The much-awaited
Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council meeting, slated for Friday, has been
postponed by a week.
Central and state
officials are yet to agree on the Bills to effect the proposed system but there
is still hope for meeting the April 1, 2017, target to begin the new indirect
taxation system. The government says it is confident of being able to introduce
the Bills in the ongoing session of Parliament, despite the indefinite
adjournments of the latter on the protests over demonetisation.
Also, the
government is yet to decide whether to introduce the GST legislations as money
Bills (which would mean Rajya Sabha approval is not needed;
the governing alliance is in a minority here) or finance Bills.
Prime Minister
Narendra Modi might reply to a debate on demonetisation, if it takes place on
Thursday, to try and request opposition parties to not stall Parliament
proceedings.
The Council, a
body comprising the Union finance minister, his minister of state, and state
government representatives (mainly their finance ministers), will now meet on
December 2 and 3 to consider the Bills and compensation legislation, the finance ministry said on Wednesday.
Central and state officials will meet on Friday to work out a solution on
these.
The Centre had on
November 16 circulated the draft legislation among the states. Officials have
been meeting daily since Monday, a source said. "The states have suggested
certain changes relating to returns procedures in the model GST law. Also, they
have asked for changes in wording in the compensation law. We will finalise the
three draft laws at the November 25 meeting," another source said.
Besides the
compensation Bill, the draft Central GST Bill, the integrated GST Bill and state GST Bill are being deliberated on by
the officials. After finalisation of the draft legislations in the meeting of
officers on Friday, these will be placed before the GST Council, the finance ministry tweeted.
Sources said that
since the legal changes in the draft laws would take some time, it was decided
to postpone the Council meeting.
"Our effort
has been to take all decisions by building consensus with the states. In the
Council, we have at times discussed one particular issue for as much as eight
hours. This spirit of consensus should continue for the future and become a
precedent, as differences of opinion on rates and other issues are likely to be
a routine affair," a source said.
The officers committee
would not discuss the issue of dividing the administrative control over
assessees between central and state officials. This would be decided at the
ministerial level. On Sunday, an informal meeting between Finance Minister Arun
Jaitley and state representatives could not reach an agreement on this.
According to the
proposed rules under the first draft GST Bill,
businesses have to file at least
three monthly returns and one annual return for each state. Monthly returns are
for output supply, input supply and summary accounts, and would cover state
GST, integrated GST (IGST) and central GST (CGST).
Currently,
businesses have to file value-added tax returns but these are quarterly.
Service tax returns must be filed but only twice a year and not state-wise. The
GST returns have to contain details of profit according to the profit and loss
account, incorporating gross profit, net profit, etc. Also, these have to be
audited for those with annual turnover exceeding Rs 1 crore.
At its previous
meeting, the Council had agreed on a four-slab structure - 5, 12, 18 and 28 per
cent - along with a cess on luxury and 'sin' goods such as tobacco.
GST Council Meeting scheduled for
25th November, 2016 has been now rescheduled on 2nd and 3rd December, 2016.
— Ministry of Finance (@FinMinIndia) November 23, 2016
Parliament
Separately, Parliament
was adjourned on Wednesday after heated exchange between the opposition and the
government over demonetisation. The differences also persist over the rule
under which a debate should take place. The government wants the debate under
Rule 193, which does not entail voting, and the opposition is keen on it under
Rule 56, which requires voting. The opposition also wants the PM to make a
statement.
The session ends
on December 16 and the government is confident of being able to introduce the
GST and compensation Bills before it ends. Back-channel efforts were being made
from the side of the government to get the two Houses to function. Jaitley,
home minister Rajnath Singh and parliamentary affairs minister Ananth Kumar are
holding talks with some of the prominent opposition parties.
A government
strategist indicated the PM might intervene if the Rajya Sabha were to resume its
discussion on demonetisation and its impact. He said the PM would attend Rajya Sabha proceedings on Thursday, which
is his day to be present in the House. However, the opposition demand that Modi
be present "cannot be a precondition". The government believes the
opposition cannot sustain its protests as the "poor of India" were
with the PM on the issue.
Source:
Business Standard News Report
by:
Keshav R Garg
(B.Com, FCA, CS,
ISA (ICAI))
Faculty for GST:
Indirect Tax Committee of ICAI
Author: Bharat's
GST Ready Reckoner
A Handbook on GST
Adviser for GST:
Industries Association of Chandigarh
Member: Indirect
Tax Committee of CII, PHDCCI, MyGst.MyTax Foundation
Address: 3328,
Sector 27 D, Chandigarh, India - 160 019
Phones:
+91-172-461-3328, +91-98880-90008
Mails: mygst.mytax@gmail.com, keshavgarg@kdai.in
very nice info keep sharing GST
ReplyDelete