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Pharma sector should be placed in lowest slab under GST
regime: SPIC
The SME Pharma Industries
Confederation (SPIC), a body of thousands of small scale pharma units in the
country, has demanded to include the pharma industry in the lowest slab as in
case of precious metals in the coming Union Budget when the Goods and Services
Tax (GST) will replace excise duty and some other taxes like CST and Service Tax
from April 1, 2010. |
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It cannot
be overlooked that medicines are not a luxury but a life
saving product. Hence, they deserve to be covered under
the lowest slab, the SPIC in its budget proposal to the
Department of Pharmaceuticals (DoP) said. Earlier, the
DoP had invited proposals from the industry associations
for the 2010-11 budget.
Other demands of SPIC included raising of pharma SSI
exemption limit to 5 crore as per recommendation of
department of revenue (DOP) which is lying with DOR for
two years. Pharma cannot be rated at par with other
service providers who are neither regulated nor covered
under price control. Pharma is the only sector which is
both regulated as well as under Price Control.
The SPIC also demanded that various other taxes should
be amalgamated into GST. It is not advisable to waste
energies in being bogged down in filing too many returns
on different taxes. All types of forms (C, H, etc) and
road permits for transportation from one state to
another should be scrapped with levy of GST. Rates of
GST and State GST should be kept uniform for all states
and the filing procedures should be simple and
transparent to enable filing by SMEs themselves without
support from CAs, which are additional cost for no
reason.
These proposals will help for the survival of the pharma
SMEs in India as the more than 5000 pharma SMEs have
suffered during the last five years owing to anomalous
fiscal policies which have been justified by DOR after
levy of MRP excise in 2005. These anomalies were first
pointed out by the Dr Pronab Sen Committee and then by
the EAC of PMO Recommendations of EAC were even approved
by the PM but never implemented by DOR, for reasons best
known to it.
The anomalous fiscal policies coincided with
implementation of Schedule M which mandated upgradation
at an enormous cost at a time when SMEs were rendered
redundant owing to MRP excise. Schedule M has escalated
the cost of setting up a moderate sized SME unit to Rs
20 crore. Hence no new SME units have come up in the
last three years except in Excise Free Zones, simply
because they are enviable. An SME entrepreneur cannot
repay loans given the small turnover of the business.
The number of Pharma SMEs has reduced drastically. If
SMEs are not protected, it will be handing over the
entire local market worth Rs 50,000 crore to MNCs. India
cannot forget that prior to advent of SMEs in 1960,
prices of medicines in India were highest in the world,
the SPIC said.
Pharma exports are worth Rs 40,000 crore today. This
will be annexed by China, which produces lowest prices
APIs, if SMEs are not protected. Needless to say, India
itself handed over the initiative to China earlier in
API production owing to parochial policies. It is high
time the country realizes the grim situation and comes
to the rescue of its 5000 pharma SMEs which are
struggling to survive owing to numerous policy changes
which are irrational, illogical and not in national
interest, the SPIC said.
Source
: pharmabiz.com, India, dated 09/10/2009
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