In a Christmas bonanza to the common man, the GST Council Saturday
reduced tax rates on 23 goods and services, including movie tickets, TV
and monitor screens and power banks, and exempted frozen and preserved
vegetables from the levy.
The reduced rates are likely to come
into effect from January 1, 2019, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley
told
reporters after the 31st meeting of Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council
here.
Of
the 23 goods and services on which rates have been slashed, the tax
rate on seven items in the 28 per cent slab has been brought down. With
this, only 28 goods are left in the highest 28 per cent tax bracket.
The
goods on which GST has been lowered to 18 per cent from 28 per cent at
present include pulleys, transmission shafts and cranks, gearboxes,
retreaded or used tyres, power banks of lithium-ion batteries, digital
cameras, video camera recorders and video game consoles.
The 28
per cent slab is now restricted to only luxury and sin goods apart from
auto-parts and cement - the tax rate on which could not be cut due to
high revenue implication.
"Rate rationalisation is an ongoing
process. When the original rates were fixed, India had the most
irrational taxation rates. Most of these items were charged, along with
the cascading effect, at 31 per cent. So we had only transiently put
them at 28 per cent because if we had immediately brought it down then
the revenue impact would have been there and therefore the social
expenditure of central and state governments would have suffered.
"So,
therefore, we followed a more realistic pragmatic and a prudent policy
that as the revenues move up and affordability increases we gradually
bring it down. And therefore 28 per cent bracket is already moving
towards a sunset, except the luxury and sin items, 3 items which are
used by the upper-income group and only 1 item of common use remains,"
Jaitley said
Apart from luxury and sin goods, mass use item
cement and white goods like air conditioners and dishwashers are left in
the 28 per cent slab.
"The next target will be rate
rationalisation in cement as and when affordability improves, Jaitley
said, adding reducing GST on cement would have cost an annual Rs 13,000
crore to the exchequer.
The annual revenue implication of the rate cuts would be Rs 5,500 crore, he said.
GST
on movie tickets costing up to Rs 100 cut to 12 per cent, from 18 per
cent, tickets over Rs 100 to attract 18 per cent GST, against 28 per
cent earlier. This will have an annual revenue implication of Rs 900
crore.
Monitors and TV screens up to 32 inches and power banks
will attract 18 per cent GST, as against 28 per cent earlier. The annual
revenue loss on account of this would be Rs 1,500 crore.
The rate
rationalisation comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday
indicated that the 28 per cent slab of GST would only be restricted to a
few select items, such as luxury and sin goods and said his government
wants to ensure that '99 per cent items attract 18 per cent or lower
GST.
The other items which will now attract 18 per cent tax
include pulleys, transmission shafts and cranks, gearboxes, retreaded or
used tyres, power banks of lithium-ion batteries, digital cameras,
video camera recorders and video game consoles. These items currently
attract 28 per cent rate.
The GST Council has also decided to
slash the tax rate on parts and accessories for the carriages for
disabled persons from 28 per cent to 5 per cent. Also, third-party
insurance premium of goods carrying vehicles has been reduced from 18
per cent to 12 per cent.
The other items will attract a lower GST rate of 5 per cent includes marble rubble, natural cork, walking stick, fly ash blocks.
Music
books and vegetables (uncooked or cooked by steaming or boiling in
water), frozen, branded and put in a unit container and vegetables
provisionally preserved but unsuitable in that state for immediate
consumption have been exempted from GST.
Services supplied by banks to Basic Savings Bank Deposit account holders under the Jan Dhan Yojana will not attract GST.
Air
travel of pilgrims by non-scheduled/charter operations being
facilitated by the government under bilateral arrangements will attract a
lower GST rate of 5 per cent.
The Council has decided that 5 per cent would be levied on renewable energy devices and parts for their manufacture.
When
asked about his message to the industry to pass on the rate cut
benefits, Jaitley said, "There is already anti-profiteering authority,
which has been more than active. Of course, they have to pass on the
rate benefits. Or we will do what we did in case of restaurants".
Jaitley
further said that the Council has decided that businesses which are
supposed to pay GST and file returns but have not done so far, should
file it by March 31, 2019, to avoid penalty.
Revenue Secretary
Ajay Bhushan Pandey said that the new return filing system will be
launched on trial basis from April 2019 and would be made mandatory from
July 1, 2019.
The GST Council has also decided to set up a
centralised Authority for Advance Ruling to hear those cases in which
two divergent verdicts have been passed by AARs of two different states.