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.
At the eighth meeting of the all-powerful GST Council, TMC-ruled West Bengal, CPM-led Kerala and Congress-ruled Karnataka pressed for including area up to 12 nautical miles in the definition of states within IGST law, a standoff that led to chairman and Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley agreeing to seek legal opinion on its Constitutional validity.
"We couldn't reach a consensus on a very important issue that relates to defining of a state. This is 12 nautical miles from the state. Can states charge GST from them or not? Right now states like Gujarat, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, West Bengal and Odisha are charging VAT or sales tax within 12 nautical miles. For eg when a ship is loaded with oil or products, the tax on that is charged by the states.
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The Council, headed by Jaitley and comprising state
representatives, agreed on most of the clauses of the draft IGST law, which along with Central-GST (CGST) and State-GST (SGST) have to be passed by Parliament and state legislatives respectively before the new tax regime can be rolled out.
Asked about rollout of GST from April, he said today's meeting did not even "touch" on the issue of dual control, which was fundamental to the GST rollout. Also tax slabs on 1,500 items have remained to be decided.
"We cannot have a GST that is non-sustainable, flawed and states will not give up their rights along with the Centre to bring it into effect," Mitra said, adding West Bengal was committed to GST implementation but the "demonetisation tsunami" derailed it.
"Every state said their taxes have fallen by 30-40 per cent. (Post demonetisation) every states compensation would go up. We had initially estimated that at most five states would need compensation, because 14 per cent rate of growth others would achieve.
"Today many states would need compensation. If you need Rs 80,000-90,000 crore, instead of Rs 55,000 crore, where will it come from? That's a double whammy. States are interested that Centre should stick to its constitutional commitment," Mitra said.
Haryana Finance Minister Abhimanyu Singh Sindhu said the draft of model IGST was "more-or-less finalised" today. "I am optimistic that dual control will be resolved tomorrow," he said.
On the rollout schedule, he said, "Realistically speaking it is difficult deadline (April 1). But I would still not say it is absolutely unlikely. I still see it as a possibility.