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“Any rate higher than 18 per cent may have an adverse impact on business buoyancy,” said a representative from one of the industry chambers. Among those invited to meet the members of the committee are representatives from the Confederation of Indian Industry, Ficci, Assocham, Nasscom, Federation of Indian Export Organisation and Federation of Indian Micro and Small & Medium Enterprises. Industry players feel any shortfall in states’ revenues could be made up by taxing of services and the promised compensation from the Centre.
Tax experts say under the new indirect tax regime, companies would have to provide for pre-payment of taxes when any invoice for a transaction is raised. “There would be substantial need for more working capital to provide for pre-payment of taxes,” said Amit Kumar Sarkar, partner, Grant Thornton India. If all states do not come on board from day one, and be part of the GST Net, the IT backbone, the chain for claiming any tax credit would break down, leading to working capital issues in businesses. Currently, 17-18 states are working along with GST Network to set up their IT network. Other states are doing it on their own.
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Experts point out that an increase in service tax rates, higher tax on stock transfers, credits in tax paid inventory during GST transition, and existing incentives moving to a potential refund model are likely to raise the demand for more working capital, leading to cash flow issues.
According to the indirect tax head of an Indian multinational manufacturing company, the group is likely to see substantial increase in cash flow outgo with the rollout of GST. “However, it is too early to foresee how much the additional requirement would be.