Goods and Services Tax to miss April deadline, signal state Finance Ministers
Posing fresh roadblocks to the Goods and Services Tax (GST) rollout, finance ministers of states have said that the new tax regime cannot meet the government's April 1 deadline.
Posing fresh roadblocks to the Goods and Services Tax (GST) rollout, finance ministers of states have said that the new tax regime cannot meet the government's April 1 deadline.
The deadlock continued today with the Centre and states refusing to budge from their respective positions on issues like control of tax payers and taxing high sea trade, a stalemate that threatens to delay the rollout till September.
The two-day meeting of the all-powerful GST Council, the eighth in a row, however, made little headway in brokering a solution even as non-BJP ruled states saw September as more likely deadline for the rollout of the indirect tax regime.
Kerala Finance Minister Thomas Issac said that an April 1 deadline is out of the picture. Yesterday, Delhi Finance Minister Manish Sisodia had also projected a September launch for the reform.
“Working overtime, it should be possible to meet the deadline of September. I am not very optimistic about rolling GST out in June/July. Because it is a new tax and lot of complexity involved, it would be better to move in after full preparation. So GST, to my understanding, will be implemented from September,” the Kerala FM said today.
Isaac further said that the other remaining issues before the GST Council include ways to fund the compensation to states for GST rollout and states participation in Integrated GST (IGST).
Some states want the GST revenue from the highest tax bracket to be shared in 60:40 ratio with the Centre, instead of the present 50:50 sharing.
“There are 4 different rates that have been fixed. Highest bracket is 28 per cent and of this how much will be the Centre and state’s share, nowhere in the law it defines and it seems to be taken for granted it is 50:50. Ever since the Independence in the Centre-state financial relation the imbalance has been growing wider and states’ rights have been curtailed. That can be corrected by ensuring that state’s share in GST will be 60 per cent. Many states also supported this. The Centre did not respond to the demand but it was decided to be discussed later,” he said.
Isaac said that convergence has been growing between the Centre and states.
“The Centre seems to be in a mood to rethink some of the positions that the Centre has been adopting… On the whole the Centre has been taking a step backward and if it really takes one more step backward I think we will have a deal,” he added.
The next meeting of the GST Council, headed by Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley and comprising state representatives, on January 16 would discuss the issue of jurisdiction over assessees as well as try to reach a finality on taxation of territorial waters.
Meanwhile, speaking to reporters here, Jaitley expressed hope to resolve dual control issue in next GST Council meet.
“We know the difficulty, we are moving against time that is why we are meeting on 16 Jan,” he said.
The GST is a signature reform of PM Narendra Modi that aim at boosting economic growth by upto two percentage points.
The GST is a single indirect tax for the whole nation, which will make India one unified common market. It is a single tax on the supply of goods and services, right from the manufacturer to the consumer.