The GST Council has set up a Group of Ministers (GoM),
under Karnataka chief minister Basavaraj Bommai, to
suggest rationalisation in tax rates, merging of slabs,
reviewing the exempt list and correcting duty inversion
in cases where taxes on final output in lower than that
in inputs. The GoM has been given 3-month more time to
submit a final report.
As per an RBI study, the weighted average tax rate under
the Goods and Services Tax (GST) has come down to 11.6
per cent, from 14.4 per cent at the time of its launch.
The revenue-neutral rate under the GST should be about
15.5 per cent, as per the Subramanian Committee report,
submitted before the GST launch.
The GST Council, based on the interim GoM report last
month, had removed tax exemptions on a host of items,
including pre-packed and labelled wheat flour, paneer,
curd, and lassi, while correcting inverted duties on
items like LED lamps, solar water heaters.
"We keep talking of RNR at 15.5 per cent and the present
rate being 11.6, may be gone up to 11.8 or 11.9 per cent
with inverted duties being removed. What is it? are we
looking at we should reach a rate of 15 per cent? I
really do not think there is any fetish in the minds of
policymakers that we have to reach that particular
rate," Bajaj said.
The secretary said this is the time after five years to
introspect and see how the GST rate structures have
panned out, whether there is a need to lessen the number
of rates than what they presently are and what are the
commodities that can go into higher rates and which can
come into lower rates.
"I think, we as policymakers and states now are looking
at GST from this eye and not having this objective that
I have to somehow increase rates in some commodities to
reach that 15 per cent odd rate," Bajaj added.
Source::: The Times of India,
dated 04/07/2022.