Today, every state government, including all the Congress ones, is in favour of the Goods and Services Tax. You have every political party in Parliament which has said they will vote in favour. ARUN JAITLEY, Union finance minister The government remained hopeful on Thursday about the prospects of a nationwide Goods and Services Tax (GST), but maintained its unwillingness to specify the tax rate in the proposed law, arguing that it could distort the system. Once adopted, the GST can dramatically alter India’s indirect tax system by replacing a string of central and state levies such as excise, value added tax and octroi into a single unified levy and stitch together a common national market. “Today, every state government, including all Congress ones, is in favour of Goods and Services Tax (GST),” finance minister Arun Jaitley said at a media event. “You have every political party in Parliament which has said they will vote in favour,” he said. The Lok Sabha passed the landmar