Course correction? on GST decisions
Revenue and optics seem to play a greater role in GST decisions
Under attack on how the indirect tax regime has panned out, the
Goods and Services Tax Council on Saturday announced a set of feel-good moves
to reassure diverse stakeholders. For consumers, the peak tax rate of 28%
levied on cinema tickets above ₹100, large screen television sets or monitors,
digital cameras and lithium ion batteries, among others, was bought down to
18%. For businesses still coping with compliance niggles, more time has been
granted for filing this year’s annual returns; the promise of a simpler return
filing system has been dangled (by July next year); and a single, fungible
e-cash ledger has been proposed to replace the present system in which credits
available under Central GST cannot be set off against State GST dues. Last but
not the least, concerns expressed by several States about revenue trends since
the GST’s introduction in July 2017 have been taken on board, and a ministerial
group will be tasked with assessing the structural patterns affecting revenue
collections in some States. This is an accommodative gesture from the Council,
whose chief — Finance Minister Arun Jaitley — cited recent revenue trends that
suggest compensation payable to the States has reduced substantively from last
year. It is anyone’s guess how much of a role the recent reverses suffered by
the Bharatiya Janata Party in Assembly elections played in the latest decisions
to slash rates or to ease the burden on businesses.
GST rationalisation is still a work in progress. It has long
been clear that traders need a simpler filing system, faster refunds and other
mechanisms to ease their cash flows. Consumers, for their part, are yet to get
a clear definition of what qualifies as a good or service for the ‘sin’
category. From over 200 items that were initially kept in the 28% ‘sin’ goods
rate bracket, it is now down to just 28 items, which include cement (hardly a
luxury for a country with a massive infrastructure investment agenda) and auto
components. That the original rates were neither thought-through nor reviewed
prudently is apparent with the Council’s decision to reduce the 28% levied on
disabled persons’ carriage parts and accessories to 5%. Since cement yields ₹13,000
crore in GST and auto parts another ₹20,000 crore, the Council has resisted
rate cuts on these items for now. This is the problematic part — revenue and
optics considerations seem to have a greater role in rate setting than the
nature of the goods or services to be taxed. The Prime Minister announced
impending cuts in the 28% slab, and reacted positively to the film industry’s
demand for lower GST. Seeking to correct popular perception ahead of the
elections is one thing. But frequent tweaks to the structure, and an impression
that rates can be altered by lobbying the powers-that-be, risk ruining the
promise the GST held for investors wary of India: a predictable, simple and
stable tax regime.
Courtesy: The
Hindu
- Optics (noun) – (typically in a political situation) the way in which an event is recognized by the public.
- Pan out (phrasal verb) – conclude, end up; turn out/work out.
- Feel-good (adjective) – relating to something causing well being/happiness.
- Diverse (adjective) – various, multiple, manifold.
- Stakeholder (noun) – a person with an interest in something.
- Compliance (noun) – observation, adherence, conformity.
- Niggle (noun) – minor annoyance, trivial objection, discomfort.
- Dangle (verb) – offer; entice/lure/tempt someone with.
- Fungible (adjective) – mutually interchangeable/replacable.
- Set off against (phrasal verb) – compare, connect, equate.
- Last but not least (phrase) – used to say equally important thing even if it is mentioned finally.
- Accommodative (adjective) – accommodating, cooperative, helpful.
- Anyone’s guess (phrase) – very difficult to know something.
- Reverse (noun) – failure, setback, hardship/upset.
- Rationalization (noun) – an act of justifying an inappropriate behaviour/attitude.
- Thought-through (adjective) – thought-out, thoroughly considered.
- Prudently (adverb) – wisely, sensibly, carefully.
- Apparent (adjective) – evident/clear, noticeable, ostensible.
- Yield (verb) – produce, generate, give.
- Impending (adjective) – nearing, imminent, forthcoming/about to happen.
- Popular (adjective) – widespread, general, common.
- Lobby (verb) – try to persuade; call on, urge.
- The powers that be (TPTB) (phrase) – the authorities, the legislature, the government.
- Wary (adjective) – cautious, careful, circumspect.
Note: All
meanings took from Oxforddictionaries.com and Google.co.in only.
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