Council approves all five draft bills for GST
On 16th March, The 12th GST Council cleared draft bills - UTGST and SGST and
all the draft bills will roll out of the new indirect tax regime by July 1.
With the Goods and Service Tax (GST) Council on Thursday
approving the remaining two draft bills -- UTGST (Union Territory GST) and SGST
(state GST), all the five enabling draft bills stand approved to enable a
likely rollout of the new indirect tax regime by July 1. "The 12th Council
meeting approved UTGST and SGST today. Officers had already done the
groundwork, The drafts were already circulated. In the past meetings, the
Council has already approved CGST (Central GST), IGST (Integrated GST) and
Compensation drafts," Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who chairs the
Council, told here. With the final approvals, the legislative exercise stands
complete and July 1 is the tentative date of GST's implementation, Jaitley
said, reports IANS. The draft bills now need to be approved by the Cabinet and
tabled in Parliament's ongoing budget session. Meanwhile, the GST draft law
will have to be approved by the legislative assemblies of Delhi and Puducherry.
The UTGST draft law is for the union territories like
Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep, Daman and Diu and Dadra and Nagar
Haveli, which do not have legislative assemblies. The new indirect tax regime
also has nine set of rules and regulations, out of which the Council has
already approved five -- registration, payment, refunds, invoices and returns.
Four other rules - composition, valuation, input tax credit transitions -
require a formal approval of the Council," Jaitley said adding the next
meeting will be held on March 31. After March 31, the Council will take up the
exercise of fitment of various commodities in the GST tax slabs - 5 per cent,
12 per cent, 15 per cent and 28 per cent, he added.
The officials have already started the fitment process,
which will be put up for discussion and approval before the Council. Jaitley
also said that the cess on sin (tobacco products) and luxury goods has been
capped at 15 per cent by the Council. "Capping of cess has been done.
These are not actual, but, ceiling is kept higher to give a marginal
headspace," he said.
From Sources:-
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.