The
fitment committee under the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council, comprising
central and state officials, has begun a rate rationalisation exercise afresh,
checking the possibility of dropping some of the rates, particularly the 12 per
cent slab, to achieve a revenue-neutral structure, according to a senior official with direct knowledge of the
matter.
The GST regime could see an overhaul in the
current financial year (FY25) as it may move to a three-slab structure from the
existing four.
The current rate structure comprises
standard rates of 5 per cent, 12 per cent, 18 per cent, and the highest rate of
28 per cent. Besides, it has zero and special rates for certain goods and
services.
The fitment committee started
holding meetings on the issue and preparing inputs towards revamping tax rates
and possible implications, which will be submitted to the Group of Ministers
set up by the GST Council to suggest changes to the rate structure. The revenue
department expects revamped tax rates to be implemented in FY25.
Rate rationalisation is a priority
as the current tax structure needs to be streamlined to remove certain
ambiguity, an official said. He further said that the Council, which is
expected to meet after the July Budget, is likely to discuss the rate
rationalisation road map.
The
move follows the stability in GST collections, which had crossed the Rs 2
trillion mark in April.They are expected to garner Rs 1.7-1.8 trillion every
month during the year. .
Rationalisation
could shift goods across slabs, so any decision on the issue to be taken after
extensive deliberations, another official said. The seven-member rate
rationalisation state ministers’ panel is being headed by
UP Finance Minister Suresh Khanna.
The
panel includes finance ministers from Goa, Kerala, Karnataka, West Bengal,
Rajasthan, and Bihar. This panel was reconstituted in November last year, in
light of the state government s political shift.
The
former state panel on the matter under the chairmanship of Karnataka s finance
minister and chief minister Basavaraj Bommai had presented an interim report in
June 2022 s council meeting and sought more time for the final recommendations.
The
new panel is likely to be rejigged again because of the necessity to replace
one of its members, Vijay Kumar Chaudhary, the former finance minister of
Bihar, following a change in the state government.
Over
1,200 items and services attract GST. Other than the standard rates, the tax
structure also has some special rates: 0.25, 1.5, and 3 per cent. While certain
goods fall under zero rates.
The
majority of the revenue comes from the 18 per cent GST slab, followed by the 28
per cent GST slab which adds 16 per cent of the total GST revenue. The
remaining is from 5 and 12 per cent slabs.
Experts
said that it is pertinent to streamline the tax structure for better revenue
augmentation. A significant portion of litigation under GST concerns the
classification of supplies and the applicable GST rates.
A simplified rate structure would automatically reduce
potential disputes over taxes charged, as most similar goods would fall under
the same GST rate, Abhishek Jain, indirect tax head and partner, KPMG
said, adding that along with the broader benefits of lower GST
rates on consumption, the industry could also expect to see fewer GST-related
litigation.