The Goods and Services Tax (GST) will be levied at several rates
ranging from 0 to 28 percent. GST Council has finalized a four-tier GST
tax structure of 5 percent, 12 percent, 18 percent and 28 percent, with
lower rates for essential items and the highest for luxury and ’demerit’
goods that would also attract an additional cess.
Service tax will go up from 15 percent to 18 percent.
While
details have not been announced, essential items including food, which
presently constitute roughly half of the consumer inflation basket, will
be taxed at zero rate.
The lowest rate of 5 percent would be for common-use items - usually items of mass consumption.
There
would be two standard rates of 12 percent and 18 percent into which the
bulk of goods and services would fall. Most commonly used items as well
as household items would fall under these two categories.
The
highest tax slab will be applicable to ultra-luxuries, demerit and sin
goods (like tobacco and aerated drinks). The demerit goods will attract a
cess for a period of five years on top of the 28 per cent GST.
The
GST will subsume the multitude of cesses currently in place, including
the Swachh Bharat Cess and Krishi Kalyan Cess and the Education Cess.
Only the Clean Environment Cess is being retained.
The collection
from the GST cess as well as that of the clean energy cess would create a
revenue pool which would be used for compensating states for any loss
of revenue during the first five years of implementation of GST.
The
principle for determining the rate on each item will be to levy and
collect the GST at the rate slab closest to the current tax incidence on
it.
Indicative Tax Slab under GST
In
addition to compensating the origin states for any loss in revenue that
may incur on account of the introduction of GST, it is proposed to levy
a 1 percent additional tax on the interstate sale of goods for a period
of two years (or such other period as may be recommended by the GST
Council). This levy is not in line with the objectives the GST regime
seeks to achieve, i.e. fungibility of input credits and removal of tax
cascading.
Commodities to not fall under GST
Alcohol for human consumption will not fall under the purview of GST in India at present.
Petroleum crude, motor spirit (petrol), high speed diesel, natural gas and aviation turbine fuel etc. will not attract GST.
Electricity has also been kept aside from the purview of GST at present.
The
Central-GST and Integrated-GST Bills passed by the Lok Sabha extend to
the whole of India, except J&K. Article 370 of the Constitution
grants special autonomous status to J&K and Parliament has power to
make laws only on defence, external affairs and communication related
matters of the state. The J&K Assembly will have to pass a
legislation saying the two laws are applicable to the state.
Will GST lead to profiteering?
The
GST law contains an anti-profiteering clause that mandates that a
manufacturer and others in the supply chain have to pass on the benefits
arising out of input credit and lower taxes to consumers or face
penalty.
An anti-profiteering authority in a GST regime is not
unique to India (Australia and Malaysia also have it) but clarity on the
calculation, time-frame, penalties, etc. is awaited. Officials have
clarified that this will be a transitional mechanism that will be
required in certain sectors, which can tend to be oligopolistic.
How will tax holidays be treated under GST?
GST
does not have any provisions for tax exemptions and the central
government and individual states will have to reimburse the exemption
amounts under extant excise and VAT exemption schemes.
How will goods move under GST?
Under
GST, e-way bills will need to be issued before goods are dispatched. It
would be important to carry e-way bills for the goods in transit as an
authorised officer could intercept the conveyance/trucks to verify e-way
bills. This will ensure that unaccounted/non-tax paid goods are
disallowed and restricted from moving easily.
As the name
suggests, an e-way bill is an online bill that will be used for
inter-State supply of goods under GST. It will provide details of the
consignor and the consignee as well as the origin and the destination of
the cargo. Eventually, to eliminate the physical checks, the Ministry
has suggested using the ’Vahan" and vehicle registration number
databases as well as RFID tags to establish the identity of the
vehicles.
What is the treatment of pre-GST goods?
The
draft GST rules has clarified that as a part of transitional
provisions, full VAT credit balance will automatically become part of
the opening balance availed under GST. Further, for goods lying at
warehouses on which excise duty is paid, excise duty so paid would
become part of the opening GST balance. However, if the excise value is
not ascertainable then 40 percent of CGST otherwise payable on goods
will be considered for the purpose of opening the GST balance.
How will GST be levied on services?
There
is still ambiguity about some areas like GST on services as consumption
of services can be at a different location. An individual from
Maharashtra can always avail of banking services in Delhi. Over time, we
hope to clarify such finer points as well.
What about GST on freebies?
While
GST will be liable on the transaction value, i.e., the value at which
the goods are supplied. The draft GST rules cover situations in which
consumer goods companies undertake offers and promotions. Thus, it has
already been clarified that in case a company offers an extra portion,
GST would still be payable only on the MRP excluding the fair value of
that product which has been given for free offers.
11 May 2017, 12:26 PM