With just eight days left for the winter session, Jaitley and Parliamentary Affairs Minster M Venkaiah Naidu today held consultations with Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha Ghulam Nabi Azad and Deputy Leader Anand Sharma.
Government is keen to get the bill passed in this session to facilitate the roll out of the measure from April next year. With the Houses, particularly Rajya Sabha doing minimal business in Winter Session, the government has not been able to push through its legislative agenda including GST.
At the hour-long luncheon meeting in Naidu's office in Parliament both sides stated their respective positions after which Naidu merely said "we will continue to meet".
The meeting over the GST happens in the backdrop of a campaign of Congress in Parliament over National Herald case.
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Government sources said that the Modi government is
inclined to take Congress concerns on board for passage of the GST bill, a comprehensive indirect tax reform which will subsume all indirect taxes including excise and sales tax.
In today's meeting Jaitely made it clear that it is not feasible to put the tax cap in the Constitutional Amendment Bill while there is a need to talk to manufacturing states including AIADMK ruled Tamil Nadu for removal of one per cent additional tax on goods.
Earlier Prime Minister Narendra Modi had invited Congress President Sonia Gandhi and former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on tea to discuss the GST impasse.
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Congress has also been demanding that the rate be part of the Constitution Amendment Bill besides seeking an independent quasi judicial grievance redress body instead of a GST council proposed by the government.
In recommendations that could help in breaking the GST logjam, the panel headed by Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian had in its report on December 4 suggested dropping additional one per cent tax on inter-state sales over and above the Goods and Services Tax (GST) rate.
It suggested a revenue neutral rate for GST of 15-15.5 per cent and a standard rate of 17-18 per cent.
The recommendations seem to suggest a middle-path approach in the deadlock between the Congress and the government, which didn't want the GST rate to be part of the bill as it would require two-third majority approval of Parliament for any change in future rates for any product.
The government wants the GST Bill to be approved in the current session of Parliament to meet the April 1, 2016, roll out deadline.
Jaitley had however insisted that the three suggestions made by the Congress now made go "contrary to" what Chidambaram and Pranab Mukherjee had presented before Parliament and alleged that they were "clearly afterthoughts in order to delay the GST".
"I wish and pray that the GST (issue) is delinked (from the National Herald case)," he had said when asked whether he sees any link Congress protest on GST and National Herald issues.