Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley
achieved a major breakthrough on Monday Dec 15,2014 by finally hammering together a
consensus between state finance ministers on the elusive goods and
service tax (GST) issue, which will pave the way for a single nationwide
market.
The Centre agreed to keep
petroleum products, such as petrol and diesel, out of the GST in return
for states agreeing to entry tax being subsumed in the new tax regime
proposed from April 2016.
States earn
over 50 per cent of their revenue from taxes on petrol, diesel and jet
fuel, and wanted to exclude these goods from the purview of GST so that
they could continue collecting taxes on these products.
The taxes on petrol goods are also easier to collect as they are factored in by the public sector oil companies who pass them on to the state governments
The Government wants to bring in the GST Bill in the ongoing winter session of Parliament.
The states have been insisting that the clause for compensation be included in the Constitution Amendment Bill in the three rounds of talks that were held last week
A compromise was reached after an
hour-long meeting between Jaitley and finance ministers of seven states -
Punjab, Haryana, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Jammu
and Kashmir. Concerns of other states have already been addressed.
It was agreed that petroleum goods would be kept out of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Bill for a few years, and a decision to include them in the new tax regime would be taken later
The Centre has agreed to fully compensate
the states for three years after GST roll out and the structure will be
included in the Bill.
Thereafter for the next two years there will be part compensation
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