The Goods and Services Tax Council will meet on May 18-19 to finalise
various rules involved with implementing the new tax regime in the
country, including on issues like input tax credit, valuation norms,
composition and transition provisions, among others. What remains to be
done between now and the final rollout? Here’s a lowdown.
What has been done so far?
The
GST Council has met 13 times to finalise the minutiae of the five laws
that will help bring the new tax regime to reality. Four of these laws
have been cleared by the Union Cabinet and passed by Parliament. The
fifth, the State GST law, needs to be passed by the legislative
assemblies of each state and union territory with legislature. The
Council still has to finalise the rules and rates of individual products
and services.
According
to experts, the draft rules that will be finalised during the upcoming
Council meeting do not as yet address key operational issues that
directly affect vendors, distributors, and service providers. These
issues include the place of supply rules for service companies. Clarity
on this will determine whether a service has been provided on an
inter-state or intra-state basis, which in turn will determine whether
the Integrated GST tax will apply.
Another major issue is the
treatment of cases where the billing address is different from the
shipping address. Since most companies have so far configured their ERP
programs to incorporate GST as a destination-based tax, there is no
clarity as yet in the rules as to what happens if the destination of the
goods or service is different from where the bill is to be made. For
example, if a company places an advertisement in the Mumbai edition of a
Delhi-based newspaper, it can be billed in Mumbai only if the paper can
show that it has an establishment in Mumbai and can print invoices
there. Else, it will be billed to Delhi. Industry associations have
sought for greater clarity on such issues from the government.
Another
issue is the e-waybill, required for the transport of goods across the
country. The e-waybill has to be accepted by the seller, transporter,
and recipient for the transaction to be closed as far the GST Network is
concerned. Tax experts say that the reconciliation of waybills is
currently a big problem, with the recipient usually failing to accept
the waybill, leaving the transaction incomplete. The e-waybill system
will require a big change in behaviour for it to work, they say.
A
larger issue is that incorporating GST will require SMEs to overhaul
and computerise their systems, since even dealing with the Harmonized
System of Nomenclature (HSN) codes for individual products will require a
computer. The codes are up to 10 digits in length. The first four
define the category and the subsequent digits specify the exact product.
For example, Lay’s chips and Kurkure could have the same first four
digits, but subsequent digits would be different. Such an overhaul of
systems and the implementation of a new ERP system takes time. Industry
players are complaining that with the rules only being decided upon on
May 18-19, they will be able to finalise their software only by the
first week of June, leaving barely any time for testing.
When can we expect tax rates to be made public?
The
tax rates are not likely to be made public in the next meeting of the
GST Council. Experts working on ERP systems say that there is no great
urgency on this count, because the numbers can simply be plugged into
the software as and when they are known without having to change the
coding itself. The rules are more critical in that respect.
Also,
revealing the rates too early may lead to people hoarding goods that are
likely to become more expensive under GST due to higher tax incidence.
However, knowing the tax rates of individual items could greatly help
companies in their procurement decisions for the July-September quarter.
15 May 2017, 11:59 AM