It’s been barely three months after the introduction of the Goods and
Services Tax (GST), the good and simple tax law has been further
simplified. The hon’ble Prime Minister also stated that the decisions
taken by the GST Council in its twenty second meeting has evoked the
mood of Diwali festival for taxpayers.
The government was
flooded with several representations primarily from the exporters as
well as Small and Medium Enterprises (SME) on the varied challenges
faced by them in the first quarter of GST implementation. The trader
community especially merchant traders/exporters were facing serious
concerns on account of blockage of working capital and delayed refund of
the taxes paid on export of goods or services. The taxpayers were
finding it difficult to undertake compliances correctly due to system
issues and they were puzzled by the complications in the return filing
process, reverse charge on procurement from registered suppliers, etc.
Taking
a note of the increasing dissent in the exporter and trading community,
the GST Council has taken several decisions which is expected to
benefit the exporters and SMEs and is intended to ease the compliance
burden. Some of the key decisions taken by the GST Council especially
for exporters include the extension of upfront exemption from IGST on
procurements available under various schemes such as advance
authorisation, Export Promotion Capital Goods Scheme and 100% Export
Oriented Units (EOUs). The exemption will apply to procurement of goods
whether imported or sourced indigenously. However, the said benefit is
not extended to procurement of services. As the contribution of services
sector increases in the economy, the exporters would have rejoiced had
the scheme extended to cover the procurement of services as well.
Further, in the absence of any specific notification, it is not clear
whether the service export units (such as Software Technology Parks of
India /Service EOU) can avail the said exemption.
Another
attempt made to alleviate the burden of working capital for merchant
exporter was to reduce the GST rate on the procurements made by such
exporters to a marginal rate of 0.1%. The GST Council has also announced
that the refunds of the IGST paid on exports in the month of July 2017
will be paid/cleared from 10 October 2017 and that for the month of
August 2017 will be cleared from 18 October 2017. The authorities also
issued a Circular on 9 October 2017 clarifying the procedural aspects
for grant of refund to exporters. Trade and industry will celebrate the
festival of lights if the burden of working capital is made lighter by
actual grant of refund within the timelines announced.
Further,
the decision to defer the compliance under the reverse charge mechanism
applicable for procurements from unregistered suppliers till 31 March
2018 is a welcome relief. However, the trade expects that such reverse
charge mechanism should be withdrawn completely and not deferred only
for a few months.
Contrary to the industry demand for abolition
of the e-way bill system, the GST Council has decided to implement the
same in a staggered manner from 1 January 2018 and on an all India basis
from till 31 March 2018. The industry believes that given the stringent
control and penal provisions for issuance of invoice/delivery challan
for every movement of goods, the requirement for e-way bills could
unnecessarily lead to additional compliance burden and not contribute to
the ease of doing business in India.
Small enterprises can
rejoice as the limit for composition scheme has been enhanced to INR1
crore in a move to provide relief to a large base of small taxpayers.
Also, the SME sector has been granted the facility to furnish tax
returns and tax payments on a quarterly basis instead of a monthly
return/payment. However, all the taxpayers will have to file the monthly
returns for the first quarter and the benefit of quarterly returns can
be availed only from the quarter of October-December 2017. Thus, all
taxpayers will have to experience the online matching concept and
monthly return for the first quarter ending on September 2017.
Unlike
the erstwhile regime, the time of supply of goods also includes the
receipt of advance and this has affected small dealers and manufacturers
as they had to prepay the GST. Therefore, the GST Council has granted a
waiver from payment of GST on receipt of advances. Now, small dealers
and manufacturers having an annual aggregate turnover upto INR1.5 crore
shall be liable to pay GST only on actual supplies of goods and not on
advances received. This can also help eliminate the issue of
non-availability of input tax credit albeit only for a small section of
the taxpayers. Even the Tax Deducted at Source (TDS) and the Tax
Collected at source (TCS) provisions are deferred till 31 March 2018.
Besides
the above key measures, the GST Council has also rationalised the
applicable GST rates for many products in line with the industry
representation. The noteworthy items primarily include food items,
unbranded ayurvedic/homeopathy medicines, man-made and
synthetic/artificial filament yarn, e-waste, etc.
Another
crucial matter for the manufacturing sector is the uncertainty on the
quantum of area-based incentives including incentives offered by states
under the state industrial policy. Though recently a notification to the
effect was issued in the public domain by the central government, the
stand of state governments is not clear.
While some relaxations
announced by the GST Council are a step in the right direction,
however, the job is not yet done. These measures are primarily aimed at
the SME sector and all other taxpayers who have an annual turnover of
more than INR1.5 crore will still be required to comply with stringent
compliance under GST. Besides this, there are several other challenges
which the industry is facing especially with regard to stabilisation of
GSTN/technical glitches and it is expected that the GST Council will
accord due importance to these issues to help ensure that the real
intended benefit of GST is enjoyed equally by the trade and the
consumer. These steps in a continuous dialogue between the government
and trade can really make GST, in a true sense, a Good and Simple Tax.
16 Oct 2017, 11:47 AM