Arun Jaitley says all
taxpayers excluding a few exceptions shall file one monthly GST return in place
of multiple filings currently required in a month
Last
Published: Fri, May 04 2018. 11 53 PM IST
New Delhi: The Goods and Services Tax Council (GST
Council) on Friday approved a simpler tax return filing system under the new
indirect tax regime and also approved the conversion of the GST Network into a
government holding, finance minister Arun Jaitley said after the council met
through a video conference.
The new
return filing form will reduce the compliance burden for taxpayers as they
would have to file only one monthly return and invoices have to be uploaded
only by sellers. It will be put in place within six months and the transition
will be done in a phased manner.
As per
the transition plan decided by the Council, the existing GSTR 1 and GSTR 3B
forms will continue for the next six months. After this period, all taxpayers
will need to file one monthly return with composition dealers, while dealers
filing no tax returns will need to file only quarterly returns.
For six
months under the new tax filing regime, taxpayers will be able to avail
provisional input tax credit, even if the seller has not uploaded the invoices.
However, after this, input tax credit will be available to the buyer only for
invoices uploaded by the supplier.
In case
of non-payment of tax by the seller, the government has retained the right to
recover dues from both the buyer and the seller. “In case of default in payment
of tax by the seller, recovery shall be made from the seller. However, reversal
of credit from buyer shall also be an option available with the revenue
authorities to address exceptional situations like missing dealer, closure of
business by supplier or supplier not having adequate assets etc,” said a
finance ministry statement.
The GST Council also decided to covert
GSTN into a government-owned company, with the centre and states holding a 50%
stake each.
At
present, 51% stake is held by private entities, valued at Rs5.1 crore, with the
centre and the states holding 24.5% each.
To be
sure, to protect existing employees and their salaries, the GSTN board has been
allowed to continue with the staffing terms for a period of up to five years.
They will also have the freedom to hire new employees at similar terms.
However,
there was no consensus on the issues of levying a 3% GST cess on sugar as well
as providing a 2% incentive on digital payments, subject to a cap of Rs100. The
matter has been referred to two separate groups of ministers—one headed by
Assam finance minister Himanta Biswa Sarma and the other by Bihar deputy chief
minister Sushil Modi.
Raising
his concerns, Kerala finance minister Thomas Isaac wrote on Twitter, “The 3%
GST cess will fetch only Rs7,000 crore. Why can’t it be met from central
budgets rather than through distorting GST. I shall agree to a cess only if a
similar treatment is offered to rubber.” He further said that states such as
Kerala, West Bengal and Telangana oppose the 2% incentive for digital payments.
First Published: Fri, May 04 2018. 07 13 PM IST livemint
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