Skip to main content

How GST deal was clinched

The empowered committee of the finance ministers of states on Tuesday reached an agreement that the revenue- neutral rate ( RNR) would not be specified in the Goods and Services Tax ( GST) Constitution amendment Bill, raising hopes that it would be passed by the Rajya Sabha next week.
Also, according to a source, once the Bill is passed ā€œ there will be a significant reduction of taxes on the common man which will be reflected in a tax rate and structure that protects the existing levels and trends of revenue between the Centre and the state.ā€ No finance minister, including those of states ruled by chief Opposition party Congress, insisted on a cap on the rate of taxation and agreed that this could be revisited later. Armed with this consensus, Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley is likely to tell the Congress that the finance ministers of states, where it is in power, are on board on the Constitutional amendment Bill.
Jaitley made no bones about the fact that he was extremely keen to get the Bill passed and showed a great flexibility in creating consensus, astate finance minister, who did not want to be named, told Business Standard.
Top sources in the Congress said they were not happy with the development but would not hold up the Bill. Neither Gujarat nor Maharashtra nor Tamil Nadu ā€“ all three states that had raised objections to one or other aspect of the Bill ā€“demurred on the formulation.
To cement this consensus, Jaitley met with other political parties on GST on Wednesday.
He met NCPā€™s Praful Patel and is likely to meet the Left parties on Thursday. Government strategists said talks with the Congress would continue. They said the GST Constitution amendment would not be possible without key states such as Congress- ruled Karnataka, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand, since the amendment has to be ratified by at least half, that is 15, of the state legislatures.
ā€œI am doing this in good faith.
You have to believe me,ā€ was Jaitleyā€™s heartfelt and fervent appeal to his counterparts from the states.
There was an initial flutter at the meeting because of a letter received by West Bengal FM Amit Mitra from the revenue secretary that the minutes of the 25 June meeting at Kolkataā€” that Mitra had recordedā€” were inaccurate. This issue related to the states getting exclusive rights to levy GST on businesses with a turnover of ? 1.5 crore or less. The revenue secretary wrote to Mitra that the Union finance ministry did not agree on this. However, this problem was sorted out with the committee accepting and passing the minutes.
Finance ministers of states pointed out that traders would have to face harassment by the central government because the CBEC did not have the bandwidth to levy and collect the taxes. When this issue was raised in Kolkata, Jaitley had said: ā€œThis can be doneā€. When the Union finance ministry raised the issue, he told the state ministers: ā€œ This is small matter. What I really want is a sense of what the states are feeling.ā€ That set the tone for the rest of the meeting on which there was some quibbling over language and wording, especially relating to ā€œ full compensationā€ but all finance ministers were finally on board.
More on business- standard. com THE CENTRE- STATES DIALOGUE
Answering the concerns of the states, Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley managed to bring almost all of them on board, clearing the decks for the GST:
States: What about tax levied on businesses below Rs. 1.5 croreRs.Centre: This is a small matterā€¦ You can have it States: We want ā€œ full compensationā€. In the Bill, ā€œ may be sharedā€, should be replaced with ā€œshall be sharedā€ Centre: The words may vary but the Bill will encapsulate the sense States: Revenue neutral rate should be significantly reduced Centre: Chief Economic Adviser Arvind Subramanian and Haseeb Drabu ( Jammu & Kashmir finance ministers) will draw up the phraseology Final formulation: ā€œ There will be a significant reduction in taxation on the common man, which is reflected in a tax rate and structure that protects the existing levels and trends of the revenue of the states and the Centreā€ States: How about signing memoranda of understanding ( MoUs) with every states on the rate, and whether it should be floating or a band? Centre: We can talk about that Parliament on Wednesday.
Business Standard New Delhi,28th July 2016

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Budget: Startup sector gets new Fund of Funds, FM to allocate Rs 10K cr

  The Indian startup sector received a boost with Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announcing the establishment of a new fund of funds (FoF) in the Budget 2025. The minister unveiled a fresh FoF with an expanded scope, allocating Rs 10,000 crore. The initial fund of funds announced by the government with an investment of Rs 10,000 crore successfully catalysed commitments worth Rs 91,000 crore, the minister said.   ā€œThe renewal of the Rs 10,000 crore commitment to the Fund of Funds for alternative investment funds (AIFs) is a significant step forward for the Indian startup and investment ecosystem. The initial Rs 10,000 crore commitment catalysed Rs 91,000 crore in investments, and I fully expect this fresh infusion to attract an additional Rs 1 lakh to Rs 1.5 lakh crore in capital,ā€ said Anirudh Damani, managing partner, Artha Venture Funds.   Damani further added that this initiative will provide much-needed growth capital to early-stage startups, further strengthenin...

GST collection for November rises by 8.5% to Rs.1.82 trillion

  New Delhi: Driven by festive demand, the Goods and Services Tax (GST) collections for the Union and state governments climbed to Rs.1.82 trillion in November, marking an 8.5% year-on-year growth, according to official data released on Sunday. Sequentially, however, the latest collection figures are lower than the Rs.1.87 trillion reported in October, which was the second highest reported so far since the new indirect tax regime was introduced in 2017. The highest-ever GST collection of Rs.2.1 trillion was reported in April. The consumption tax figures highlight the positive impact of the recent festive season on goods purchases, providing a much-needed boost the industry had been anticipating. The uptick in GST collections driven by festive demand had been anticipated by policymakers, who remain optimistic about sustained growth in rural consumption and an improvement in urban demand. The Ministry of Finance, in its latest monthly economic review released last week, stated that I...