Kolkata
Keshav Bhajanka, Executive Director of Century Ply,
expected the introduction of GST to help him grab market share from
unorganised players. Three months into the new tax regime, Bhajanka’s
expectations are unfulfilled.
"The absence of e-way
bill has benefited the unorganised sector as they can still resort to
cash deals and evade taxes in inter-State transactions," he said. The
net result is Bhajanka’s products continue to be 20-30 per cent costlier
than offerings from unorganised players.
Amritanshu
Khaitan, MD of Eveready Industries, confirms that the expected market
shift from unorganised to organised players is yet to happen.
Way
bill or transit pass was the primary document to check tax evasion on
the VAT regime that offered scope for tax arbitrage. GST removed the
scope for inter-State tax arbitrage. Way bills are now expected to act
as a secondary check to ensure tax compliance.
The
government initially decided to roll out the electronic way bills that
would have GST particulars by October 2017. The roll out has now been
postponed to April 1, 2018. The result has been catastrophic.
According
to SP Singh, Coordinator of the Delhi-based Indian Foundation of
Transport Research and Training (IFTRT), there are now two clear slabs
for truck rentals. Goods with clear GST details are charged ?400 a
quintal, the rest ?700-800 a quintal.
"GST has become
a source of easy money for truckers. Instead of making four trips a
month, they can rake in the moolah in three trips," he said.
According
to IFTRT, previously, 40-50 per cent of the goods moved in the trunk
routes avoided taxes; the ratio might have gone up to 60 per cent. As
most of the goods are put in the 18-28 per cent tax bracket, the
incentive for evasion is high.
Under-invoicingBhupendra
Vyas, COO of Kajaria Ceramics, agrees that the higher tax incidence in
GST is making tax evasion lucrative for the unorganised players. "The
price gap between the organised and the unorganised sector produce is
increasing," he said.
However, high GST rates may not
be the only cause for evasion. A tea producer from Upper Assam confirms
that trade is resorting to under-invoicing and part-cash deals to
reduces tax incidence in inter-State private sales. Manufactured tea
attracts only five per cent GST.
According to him,
this is partly to help smaller consumers who are not GST-registered. The
prospect of such evasion is limited to approximately 40 per cent of the
1,260 million kg production, which is neither sold in auction nor
scheduled for direct exports or packaging.
A source
in a top paint and paper product manufacturer, however, said GST has
benefited the industry. According to him, paper mills have stopped
selling products to customers who are not GST-registered. Wholesalers
are also reluctant to sell on cash.
Together, the
cost of notebooks and other paper products of unorganised players have
gone up, reducing the price advantage over branded products from as high
as 30 per cent to 15 per cent.
Another
top paint maker confirmed that the market share of organised players is
improving. He, however, felt the evasion by unorganised players is
rampant in intra-State sales. "Unorganised players find a way to evade
taxes. We didn’t expect them to change overnight," he said.
03 Nov 2017, 07:22 AM