He made a pitch for widening the tax base, saying efforts are on to make taxation process far simpler and make rates more reasonable.
For instance, he said, the GST Council is deliberating on ways to reduce the taxation process, including assessment by tax officials.
"Today, each person gets assessed thrice, in each of the three taxations (including VAT and central excise). Now, you will only be assessed once and what one authority assesses, others will have to accept that assessment," he said.
So, if as on September 16, 2017, there is no GST, then there is no taxation in the country, he reasoned.
Also Read
"So, you have a constitutional compulsion to have a Goods and Services Tax in place before September 16 (2017), otherwise the country doesn't run, and the tax is absolutely essential. Therefore, our intention is it gets implemented from April 1, 2017, that was the original intention," he said.
"The states must welcome the decision and I can only tell you, if some states are seen as opposing every reform, then investors in the country and the ones coming from outside, must decide which are the states they want to invest in," he cautioned.
(REOPEN DEL42)
Later in the day, Trinamool Congress MP Derek O'Brien said that since 2004, West Bengal is consistently supporting the GST.
"Please do not lecture us on GST. Since 2004, we have been consistent in our support for GST. It is BJP which during its stint in opposition had stalled it," he said.