However, much water has flown under the bridge between June 7 and now. Despite doubts and reservations, the goods and services tax (GST) was launched on July 1 by the Union government. As expected, some services and goods may cost more now than they did in the pre-GST regime. However, most of the essential goods that form the CPI basket are charged either a nil rate or five per cent in the GST regime. There is rumour-mongering by some to cause panic among people by comparing taxes on a few goods and services prior to GST with that after GST and claim that prices would be higher in the post-GST period. Most of these attempts compare the state value-added (VAT) tax with GST and claim that GST rates are higher than pre-GST rates. The GST is a single tax that subsumed central excise duty (Cenvat), additional excise duties, excise duty levied under the Medicinal and Toilet Preparations (Excise Duties) Act 1955, service tax, additional customs duty (known as countervailing duty or CVD), special additional duty (SAD) of customs (four per cent), surcharges and cesses, VAT or sales tax, luxury tax, Octroi and entry tax, purchase tax and state cesses and surcharges.
It is true that every commodity or service does not entail all the central and state taxes, but most goods do pass through more than one tax. For instance, for a biscuit packet, all taxes put together (central excise is eight per cent and sales tax or VAT is 8-16 per cent by various state governments), the consumer paid about 16-24 per cent as tax in the pre-GST regime. In the GST regime, he will pay 18 per cent. The basket that constituted about 50 per cent of items considered for CPI calculations are kept out of the tax net or levied at five per cent in GST. Therefore, there is little scope for CPI inflation to increase in the post-GST period compared to that in the pre-GST period.
By all these accounts, it looks as if there is every possibility that CPI inflation would decrease to four per cent or less at least in the last two quarters of FY 2017-18 and thereon. The right environment to boost GDP growth has arrived with the introduction of the GST. However, the repo rate cut is indispensable to add momentum to India’s GDP growth rate. Unlike dearness allowance, which is revised based on inflation in the immediate past, the RBI speculates the inflation for the next one year and devises its monetary policy accordingly. The RBI in its policy review made an inflation forecast of 2-3.5 per cent during the first two quarters and 3.5-4.5 per cent during the third and fourth quarters of FY 2017-18. It is not known whether the forecast of inflation included the comprehensive positive impact of the GST such as reduction in taxes and cost of logistics. If the positive impact of the GST was accounted for by the RBI in the forecast of inflation, there is a case for a repo rate cut of, say, at least 25 basis points. If it was not considered, there is a very strong case for a repo rate cut of 50 to 100 basis points, as GST may even reduce inflation to less than two per cent.
The RBI has two options. It could wait for inflation to settle down to four per cent or less due to the positive impact of the GST and then introduce repo rate cuts. The rate cuts cannot immediately boost the economy as repo rate cut and borrowing take time to bring about the change. So, if the RBI goes for a wait-and-watch approach, it may not augur well for boosting GDP growth in FY 2017-18. The second option for the RBI is to introduce an immediate repo cut of at least 25 basis points for each quarter in the next three quarters of FY 2017-18 and add momentum to the GDP growth rate. The first option represents conservatism, which is not bad by itself. But given the need to boost the GDP growth rate in the last two years of this government, the calculated risk of reducing the repo rate is not bad either. It is to be seen whether the RBI chooses conservatism by not touching the repo rates or takes a calculated risk by cutting them. The author is an IIMA doctorate teaching at TAPMI Manipal. Views are personal
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