After nailing a four-tier rate structure of 5, 12, 18 and 28 per cent, the second-day of the all-powerful GST Council failed to reach a consensus over which category of assessees should be governed by the Centre and which by states.
The November 9-10 meeting of the Council has been called off. It was to finalise the draft law and supporting legislations for subsuming an array of central and state levies including excise duty, service tax and VAT. The finance ministers of states will now meet informally on November 20 to evolve a political consensus on the sticky issue.
Jaitley, who had previously stated that he hoped for all modalities for the GST to be finalised by November 22, was still hopeful of getting the supporting legislations during the ensuing Winter Session of Parliament from November 16.
"That's the effort. I am endeavouring to do that," he said when asked if the CGST and IGST legislations will come before Parliament in the upcoming session.
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"When in the month of August we passed the Constitution amendment, it appeared too challenging because the time was very short. As of today, I am more confident than I was in August. Let me say this because bulk of the spade work has been done. Most of the decisions have been taken. Only one key decision remains," he said.
Jaitley said the draft CGST, IGST, SGST and compensation
laws will be sent to states after November 15 and the GST Council in November 24-25 meeting will approve them.
He said all pros and cons have to be weighed before deciding on the issues of cross empowerment to ensure single interface under GST, which will subsume excise, service tax, VAT and other local levies.
"But whatever option is we don't want to take it in a hurry because it has to be a well thought out decision, because administratively, any mistake on this front could be chaotic. So we are going slowly and systematically on this," he added.
In the last meeting of the Council, 5 proposals were discussed, but today the Council has arrived at an option of two proposals-- horizontal division and vertical division.
The 'Vertical Division' based on ratios assigns tax payers to a tax administration, Centre or state, for a period of 3 years for all purposes including audit. Tax payers could be divided in a ratio which would balance the interest of the Centre and the state, both with respect to revenue and spread of numbers.
According to sources, the Centre feels that horizontal division would be lopsided as 93 per cent of Service Tax assessees and 85 per cent of the VAT tax payers have a turnover below Rs 1.5 crore.
The GST Council also felt that distinction between goods and services cannot be maintained as works contract, construction contract, restaurants -- all these have VAT and Service Tax and it is not possible to disintegrate them.