The Centre may try to bring up inclusion of natural gas at the next GST Council meeting in January
It literally took the country by storm six months back when
dozens of taxes and levies were rolled into one, but as the new goods
and services tax (GST) stabilises, its ambit is now likely to be
increased by including natural gas in next couple of months.
On
July 1, when the new national sales tax was implemented, it was decried
as technologically tedious and expensive and had potential to torpedo
political prospects of the ruling BJP.
However, the government
made numerous changes, including easing the tax filing process and
reducing rates on over 200 items, to save the day for the party in Prime
Minister Narendra Modi’s home state Gujarat.
While GST
transformed India into ’one nation, one market’ at the "stroke of
midnight" on June 30, real estate as well as crude oil, jet fuel or ATF,
natural gas, diesel and petrol were kept out of its purview. This meant
that the products continued to attract duties like central excise and
VAT.
That may well change in 2018, at least for natural gas.
A
top revenue department official said as the Centre and states are
assured of revenue flows, natural gas can be the next big item to be
included.
"To me it appears that out of the 5 petroleum products,
natural gas is an easier candidate for bringing into GST," he said,
adding that a 5 percent GST, equivalent to that being charged on coal,
will benefit states in reducing price of CNG as well as cooking gas
piped into kitchens.
The Centre may try to bring up inclusion of natural gas at the next GST Council meeting in January.
But
doing so for other petroleum items could be difficult because the
states and the Centre both get quite a bit of revenue from those items.
The roll out of biggest tax reform since independence on July 1 was without undue disruption.
The
’one nation, one tax’ united at least 17 different central and state
indirect taxes under one umbrella to cut tax evasions and reduce
corruption.
In a bid to get states and political rivals onboard,
the government got a four tax rates of 5, 12, 18 and 28 percent with
numerous exceptions, instead of the single slab adopted in countries
like the UK, Singapore and Malaysia.
Six months into
implementation, there are talks of evasion creeping in with unscrupulous
traders colluding with transporters and suppliers preferring to conduct
a cash-only business and not pay the tax.
Also, states like Tamil
Nadu and Maharashtra have used their discretion to raise taxes on
certain goods excluded from the new regime, defeating the purpose of
unified tax.
But multiple rates wasn’t the biggest problem with
GST. It was the costly compliance. The need for computerised accounting
in businesses often run by barely literate was a hurdle.
For
exporters, GST was a nightmare as tax refunds were delayed, leaving them
short of capital. Small, unorganised businesses, especially in
traditionally dominant textiles and jewellery sectors, were worst hit.
So,
the government eased the filing process for traders with a turnover of
less than Rs 1.5 crore and expedited refunds to exporters.
With
GST, about two dozen of 29 states have abolished check points at their
borders, where truck drivers had to halt and fill out paperwork, often
delay deliveries, at times by days. The posts have gone but tax
officials can still clog the roads by demanding inspections of goods
being moved or fees.
Prices of some products are varying according
to location as traders have not fully implemented the new structure and
profiteers have stepped in.
Asked by when could real estate be brought into the fold of GST, the official said it is even more "difficult candidate".
"The
real benefit of bringing real estate into GST can occur to consumer
only when there is a combined discussion on Stamp Duty, Registration
charges and GST. If you are going to have real estate in GST independent
of stamp duty, then there will be duality of taxation and it will be
more burdensome for consumers," he said.
He said that the new
indirect tax reform since independence has "more or less" stabilised and
90 percent of the problems have been addressed.
"Now, whatever
are the remaining problems, we need to solve them and stabilise GST.
That should be our target for 2018. The other major task we have to
undertake in 2018 will be the process of matching of returns because
matching of returns is the core to GST. Unless we undertake this
exercise, the real benefit of GST will not come," the official said.
The
revenues under the GST after averaging around Rs 93,000 crore for the
first three months after GST roll out slipped to Rs Rs 83,346 crore in
October as tax rates on several product were cut and teething troubles
with the new regime pushed back implementation of key provisions.
Over 3 crore returns have been filed on the GST Network portal between August and November.
With
revenues dropping, the government said it would move towards matching
of returns, electronic transit permit system or e-way bill as it looks
to check tax evasion.
He said it would take some time to move to a
two-slab GST by merging the 12 and 18 per cent bracket, and also ruled
out lowering tax rates on white goods from 28 per cent at present.
25 Dec 2017, 08:37 AM