A day after Rajya Sabha approved a constitutional amendment to pave the way for rollout of GST, he said the tax rate will be decided by the GST Council, which will have Union Finance Minister and representatives of all 29 states.
"We are going to try to make it reasonably as quick as possible... It is always good to set stiff targets and try meet them, rather than have no targets at all," he said.
Jaitley said the government is targeting to bring the legislations -- the Central GST Bill and the Integrated GST (GST) Bill -- before the Parliament in the Winter Session of Parliament in November.
Chief Economic Adviser Arvind Subramanian, who had previously recommended a standard GST rate of 17-19 per cent, said while a GST rate of close to 22 per cent will put inflationary pressure, higher rate of 27 per cent will become totally self-defeating.
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Central excise duty and state VAT taken together added up to 27 per cent currently.
"I think what you need is an optimum rate... Currently what the tax payers are paying is phenomenally much higher... Now it will gradually slide down. But even in the first instance it will come down," Jaitley said.
The GST Bill passed by Rajya Sabha yesterday will have to go to Lok Sabha before it is sent to states for ratification.
Unveiling the roadmap for GST roll out, Adhia said the
government is looking at April 1, 2017, as the target date for implementation and 60,000 officers would be trained on GST laws and IT infrastructure framework by March next year.
Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia listed seven challenges, which needed to be dealt with for smooth implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST).
These challenges include: calculation of revenue base of Centre and states and compensation requirements, structure of GST rates, list of exemptions, forming of consensus on Model GST Bill, threshold limits, compounding limits and cross empowerment to mitigate ill-effects of dual control.
Citing media reports which gave examples based on 18 per cent GST rate, he said: "I would advice that these are premature calculation, particularly in items like car."
Jaitley said a balance will have to be created by the GST Council between states' need for funds for developmental activities as well as ensuring that the incidence on common man comes down.
"On almost 60-70 per cent of commodities on a weighted average you are paying 27 per cent plus a large number of small taxes. Some of the states have 30-32 per cent tax rate. The guiding principle laid by the Empowered Committee (of state finance ministers) is this rate has to come down," Jaitley said.
While the CEA has suggested a tax band, states want a rate of 22-24 per cent.
Subramanian said: "At 27 per cent it is totally self-defeating... Up to 18-19 per cent there will be minimal impact on inflation and if it goes to 22 per cent there will be a few basis point increase."
He further said the government will try to roll out GST quickly. "Now which is the date by which we will be able to make it will have to be seen. It's always good to set stiff targets and try and meet them rather than have no targets at all".
(REOPENS DEL101)
Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said he has proposed that traders with turnover below Rs 1.5 crore they should be taxed only by the states. Above that threshold turnover, 60 per cent of the revenue should come to states and 40 per cent should go to Centre.
States have also demanded increasing the number of items on which cess is to be levied to compensate them to deal with revenue loss estimated at Rs 90,000 crore post demonetisation.
Initially, a Rs 55,000 crore GST compensation fund was proposed to be created by levying cess on demerit or sin goods and luxury items, but post demonetisation the compensation amount is expected to go up to Rs 90,000 crore as most states have seen revenue decline of up to 40 per cent, non-BJP ruled states claimed.
He said convergence has been growing between the Centre and states. "The Centre seems to be in a mood to rethink some of the positions that the Centre has been adopting... On the whole the Centre has been taking a step backward and if it really takes one more step backward I think we will have a deal."