GST: Imposition of new ITC restrictions every year is
diluting ease of doing business
The Goods and Services Tax (GST) was introduced in India
with much fanfare in July 2017. It was expected that the
Input Tax Credit (ITC) mechanism under the legislation
would be robust, and credits would be fully fungible
resulting in favourable cash flows. However, even after
four years of its introduction, the journey of ITC has
been bumpy and ridden with new restrictions each year,
which has increased the compliance burden exponentially.
At the inception of GST,
the availment of ITC was envisaged as a two-way
communication whereby the supplier would upload the
supply invoice details on the common portal and the
recipient, on a real-time basis, would accept/reject the
same. However, as the system functionalities were not in
place, the two-way communication system could not be
implemented. Further, the legislative provisions to
formalise the two-way communication, i.e., Section 41,
42, 43 and 43A of the CGST Act is proposed to be omitted
vide Finance Bill 2022 giving a go-bye to the ambitious
‘credit-matching’ concept.
It's apposite to analyse
the major amendments made in the ITC provisions:
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Amendments to Rule 36(4) of the Central Goods and
Services Tax Rules, 2017 (CGST Rules) [effective from
Oct’19]
-
Before the insertion of Rule 36(4), the taxpayers
used to avail the entire eligible input credit based
on their invoices and GSTR-2A was only a
facilitation measure, which did not impact the
ability of the taxpayer to avail ITC on a
self-assessment basis
-
Further, Rule 36(4) imposes an onerous and
impossible burden on the buyer to somehow ensure
that the supplier uploads the details of outward
supplies on the common portal, failure of which
leads to risks of ITC disallowance
Amendment to Section 16(2)(aa) of the CGST Act read with
Rule 36(4) of the CGST Rules [effective from Jan’22]
-
The availment of ITC in GSTR-2B continues to be
plagued by certain ambiguity which remains
unaddressed as on date. While the invoices are
reflected in the GSTR-2B for a month, ITC is not
eligible to the recipient due to non-fulfilment of
certain other conditions specified in Section 16 of
the CGST Act viz. goods in transit not received by
the buyer, invoice not received by the buyer, etc.
Proposed Amendment in Section 16(2)(ba) read with
Section 38 of the CGST Act [introduced in Finance Bill
2022]
-
It is imperative to note that the list of
restrictions, on availment of ITC, enumerated under
Section 38 is on account of default by the suppliers
viz. non-compliance with registration provisions,
supplier default in payment of tax, excess ITC
availment, etc.
-
Imposition of such restrictions on the recipient for
the non-compliance of supplier is onerous on the
recipient, who has no recourse or control over the
supplier; these conditions appear to be retrograde,
arbitrary, and irrational and run counter to a
robust value-added tax legislation.
Amendments proposed in Section 49 of the CGST Act read
with Rule 86B of the CGST Rules [Amendment in Section 49
- introduced in Finance Bill 2022; Rule 86B effective
from Jan’21]
-
Rule 86B of the CGST Rules restricts the use of ITC
for payment of output liability. The validity of
Rule 86B is under challenge before the Gujarat High
Court. While the matter is sub-judice, the Finance
Bill 2022 seeks to amend section 49 of the CGST Act,
to empower the Government to restrict utilisation of
electronic credit ledger for payment of output tax
liability.
The imposition of restrictions on the availment and
utilisation of ITC appears to have been made with an
intent to curb fake invoicing and boost revenue.
However, frequent law amendments and imposition of new
restrictions will adversely impact taxpayers especially
the MSME and small taxpayers who neither have the
resources nor automated tax compliance tools. Stringent,
complex and arbitrary conditions in ITC dilutes ‘ease of
doing business’.
It is expected that the Government may take a pragmatic
approach while enacting the budget proposals and remove
onerous compliances and avoidable restrictions on ITC
and aim for a balance between facilitation and
enforcement, which would aid in better compliance and
removal of uncertainty for honest taxpayers.
Source::: THE ECONOMIC TIMES ,
dated 18/02/2022.
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