"The GST for unregistered agencies is at 12 per cent. As
there is no mechanism to differentiate between
registered and unregistered agencies at purchasing
point, the unregistered agencies are purchasing printing
paper at five per cent instead of 12 per cent, creating
shortage of papers for registered agencies. This
shortage has also resulted in increase in the cost of
printing papers as well. The government has to consider
reducing the GST rates for registered agencies and
create a differentiating mechanism to identify
registered and unregistered agencies," the former CM
said in the letter, a copy of which was shared with the
media.
Supply chain disruptions due to pandemic, labour
shortage, raw material cost, shortage of shipping
containers and fuel price hike have contributed to
drastic increase in printing prices, he noted.
"The cost of one ton of imported printing paper was $300
or Rs 23,000 before the pandemic, and it has reached
about Rs 55,000-Rs 60,000 now. Nearly 56 per cent of
paper was imported and 44 per cent was manufactured
domestically," Siddaramaiah, who is the leader of
opposition in the Karnataka assembly said.
Referring to the ongoing Ukraine-Russia conflict, he
said since most of the imports are from Russia and
Europe, the disruption has increased drastically due to
the war.
Siddaramaiah also pointed out that the cost of printing
paper having doubled in last two years and increase in
GST have caused a huge burden on print media houses to
sustainably continue the printing of newspapers.
Source:::THE NEW INDIAN EXPRESS,
dated 27/04/2022.