7 Years Of GST: Finance Ministry Says Reform Reduced Tax On Household Goods, Relief To Every Home
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The rate of food items like unpacked wheat, rice, curd, and lassi, which were taxed at 2.5-4 per cent before GST implementation, is at nil after the GST rollout. (Representative image)
The GST taxpayer base has increased to 1.46 crore in April 2024 from 1.05 crore as of April 2018.
Goods and Services Tax (GST), which completed 7 years of implementation on Monday, has brought happiness and relief to every home through reduced taxes on household appliances and mobile phones, the finance ministry said on Monday.
GST, which subsumed about 17 local tax and cesses, was rolled out on July 1, 2017.
The theme of the 7th GST Day is Sashakt Vyapar Samagra Vikas (empowered trade overall growth).
Also Read: GST Simplified Compliance, Improved Tax Buoyancy; Fake ITC Generation Still A Challenge
“With reduced tax rates on household goods after GST implementation, #7yearsofGST has brought happiness and relief to every home through lower GST on household appliances and mobile phones,” the ministry said in a post on X.
The GST taxpayer base has increased to 1.46 crore in April 2024 from 1.05 crore as of April 2018.
“We have witnessed a quantum jump in taxpayers base along with improved compliance,” Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) Chairman Sanjay Kumar Agarwal said.
Giving comparative charts of pre- and post-GST tax rates of household goods, the ministry said GST has enhanced the ease of living with every household saving on expenditure on food items and items of mass consumption after GST implementation.
The rate of food items like unpacked wheat, rice, curd, and lassi, which were taxed at 2.5-4 per cent before GST implementation, is at nil after the GST rollout.
Household goods like cosmetics, wrist watches, sanitary plastic ware, doors and windows, furniture and mattresses are taxed at a lower rate of 18 per cent in the GST regime, lower than 28 per cent in the erstwhile excise and VAT regime.
The ministry said mobile phones, TVs up to 32 inches, refrigerators, washing machines electrical appliances (other than air conditioners), geysers and fans which attracted 31.3 per cent taxes in the pre-GST era, are now in the 18 per cent tax slab in GST regime.
It further said the compliance burden was reduced for small taxpayers, and the GST Council has recommended waiving off annual return filing requirement for taxpayers with aggregate annual turnover of up to Rs 2 crore in fiscal 2023-24.
The quarterly return filing and monthly payment of taxes (QRMP) scheme has reduced the number of returns filed in a year from 24 to 8, for more than 44 lakh small taxpayers, IFF (Invoice furnishing Facility) ensured the seamless passage of ITC (Input Tax Credit), the ministry added.
Fake ITC Generation Still A Challenge
GST has simplified compliance, improved tax buoyancy and increased states’ revenues, but fake invoices and fraudulent registration remain a big challenge for policymakers trying to curb tax evasion.
In 2023, the Directorate of GST Intelligence (DGGI) detected tax evasion of more than Rs 1.98 lakh crore and arrested 140 masterminds who were involved in defrauding the exchequer.
Significant GST evasion was detected in diverse sectors like online gaming, casinos, insurance and secondment (import of manpower services).
The setting up of the GST appellate tribunal is expected to streamline and fast-track the dispute resolution process for the industry. However, the principal bench and the state benches of the GSTAT are yet to be operationalised.
Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) President Ranjeet Kumar Agarwal said, “Our efforts in capacity building, including training over 6,800 officials across various government departments, have been pivotal in promoting an efficient and transparent indirect tax regime.
(With PTI inputs)
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