The group of ministers (GoM) led by Karnataka chief
minister Basavaraj Bommai could not conclude discussions
on how the GST rates could be revised, leading to a
delay in the submission of the report. The panel was
constituted in September 2021.
Given that stakeholder consultations on the GoM report will also take time and
that some key state elections such as Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh are due in
2022, a comprehensive GST rate rejig could be deferred on for a longer period.
While the council made some attempts to correct inverted duty structures across
several value chains, the decision to roll back a uniform GST rate for textiles
proved that it won’t be an easy option.
The council had to drop a plan to hike the GST rates for most textile products
in the man-made fibre value chain from 5% to 12% in late December 2021, amid
protests from the industry from Gujarat and other states. It may revisit the
issue soon.
With the hardening of commodity prices after the Ukraine-Russia conflict,
India’s wholesale price inflation (WPI) reversed it trajectory in February 2022
and increased to 13.11%, after coming in at 12.96% in January. Retail inflation
(CPI) in February also rose marginally to 6.07% from 6.01% in the previous
month, hovering over the upper bound of the RBI’s inflation target range of
2%-6%.
“It is essential to carefully consider all aspects including the possibility of
inflation, before concluding on the rate rationalisation exercise. It is also
necessary to ascertain views of key industry stakeholders,” said MS Mani,
partner, Deloitte India.
It was envisaged that GST would produce significant incremental economic growth
and improve revenue productivity. But revenues from this comprehensive
destination-based consumption tax have consistently been below the government’s
expectations, partly due to the pandemic. Revenues improved in recent months due
to a crackdown on evasion and formalisation of the economy.
Officials are hopeful that the average monthly GST collections would improve to
about Rs 1.35 lakh crore from Rs 1.23 lakh crore in FY22, thereby generating
about Rs 90,000 crore in additional state GST collections in the next financial
year.
There have been discussions on merger of 5% and 12% GST rate categories into a
single rate of 7% or 8%, another official said. However, raising GST rates at
this juncture may not be easy for commodities such as food products that attract
a 5% rate.
An analyst pointed out that if the GST Council has to replace the existing
structure of four rates — 5%,12%, 18% and 28% — with a three-slabs system, then
the peak rate of 28% is unlikely to be touched because it covers a few luxury
items. The other option is to get 5% and 12% rates merged to 7%-8% or merge the
slabs of 12% and 18% to 15-16%. Again, 18% may not be changed as it is giving
70% of GST revenues. It is also possible that some items may be moved to the 18%
slab from 5% or 12% now. Also, a few items in the 5% category might be exempt.
While the GST compensation mechanism is to end on June 30 this year, several
states have demanded that the facility be extended, finance minister Nirmala
Sitharaman told Parliament earlier this week. The Centre has however reiterated
that the statutory requirement was to compensate the states for GST shortfall
only for the initial five years after the GST’s launch.
Also, it pointed out that just for servicing the loan taken to compensate the
states for 2020-21 and 2021-22, the cesses will need to be in place till the end
of FY26.
Following a GST Council decision, the Centre released Rs 1.1 lakh crore for
2020-21 and Rs 1.59 lakh crore for 2021-22 as back-to-back loans to make good
the shortfall. The Centre has mobilised the funds through borrowings under a
special window provided by the RBI.
Source:::FINANCIAL EXPRESS ,
dated 18/03/2022.