GST council agrees on five areas, differs over decisions taken in 1st meeting

Live mint By PTI Fri, Sep 30 2016. 08 45 PM IST

GST council agrees on five subordinate legislations dealing with issues ranging from registration to invoicing under the new tax regime

New Delhi: In signs of fracture, the centre and states on Friday disagreed on decisions reached at the first meeting of the goods and services tax (GST) council on service tax assessment although they reached a consensus on area based exemption in the new tax regime.

The second meeting of the GST council, headed by finance minister Arun Jaitley, agreed on five subordinate legislations dealing with issues ranging from registration to invoicing under the new GST regime.

It also agreed on the treatment of exemption from GST. Currently, the centre gives exemption to 11 states mostly in the northeast and hilly regions from excise duty as also many states give the same as incentive for setting up industry.

The council decided that under GST, which will subsume excise duty and value-added tax (VAT) among other levies, taxes will have to be collected and it can be reimbursed from the annual budgets to the exempted categories.

But there were divisions over ratifying or approving the minutes of the first meeting of the council, held last week, after at least two states disagreed with what was documented as decided on the centre’s assessing 11 lakh service tax filers in the new dispensation.

“Obviously the first item has to be approval of minutes of the last meeting. With regard to one item recorded in the minutes with regard to the service tax assessments in the new dispensation, there was a long discussion on the interpretation on the decision taken in the last meeting and that discussion consumed a lot of time today (Friday). That discussion was inconclusive and therefore it will continue in the next meeting on 18th (October),” Jaitley told reporters.

Non-ratification of even one item on the minutes means the whole minutes are not agreed. Initially, it was thought that the minutes should be put to vote as those objecting to them were far less than those agreeing but Jaitley wanted to take decisions with consensus and so it was postponed.

Uttar Pradesh’s minister for vocational education and skill development Abhishek Mishra said the minutes were not approved in entirety. The second meeting of the GST council finalized rules for registration, rules for payments, returns, refunds and invoices. With this as many as six issues have been settled by the council, that has representatives of all the states, in two meetings in a span of one week.

Discussions on service tax assessment and the formula for calculating compensation to be paid to states, in case of revenue shortfall caused by GST implementation, possibly from 1 April 2017, would be taken up at the next meeting on 18-20 October.

It will also decide on the all important GST rate, Jaitley said, adding that the government is targeting 22 November for completing major work on deciding tax rate, exemptions and draft legislation by the council.

There were two items regarding the draft GST rules on the agenda of Friday’s meeting, he said. “Now these rules are with regard to registration, rules for payments, return, refund and invoices. These rules are notified once the act is passed... These 5 sets of rules were taken up for consideration and have been approved. So we are in a state of readiness with the subordinate legislation once the act itself is approved,” he said.

The rules approved will form part of the supporting legislations needed to rollout GST. “So once the act is passed by Parliament or by the state legislatures as the case may be, we want the draft rules to be ready so that the rules can be notified immediately,” he said.

Stating that the second item on agenda was treatment of existing tax incentives by the centre, he said, has given some exemptions from excise duty to 11 northeast and hill states.

Similarly, states too give out a series of incentives. “It is possible that some of the exemptions may get phased out. But for the exemptions which may remain how will these exemptions fit into the GST system. So the Council took up for discussion the management of these exemptions. And it was agreed that there would be a levy of tax under the GST system on all exempted entities. Once the tax is levied, the central govt or state government, which gets that tax, would then reimburse from the budget, that quantum of tax back to exempted entity,” he said.

Under the GST system, everybody will have to pay tax, but those exempted would be entitled to be reimbursed the levy they pay. On the issue of service tax assessment, he said the central government’s understanding is that an arrangement has been finalized for continuing with the existing system and transferring it to states when their officers are trained. On services that are taxed partly by the centre and partly by states, he said experts will examine and report it in next meeting for a final decision.

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