The official said that GST needed to be revenue neutral and that the GST Council needed to move from multiplicity of rates to one standard rate.
The
goods
and service tax (GST) needs to be taken back to the drawing board
and simplified, the Fifteenth Finance Commission Chairman N K Singh
said on Tuesday.
“GST needs to go back to the drawing board. We need simplicity of rates. Whether one rate or not is a matter of debate,” Singh said, adding in its current form, GST had made compliance very difficult.
“GST needs to go back to the drawing board. We need simplicity of rates. Whether one rate or not is a matter of debate,” Singh said, adding in its current form, GST had made compliance very difficult.
Singh
was speaking at the launch of a book by former Finance Secretary
Vijay Kelkar and economist Ajay Shah. In a chapter in the book, the
authors have proposed a single-rate GST of 10 per cent.
Kelkar
said at the event that given the present situation in the Indian
economy, reviving growth was far more important than anything else in
meeting various objectives. Shah said that at the current level of
state capability in India, it was better for the state to do fewer
things but do them well. The event was also attended by former Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh, who did not speak.
Additionally,
a Fifteenth
Finance Commission source said on Tuesday that the final report
of the Commission will have a big chapter on GST.
“There
will be a big robust chapter on GST in our final report. We have very
vital things to say about how the revenue behavior takes place. So
from this point of view we have a strong stake in how future of the
GST pans out,” the official said.
The
official said that GST needed to be revenue neutral and that the GST
Council needed to move from multiplicity of rates to one standard
rate. “A huge amount of simplification of procedures is needed to
make compliance easier for a small scale industry guy, so that he
does not have to employ a chartered accountant to fill forms. You
also need to give it predictability and certainty because you cannot
have predictability if you have many changes,” the official said.
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