|
The GST is a new comprehensive tax that — when implemented — will subsume the
central excise, additional excise and services tax apart from value-added tax
(VAT) and entertainment and luxury taxes at the state level. The GST is expected
to have different rates at the state and central level.
Speaking at the release of the draft paper, West
Bengal Finance Minister Asim Dasgupta, also the Chairman of the Empowered
Committee of the State Finance Ministers that is involved with the
conceptualisation of the tax, said GST would not cover alcohol products though
tobacco products would be charged.
Crude oil, petrol and diesel products would also
be kept out of the GST’s ambit, Dasgupta said, while a decision whether to levy
GST on natural gas would be taken later.
GST players would get a PAN-linked identification
number and the state GST would be levied on over Rs 10 lakh turnover, the
minister said, adding that the centre CST would be levied on over a turnover of
Rs 1.5 crore.
The government, however, decided to not impose
the GST on exports though the tax would be levied on imports.
“There would be no levy on special economic
zones,” Dasgupta said. The GST panel said the tax rates would be decided later.
“The GST would redistribute the taxation burden
equitably,” said Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, soon after the release of
the white paper. “It would minimize exemptions, broaden tax base, help increase
exports and cut prices.
Dasgupta, however, did not comment whether the
ambitious project, first talked about by Mukherjee in this year’s budget, would
meet its tight deadline of April 1, 2010. The FM too was non-committal on
whether the deadline would be met though he has, in the past, admitted that
meeting the deadline would be difficult.
Many states have not yet committed to joining the
GST — another factor that could delay the GST rollout — and the government
handed out an incentive in the form of compensation for states due to any losses
that arise from the tax’s implementation. The GST panel said the 13th Finance
Commission would decide on the compensation that would be handed out over a
period of five years.
Source :
Moneycontrol.com,
India,
dated
10/11/2009
|