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GST to be
levied at 16%, goods to cost less for consumers
The long-awaited reform of India's indirect taxes system
is set to get a major fillip, with a broad consensus
forming within the finance ministry on a rate of 16% for
the proposed Goods and Services Tax (GST) for both
Centre and states combined. To be levied on all
companies and traders with an annual turnover of Rs 10
lakh and above, this would provide a tax base of 40-45
lakh assessees and ensure that neither the Centre nor
the states suffer any revenue loss. |
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Sources said the rates
for both the Centre and the states on GST could be 8% each, or the states could
get a percentage point more depending on the final negotiations with the
empowered committee of state finance ministers after presentation of the Union
Budget. However, there is no scope for taking the Central threshold limit of
annual turnover to Rs 1.5 crore as demanded by the states.
The introduction of GST will streamline the movement of goods across India with
a single tax structure replacing the current multiple tax system, which includes
central excise, state VAT and service tax -- the sum of which runs to as high as
30%
For instance, if a soap is manufactured for Rs 100, 8% excise duty is imposed on
its cost, 12.5% VAT is levied on the net sum when it is cleared from the factory
and 2% central sale tax is added when the goods are supplied inter-state. Again
depending on the state, entry and purchase taxes are charged on the cost of the
good -- taking the total price of the soap manufactured at Rs 100 to somewhere
between Rs 130 and 150, said Anita Rastogi of PricewaterhouseCoopers.
In a GST system, a uniform rate will be imposed on the product only once, at the
point of its supply. This should result in reduction of cost for consumers.
The law ministry is believed to have sent a detailed response on the suggestions
sought by the department of revenue toward finalisation of draft Constitutional
amendment of the indirect tax reforms.
The proposed GST was initially scheduled to be implemented from April 1, 2010.
However, lack of consensus between states and the Centre on a uniform tax
structure and their inability to carry out necessary legislative amendments led
to its postponement by another six months.
"On a different threshold, the revenue-neutral rate for central GST will go
abnormally high," sources said. The Centre is hopeful of taking on board Haryana
and Punjab on including the purchase tax in the GST. At present both the states
earn nearly Rs 1,000 crore each on account of purchase tax and have been seeking
exclusion of the tax from the proposed GST model.
Sumit Dutt Majumder, member Central Board of Excise and Customs, who has an
overview of the tax base on Central excise, said central excise and state VAT
would still have to be levied on 'sin goods' like tobacco and alcohol, which are
taxed much higher than other products.
While tobacco is taxed by the Centre, alcohol comes under states. In the current
negotiations, states have sought petroleum products and alcohol to remain
outside the GST model. However, the Centre wants to bring them within the GST
model in order to remove the cascading effect on the proposed tax paid on inputs
such as raw material and packaging material. Sales tax/VAT and state excise duty
can be charged over and above GST.
The Centre also has plans to continue with some of the exemptions toward working
out an ideal and faultless GST. Currently there are 330 exemptions in the CENVAT
and 99 extended by states in their VAT list. After a careful screening, the
Centre and states could work out a uniform exemption list that could be pruned
down to 50, sources said.
In the discussions so far, both the states and the Centre have agreed to a dual
GST model -- one levied by the Centre referred to as Central GST, and the other
levied by the states referred to as state GST. In addition, the Centre has
suggested that GST on inter-state transactions and imports should be levied and
collected by the Centre which would pass on the GST on imports to concerned
states on the destination principle.
On the issue of keeping the purchase tax outside the GST model, the Centre says
it will give the loophole to the states to impose purchase tax on any commodity
(food-grains, agricultural/forest produce, minerals, industrial inputs etc.)
over and above GST. Hence, purchase tax must be subsumed. The compensation
package, if agreed, need not have any link to any particular tax being subsumed,
it has already clarified in response to the states discussion paper.
Source:
Times of India, India, dated
08/02/2010
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