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Govt meets
state FMs on pending areas in GST
The Union government on Friday discussed some “pending
areas” in the proposed Goods and Services Tax (GST) with
the empowered committee of state finance ministers, and
asked it to resolve the issues at the earliest to meet
the April 2011 deadline for the rolloutof GST. |
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Asim Dasgupta, West
Bengal finance minister and chairman of the empowered committee met Finance
Minister Pranab Mukherjee to discuss the unresolved issues, including
Constitutional amendment and compensation to the states for meeting losses on
account of GST.
The finance minister is
also believed to have taken up with Dasgupta the areas of differences between
the Centre and the states, including threshold limit, exemption list and
revenue-neutral rate. According to people in the know, Mukherjee said the Centre
was ready to compensate the states in the initial years, provided there was a
consensus on the broad framework for GST, including an acceptable rate.
The meeting, which lasted for about half-an-hour at the finance minister’s North
Block office, came just a week before the empowered committee's meeting with
finance ministry officials on April 21. After the Budget in February, this will
be the first meeting between the Centre and the states on GST.
“The meeting next Friday will discuss all relevant matters for the
implementation of GST. As a preparation for that, we needed to have some
interaction with the Union finance minister,” said Dasgupta after the meeting
Mukerjee. He showed confidence that the revised deadline of GST implementation
would be met. "That is our target and we will make all efforts to meet it. We
are confident," he added.
The earlier deadline of April 2010 was missed as there was no agreement between
the Centre and the states on many areas of GST. The new GST rollout deadline is
just ten months away and still much progress has not been seen as far as areas
of agreement between the two are concerned. The government is still discussing
the options for amending the Constitution so that there is no legal dispute in
future.
The empowered committee, in its first discussion paper on GST, had suggested
that businesses below a gross annual turnover of Rs 1.5 crore will be subjected
to GST only by the state and not by the Centre. The Centre, however, is strongly
opposed to the idea as it would result in a substantial revenue loss, and said
there should be a common threshold of Rs 10 lakh. The Centre has also said that
it wants a common exemption list for both and an acceptable level of GST rate,
against states’ demand of 18-20 per cent.
Source: Business Standard, India, dated
15/05/2010
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