Industry sources said there has been a sudden surge in
the Directorate General of GST Intelligence (DGGI)
investigation where issues such as inclusion of salary
in cross-charge is being raised. GST is 18% on supply of
services under cross charge.
In December 2021, the Appellate Authority for Advance
Ruling (AAAR), Maharashtra had ruled in the case of
Cummins India that allocation and recovery of the salary
of the employees of the head office from the branch
office/units will be subject to GST. The company had
sought a ruling on the applicability of GST on
allocation and recovery of the salary cost of the head
office’s employees from the branch offices in different
states.
The objective of cross-charge was to pass on the input
tax credit from head office to branch offices in
different states seamlessly for GST paid on common
services of a company such as rent, IT and
advertisement, industry sources said. However, there are
no specific guidelines on the manner and structure of
cross charge or whether to include salary costs of head
office staff or not in it for taxation purpose.
“The GST Council needs to examine whether cross charge
mechanism should continue and in what form. The most
important issue is as to whether salary of one office
(typically head office) staff has to be included in this
for levying GST,” said Pratik Jain, Partner, Price
Waterhouse & Co LLP.
The most impacted sectors are those exempt from GST such
as healthcare, education, electricity and petroleum as
input tax credit is not available, Jain said. It is also
adversely impacting sector such as restaurants and real
estate which don’t get input tax credit on taxes paid on
input services and it becomes an additional cost for
them.
Companies in these sectors, which were already suffering
from GST on cross charges for common services, will see
further rise in operational cost due to inclusion of
salary. For other companies, it is more sort of a
compliance burden as taxes paid in supply of services to
branches are recovered through ITC mechanism.
In the pre-GST regime, any supply of service between
head office and branch office was not taxable. Hence, it
has been a matter of dispute between companies and tax
officials after the GST was rolled out in July 2017.
Inclusion of salary in cross charges for GST has further
complicated the matter as industry is of the view that
employees work for the company as a whole and not
employed for head office or branches.
Source:::FINANCIAL EXPRESS,
dated 21/04/2022.