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Challenges with digital GST rate

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November 30, 2017

Click here to know more about digital GST rate.

What is the issue?

  • Union government has proposed a 2% discount in GST for consumers who make digital payments.
  • Incorporating a digital GST rate for every digital transaction is going to be a huge challenge.

What is significance of digital GST rate?

  • The proposal is likely to be taken up in the next GST Council meeting in January.
  • The incentive will be available to business-to-consumer (B2C) transactions for goods and services that face a GST rate of 3% or more.
  • The incentive will include a 1% concession on the Central GST and another 1 per cent on the State GST.
  • The move means that the effective GST rate for items in the 18% slab will come down to 16% for those paying through digital mode.

What are the concerns with the move?

  • The concession will be limited to Rs.100 per transaction, this implies that goods and services bought up to Rs.5,000 per transaction will enjoy the full 2 percentage point concession of Rs.100.
  • The cap of Rs.100 per transaction is too less to induce taxpayers accustomed to cash to switch over to digital.
  • The proposal will not apply to retailers registered under the composition scheme.
  • Customers will be offered two prices, one with the normal GST and the other with two percentage points lower GST for digital payments.
  • This would need some alteration in the tax computation process and the return filing templates.
  • GST is still a new law and revenue collections are oscillating substantially,it is too early to offer such incentives under a tax law.

What are the expected challenges?

  • Providing a 2% rebate is going to further reduce collections from GST which could impact the coffers of the Centre and the States.
  • In turn, this would force the Government to tap into the Compensation Cess for monetary comfort.
  • The taxpayers with turnover of less than Rs.1.5 crore are most likely to conduct some transactions in cash.
  • The condition not to extend the scheme to taxpayers registered under the composition scheme could actually turn out to be counter-productive.

 

Source: Business Line

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