The amendments to the GST law announced by the GST
council last week show that the Government has its ear to the ground.
But in its zeal to find a quick-fix solution to the teething troubles,
it could be doing more harm than good.
The council
needs to think through the consequences of its actions before pushing
through changes to the law. While allowing assessees with turnover less
than ?1.5 crore to file quarterly returns will help declog the GSTN, it
is going to cause undue hardships to larger enterprises. The GST system
is based on seamless invoice matching between the supplier and the
receiver and this cycle could be disturbed by this change.
Similarly,
it is hoped that the move to roll back reverse charge mechanism (RCM)
is only temporary and is reinstated soon. Else the GST will be unable to
achieve its objective of widening the tax base and halting creation of
black money.
The GST system will work wonders once
fully implemented but the original framework should not be tampered
with. For now, the Centre can turn its energy on fixing the issues with
the GSTN (the IT backbone of the system) software. The number of GST
returns filed so far show that not all registered taxpayers are
compliant.
Complicating matters Exempting
some businesses from paying up monthly will not help in the short term
as the leeway is applicable from the October 2017 quarter. Smaller
businesses have to somehow wade through the filing of the full returns
for July, August and September before they can get relief. With the July
returns being filed now, it promises to be one arduous journey for
small taxpayers before they are through with the 9 returns for the
September quarter.
That said, the filing of returns
from October onwards is likely to get easier for all businesses since
they would have already gone through the rigour for three months. The
GSTN would also have ironed out the glitches. Exempting smaller
businesses from filing monthly returns from October therefore makes
little sense.
The bigger problem would be due to the
mismatch in the return filing periods of large and small businesses.
More than 80 per cent of taxpayers would be able to file quarterly
returns after this move. Many of them would be supplying to larger
businesses that file monthly returns. Therefore, it is difficult to see
how the GSTR 2 form that is auto-populated based on suppliers’ returns
would be prepared. The council has said that input tax credit can be
claimed by larger businesses every month. But this would be possible
only if the details of inward supplies are uploaded onto the GSTN. This
would lead to more work for them.
Also, once smaller
businesses file their quarterly returns, these would have to be matched
with the monthly returns filed by large businesses. This could lead to
further complications. The GSTN could consider asking larger businesses
to file the GSTR 1, 2 and 3 quarterly too. The input tax credit could
also be claimed every quarter. While this could cause cash-flow issues
for a few quarters, it will get sorted once the cycle is established.
The
move to keep reverse charge in abeyance up to March 2018 gives small
businesses time to register for GST and get compliant. But it is hoped
that the date is not extended any further as the reverse charge is the
tool which makes the GST structure effective.
Fix GSTNThe
inter-ministerial panel led by Bihar Deputy Chief Minister Sushil Kumar
Modi that is looking at the technical glitches in the GSTN has said
that it will try and iron out 80 per cent of the problems by end of
October. But October is crunch time. With GSTR 1 for July already filed,
the invoices have to be matched by the system and the auto-populated
GSTR 2A has to be sent to assessees. Once GSTR 2A is validated, GSTR 2
will be filed, based on which the GSTR 3 has to be generated by the
system. Taxpayers, consultants and the GSTN are in for a harrowing time.
The
return filing numbers so far have not been encouraging either. Of the
65 lakh eligible taxpayers only 53 lakh filed the GSTR 3B for July and a
lesser 31 lakh filed for August. Of these, around 40 lakh are reported
to have filed the GSTR 1 for July. Fixing the issues with return filing
is an arduous task, but needs to be tackled urgently.
12 Oct 2017, 05:29 AM