Manmohan Singh’s 1991 budget was biggest reform
country has seen. GST deals with just one indirect tax’
Goods and Services Tax (GST), India’s biggest
tax reform since Independence, was ushered in today with a special midnight
session of Parliament. Yashwant Sinha, former Union finance
minister, senior BJP leader and co-editor of ‘The Future of the Indian Economy’
spoke to Nalin Mehta and Sanjiv Shankaran about
GST’s challenges, its impact on the federal structure and next steps for
reforms:
You have written about the difficulty
of economic reforms in India because of a lack of political acceptability. How
difficult was it to pass GST?
The very fact that GST has taken so many years in coming and at the end
of it we have a flawed GST – it’s not the original GST we had imagined –
demonstrates how difficult it is to carry out economic reforms in India.
I have always held the view there is a great deal of political
opposition to economic reforms in India. If you go through the parliamentary
standing committee report on GST, it clearly brings out the problem. During my
years as finance minister, I was trying to push state value added tax (VAT) and
the precursor to GST Council was created then, which worked on GST.
Starting in 1991, the government was able to carry out reforms in
sectors directly under its control, like banking, industrial policies, central
taxes, capital markets, etc. Reforms which are entirely in Centre’s
jurisdiction and ones which do not require legislation are much easier to do.
Where states had to be partners in reforms, the process became that much more
difficult and things did not move that smoothly. Therefore, most important
reforms have taken years to fructify. The evolution of GST is a clear
demonstration of the difficulties.
Don’t these challenges make the realisation of GST unique?
Which were the states which opposed GST? Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat,
ruled by BJP. Gujarat’s finance minister came before the parliamentary standing
committee and made such a convincing presentation that committee’s members
started saying there is no need for GST. I had to then request Vijay Kelkar
(chairman, 13th Finance Commission) to appear before the
committee again to convince the members that GST was desirable. It is very
unusual to appear twice before the committee members. It has not been easy to
evolve a consensus.
Why do you think this is a flawed GST?
As finance minister I had brought down multiple central excise rates to
just three based on a philosophy: one excise or GST rate is the ideal. Even
when you make compromises, what should determine slabs? A mean rate, a merit
rate and demerit rate. You need only three rates and not more. In central
excise, multiple rates used to lead to enormous amount of litigation. It was
not easy to collapse multiple rates into three rates. It was achieved with a
great deal of struggle. Now, all the problems have been brought back with
multiplicity of rates. We had a single rate in service tax but now it is broken
into multiple rates. That’s why it is flawed. The return of multiple rates is a
step backward and will lead to implementation problems.
The second reason why it’s flawed is that an element of discretion has
crept in. For example, why keep gold at 3% and notebooks at 12%? The most
important step towards simplification is to do away with discretion. The
philosophy of taxation must be firmly grounded in equity and simplicity, not in
discretion. The third reason is that a large chunk of the revenue stream
relating to petroleum, alcohol, electricity, etc is still out of the GST ambit.
How will the advent of a statutory GST Council impact federalism?
It is not so much the political complexion of a state government but its
own estimate of gain and loss which determines its approach to a reform measure
like GST. GST Council is a shining example of cooperative federalism, it’s a
step forward. How will it work? It will depend on interaction of personalities.
In future, GST Council will be a play of personalities and play of
gain-and-loss estimates by states and government of India.
Where would you rank GST in terms of economic reforms since
Independence?
I would rank Manmohan Singh’s 1991 budget as the biggest reform this
country has seen. GST deals with just one indirect tax. As far as
comprehensiveness of reforms is concerned, 1991 was the biggest.
What should be the next step on reforms?
Any measure which propels the engine of economic growth is economic reform.
It is a continuous process. Having said that unless economic reforms are
seen to directly impact people they would never be fully acceptable. Economic
reforms must be accompanied with visible action on the livelihood and quality
of life fronts. We must have high growth rates; there is no dispute about that.
Simultaneously, take steps which impact on the quality of life and create
employment.
From Sources-
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