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Congress’s idea of single rate for GST will not work out says PM Modi

Yesterday, GST completed a year. While the BJP had lauded the implementation, Congress had slammed it, calling it ‘grossly scary tax’.

Meanwhile, Congress President Rahul Gandhi had come forth with a plan of single rate GST.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley dismissed the idea of a single rate GST as “flawed” saying that it can only work in a country where the entire population has ‘similar and high’ capacity to spend.

PM Modi too voiced his opinion on the matter. PM Modi said that a Mercedes car and milk cannot be taxed at the same rate. He said that accepting the Congress Party’s demand for a uniform 18% rate would lead to a spike in tax on food and essential items.

Modi said the GST has within one year of its launch led to an over 70% jump in the indirect taxpayer base, demolished check-posts and merged 17 taxes and 23 cesses into one single tax.

 Modi, according to a part-transcript of the 45-minute interview posted by Swarajya magazine on its website, said against a total of 66 lakh indirect taxpayers registered since Independence, 48 lakh new enterprises were registered since the launch of GST on July 1, 2017.

READ ALSO: GST has brought simplicity says PM Modi on GST’s 1st birthday

The new tax regime, which subsumed Central levies like excise duty and service tax and state taxes like VAT, is aimed at making indirect taxation “simple” while eliminating the “inspector raj”, he said, adding that GST was an evolving system that is calibrated based on the feedback from all stakeholders.

“It would have been very simple to have just one slab but it would have meant we could not have food items at 0% tax rates. Can we have milk and Mercedes at the same rate? So when our friends in the Congress say that they will have just one GST rate, they are effectively saying they will tax food items and commodities, which are currently at zero or 5%, at 18%,” he said.

“Around 350 crore invoices were processed and 11 crore returns were filed. Would we be looking at such numbers if the GST were indeed very complex?” he asked.

“Checkposts have been abolished and there are no more queues at state borders. Not only are truck drivers saving precious time but also the logistics sector is getting a boost and thereby increasing the productivity of our country. Would this be happening if the GST was complex?”

To a query on criticism of GST’s implementation, he said the new tax regime was a massive change, requiring a complete reset of one of the world’s largest economic systems.

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