.
More Clarity
Rules and specific rates of taxation aren’t yet finalized, according to
the council member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India,
who asked not to be identified because only the institute’s president is
authorized to speak to the media. Without more granular detail, it will
be impossible for organized industries to comply from July 1, let alone
India’s 40 million small-scale enterprises, 70 percent of which are
unorganized and haven’t started the process of readying their
businesses, the member said.
India has about 300,000
sales-tax accounting practitioners who help mostly small businesses file
returns and comply with tax laws. In addition, there are 150,000
chartered accountants employed in India of which 80,000 need to be
trained, the member said.
Businesses with more than 10
billion rupees in revenue typically spend 6 million-to-10 million rupees
on accounting services, representatives of two accounting firms said.
This cost will probably double at least in the first year of the GST’s
implementation, they said.
12 May 2017, 10:53 AM