Yahoo – AFP,
Megha BAHREE, July 1, 2017
![]() |
| Prime Minister Narendra Modi held a special midnight session of parliament to launch the new goods and services tax (GST) which he called "good and simple" (AFP Photo/Karel Prinsloo) |
India on
Saturday launched its biggest ever fiscal reform with the government promising
a stronger, less corrupt economy while businesses are nervous about the new
tax.
The goods
and services tax (GST) replaces more than a dozen levies imposed nationally and
by the 29 states. It aims to transform the nation of 1.3 billion people and its
$2 trillion economy into a single market.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi held a special midnight session of parliament to launch
GST which he called "a good and simple tax."
"With
GST, the dream of one India, great India, will come true," the prime
minister said.
"GST
is a simple, transparent system which prevents generation of black money and
curbs corruption," said Modi who jolted the country last year by
withdrawing more than 85 percent of India's bank notes from circulation in a
clampdown on under-the-table dealings.
"The
system gives opportunity to honesty and people who do honest business."
But the
prime minister, who has put huge efforts into the economy as he targets
re-election in 2019, acknowledged that it would have teething problems.
Jammu and
Kashmir state has refused to sign onto the one tax regime. And GST has sparked
protests by traders, while the main opposition Congress Party boycotted the
launch ceremony.
Tax rules
confound
Businesses
are nervous about the imposition of GST, which sets out four different rates of
between five and 28 per cent instead of the one originally envisioned.
The GST
rule book runs to more than 200 pages and last-minute changes were still being
made late Friday.
Textile
traders and other sectors went on strike ahead of the launch and many
businesses say they are unclear about what to charge.
The
Bhartiya Udyog Vyapar Mandal, a national traders association that claims 60
million members, called a one-day strike Friday to protest the GST.
Many are
worried because while returns have to be filed by computer, they do not have or
do not understand computers.
"Since
August last year we have put forward our demands on GST but the government has
never responded," national secretary general Vijay Prakash Jain told AFP.
"We told the government, either fix this, or we will strike."
Most
economists agree the reform -- first proposed in 2006 -- is long overdue, but
warn the initial shock to the economy is likely to drag, rather than stoke
growth, as businesses adjust.
Credit
Suisse managing director Neelkanth Mishra warned that "the next few months
will be a period of uncertainty in which no company would want to invest, that
slows down the investment cycle and acts as a drag on the economy."
Rating
agency ICRA said that while GST would lead to an increase in compliance in some
sectors, it would also reduce the competitiveness of the informal businesses
who are expected to lose out to the formal and organised players.
"Although
it is still far from perfect, we realise how much better it is than the myriad
taxes we've been subjected to over the last several decades," said Pratik
Jain, Partner and Leader Indirect Tax, PwC India.
"The
old India was economically fragmented. The new India will create one tax, one
market for one nation," Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.