“The next GST Council meeting will take place in March.
We will discuss with the Council members and try to take
up the issue of slab mergers and correcting the inverted
duty
structure
in the meeting,” said a senior Central Board of Indirect
Taxes and Customs (CBIC) official.
Besides the merger of the 12 per cent and 18 per cent
slabs into a standard rate, the 15th Finance Commission,
headed by N K Singh, has suggested rationalising GST
into a three-rate structure, comprising a 5 per cent
merit rate and 28-30 per cent de-merit rate.
“We realise that our GST rates are lower than the
revenue-neutral rate. The Council will take a final call
on what the rationalised slabs should be. The aim will
be to make the structure clean, besides improving
revenues. The potential of monthly GST revenue
collection is Rs 2 trillion,” said the official.
GST revenues touched a record high of Rs 1.19 trillion
in January and Rs 1.15 trillion in December on the back
of improved economic activities and enforcement.
In the view of the 15th Finance Commission, the
effective tax rate under GST stands at 11.8 per cent
according to the International Monetary Fund and 11.6
per cent according to the Reserve Bank of India.
These rates are considerably lower than 14 per cent, the
average revenue neutral rate (RNR) required for a smooth
transition from the value-added tax regime without any
revenue loss.
While GST’s potential is to generate revenue at 7.1 per
cent of GDP, at present it is 5.1 per cent, which
translates into a revenue loss of Rs 4 trillion, the
Commission report notes.
“With GST collection stabilising over the past few
months, there is a need to begin discussion on
rationalising slabs and plan fewer slabs. This will help
in reducing complexity and benefit many businesses,”
said M S Mani, partner, Deloitte India.
Punjab has recommended two slabs.
Currently, GST has four slabs -- 5, 12, 18 and 28 per
cent. Over the peak rate, there is a cess on demerit
items and luxury goods. Besides, bullion is taxed at
less than 5 per cent.
Kerala Finance Minister Thomas Isaac has been batting
for an upward revision in GST rates to ensure states
don’t face a revenue shortfall once they stop getting
compensation after June 2022.
Meanwhile, the government is looking at correcting the
inverted duty structure in certain items such as
textiles, footwear, and fertiliser. The decision on this
was deferred in June last year due to the pandemic. The
council had to correct the inverted duty structure on
mobile phones and specified parts by increasing the rate
to 18 per cent from 12 per cent. An inverted duty
structure arises when the rate on inputs is higher than
that on final products.
As for rationalising rates, key suggestions compiled by
the fitment panel last year included hiking rates on
precious metals from 3 per cent to 5 per cent, taxing
higher segments of education and health, and revisiting
rates on certain items that went down from 28 per cent
to 18 per cent. The Centre had also examined raising the
5 per cent slab to anywhere between 6 per cent and 8 per
cent and doing away with the 12 per cent slab. However,
it did not formalise the proposal due to opposition from
several quarters. The fitment panel had also examined
hiking the rate for certain items at 5 per cent to 12
per cent, and those in 12 per cent to 18 per cent.
Although Modi has expressed the government’s commitment
to bring natural gas under GST, states have been
resisting the move. According to estimates, states earn
about Rs 6,000 crore in revenue from natural gas with
most of it concentrated in Gujarat, Maharashtra, and
Uttar Pradesh.
Andhra Pradesh had in a letter to the chairman of the
GST Council last year said that the state got a revenue
of Rs 5.23 bn on sale of Natural Gas during the year
2017-18, and how bringing it into the GST ambit would
severely impact its revenues.
The use of natural gas is concentrated in only 8-10
states.
On the insistence of states, petroleum has been kept out
of the GST and, hence, continues to face a cascading
effect of multiple taxes. However, certain petroleum
products such as cooking gas, kerosene and naphtha are
part of the GST.While crude oil, diesel, petrol, natural
gas and ATF do not attract the GST, these are used as
inputs in the petrochemical, fertiliser and transport
industries and this leads to a cascading of taxes.
Naphtha and liquefied petroleum gas are included in the
GST.
Source::: Business Standard ,
dated 19/02/2021.