Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in her reply to the
discussion on the Finance Bill had said 75% of the GST
collected goes to states and opposition members should
ask their State finance ministers to bring the proposal
at the GST Council.
West Bengal Finance Minister Chandrima Bhattacharya had
raised the issue in the meeting of the Group of
Ministers (GoM) on rate rationalisation last month and
the matter was referred to the fitment committee for
further data analysis.
The GoM had opined against any tinkering with a
four-tier GST slab of 5, 12, 18, and 28% for the time
being. The panel, however, had asked the fitment
committee to look into any scope for rationalisation of
rates of goods and services.
Regarding online gaming, Centre and State tax officers
will present a "status report" before the GST Council.
The report would include GST revenue collection from the
online gaming sector before and after October 1, 2023.
From October 1, 2023, entry-level bets placed on online
gaming platforms and casinos were subject to 28% GST.
Before that, many online gaming companies were not
paying 28% GST, arguing that there were differential tax
rates for games of skill and games of chance.
The GST Council in its meeting in August 2023 had
clarified that online gaming platforms were required to
pay 28% tax and subsequently Central GST law was amended
to make the taxation provision clear. Offshore gaming
platforms were also mandated to register with GST
authorities and pay taxes, failing which the government
would block those sites.
The council had then decided that the taxation on the
online gaming sector would be reviewed after six months
of its implementation. Sources said the Council would
deliberate on the status of taxation on the sector and
any change in tax rates is unlikely.
Besides, the Council is likely to be apprised about the
ongoing drive against fake registration, the success of
the drive, and action taken against such entities. The
total amount of suspected GST evasion would also be
presented before the Council.
The drive, from August 16, 2024, to October 15, 2024, is
aimed at detecting suspicious/fake GSTINs and to conduct
requisite verification and further remedial action to
weed out these fake billers.
In the first drive between May 16, 2023, to July 15,
2023, against fake registration, 21,791 entities (11,392
pertaining to state tax jurisdiction and 10,399
pertaining to CBIC jurisdiction) having GST registration
were discovered to be non-existent. An amount of 24,010
crore (State - 8,805 crore + Centre - 15,205 crore) of
suspected tax evasion was detected during the special
drive.
Also, the Council would approve notifications, including
that of the amnesty scheme, announced in the last
council meeting. The various amendments to GST law
decided by the council in its previous meeting on June
22 were passed by Parliament last month vide Finance
Act, 2024.
The council’s June meeting took a host of
taxpayer-friendly measures, including waiver of interest
and penalty for demand notices issued in the first three
years of GST — 2017-18, 2018-19, and 2019-20 — if the
full tax demanded is paid by March 31, 2025.
To reduce litigation, a monetary limit for tax officers,
to file appeals before the GST Appellate Tribunal, the
High Court and the Supreme Court was fixed at 20 lakh, 1
crore and 2 crore, respectively, by the Council. It also
recommended a reduction of the quantum of pre-deposit
required to be paid by taxpayers for filing of appeals
under goods and services tax (GST).
Source:: The Hindu,
dated 08/09/2024.