Besides, the council has made it optional for taxpayers
with turnover up to Rs 2 crore to file annual returns
for 2020-21.
Also, the reconciliation statement in Form GSTR-9C for
fiscal 2020-21 will have to be filed by taxpayers with
an annual aggregate turnover of above Rs 5 crore.
EY tax partner Abhishek Jain said, “Overall, it can be
said that the Council has duly considered the interest
of the small industry players and provided them with
requisite reliefs, especially since these businesses
were most impacted due to the pandemic”.
AMRG & Associates senior partner Rajat Mohan said this
is a substantial relief in payment of late fees for
non-filers of GSTR-3B.
“This one time Amnesty scheme will push up overall
compliance, contributing extra funds in the exchequer,”
he added.
Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co partner Rajat Bose said
the relaxation in compliance-related measures should
provide temporary relief to small and medium taxpayers.
“However, on an overall basis, the council has failed to
address major pain points of the industry and the common
man resulting from the pandemic,” Bose added.
Deloitte India senior director M S Mani said while the
amnesty scheme would significantly benefit small
businesses, there is a need to extend the same to other
businesses who may not have fulfilled their obligations
due to the pandemic.
Athena Law Associates partner Pawan Arora said, although
the council has allowed self-certification of Annual
Reconciliation instead of GST Audit from CA, taxpayers
should review their annual compliances to ensure proper
compliance.
Nexdigm executive director - indirect tax, Saket
Patawari said the compliance relief is likely to benefit
around 89 per cent of the taxpayers.
“While all the Council recommendations may provide
temporary reliefs to the taxpayers, some important
aspects like the correction of duty inversion,
entitlement to ITC vis-a-vis vaccination for employees,
and extension in due dates for GST returns remain
eluded,” he added.
Tax Connect Advisory Services LLP Partner Vivek Jalan
said that filing GSTR 9 (annual return) is the last
opportunity a taxpayer gets to rectify any mistakes done
during the financial year and should be prepared with
great care.
The GST department may issue notices in case any
inconsistency is detected by its Data Analytics Wing in
the GSTR 9.
Source::: The Times of India
, dated 29/05/2021.