Congress communications in-charge Randeep Surjewala said GST, which should be a "good and simple tax" rather than a "grossly scary tax", had failed to provide relief to the common man or to the farming and textile sectors, the biggest generators of employment in the country.
"While we welcome the interim relief to certain sections, the Modi government has utterly failed to address structural issues of GST reform through fair and transparent consultations," Surjewala told reporters.
Labelling the government "amateurish and vision-less" and "drunk with arrogance", he said it was wasting a golden opportunity to put India on a growth trajectory due to its "ineptitude and lack of comprehension of issues".
The stark truth is that the Indian GST rate is now the highest in the world and the 'one nation, one tax' has become 'one nation, seven taxes' and more, the Congress leader added.
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Where was the real relief for the people, Surjewala asked, and added that people wanted substance, not soothing words.
"This mammoth opportunity is being lost due to sheer incompetence of a panic stricken Modi government driven by adhocism and lost in chaos of its own making," he said.
No relief has been given to the farmer and the agriculture sector, Surjewala added.
He said all farm imputs and implements have been taxed heavily, including fertilizers, pesticides, and other agricultural implements like tractors, tyres and submersible pumps.
Following the "disaster" of demonetisation, a possible "good fortune" of adding two percent to Indias GDP is being converted into "misfortune" by sheer ineptitude and amateurish handling of the most important tax-reform, he said.
The entire spirit, direction and purpose of the GST Bill introduced by Congress-led UPA government, Surjewala said, was a "single, transparent and uncomplicated taxation on goods and services" and reduction of prices.
Accusing the BJP of a "we know it all" attitude, he said the party refused to acknowledge the "clutter, confusion and cost to economy by botching up the GST conception and implementation and reality dawned with the massive economic downslide".
Adjournment and deferment rather than taking decisions appears to be the way forward for this government, as it had e postponed the implementation of TDS (tax deduction at source), TCS (tax collection at source), reverse charge mechanism (RCM) and E-way bill concept till March 31, 2018, he said.
Surjewala alleged that the tax refund system had virtually collapsed with the outstanding tax refund demand of Rs 65,000 crore in July 2017 alone and exporters were in peril.
He also alleged that items of mass consumption continue to be heavily taxed as no relief has been given to the common man despite the relaxations announced in some items.