Anti-Profiteering
Measure to reap benefits to consumers
The 10th GST Council Meeting which
concluded on 18.02.2017 at Udaipur has approved the anit-profiteering Measure
as illustrated by section 163 of the Revised Draft of Goods and Services Tax
Law. But what it is exactly here we illustrate for you:
1. What is the provision in the law?
The Central
Government may by law constitute an Authority, or entrust an existing Authority
constituted under any law, to examine whether input tax credits availed by any
registered taxable person or the reduction in the price in account of any
reduction in the tax rate have actually resulted in a commensurate reduction in
the price of the said goods and/or services supplied by him.
2. What is the implication of the Anti-profiteering measures?
The
provision clearly indicates that in case a business/registered taxable person
avails any benefit under GST due to availment of extra tax credit or due to
reduction in tax rate, such benefit has to be passed on to the consumer. For instance
a dealer who buys excise paid goods from the manufacturer does not get credit
of the excise duty when he sells his goods under VAT. Under GST such credit
shall be available leading to saving at the hands of such dealer.
The Act
proposes that such savings cannot be retained by the business units rather they
shall pass it to the consumer.
3. What if a business unit trading in goods which were earlier taxed
at 12.5% and post GST they are going to be taxed at say 5%, do they need to
reduce the price of my products?
Yes, the
clause also provides that where the business unit is saving due to reduction in
the tax rates, it has to compulsorily reduce the price of their products to the
extent of such reduction. This will result in same profit margins pre-gst and
post-gst leading to cheaper goods availability with the consumers.
4. Does this mean that whatever a business unit saves from the tax
part has to be passed on?
No, the law
does not make it mandatory that exact savings has to be passed on but it says commensurate
to the reduction of the tax rates. If there are any other cost which the
business might have to incur post gst the same shall be adjusted when new
prices have to be calculated.
5. Does the clause of Anti-profiteering apply on all CGST, SGST and
IGST?
No, the provision
of section 163 is applicable only in respect of tax administered by the Centre
Government i.e. CGST and IGST. Hence the anti-profiteering clause is not
applicable on the State GST.
6. Is Section 163 applicable only for transitional period?
No, The
provisions of the section 163 has been deliberately kept out of the Chapter
covering Transitional Provisions which means that every time there is a
reduction in the tax rates or any benefit is derived by the business unit, the
same has to be passed on to the consumer.
Keshav R Garg
(B.Com, FCA, CS, ISA(ICAI))
Author: Bharat’s Analytical study of Revised GST
Bharat's GST Ready Reckoner
A Handbook on GST
Member: Indirect Tax Committee of CII, PHDCCI, MyGst.MyTax
Foundation
Advisor – Industries Association of Chandigarh
Address: 3328, Sector 27 D, Chandigarh, India - 160 019
Phones: +91-172-461-3328, +91-98880-90008
Mail: keshavgarg@kdai.in
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