With the first meeting of the GST
Council scheduled for 22 September, it appears that the government is moving
more sensibly and cautiously than what it seemed to be doing earlier. This is the right approach,
for the goods and services tax (GST) is a new animal where neither centre nor
states will have revenue sovereignty in indirect taxes, and movement forward
needs a political and economic consensus. Getting it more or less right is
better than getting it done fast.
Luckily, several impractical ideas
appear to have been dumped in order to facilitate a consensus.
First, it is clear that the old ideal of having three rates (a standard rate of 18 percent, plus one merit and one non-merit rate) has been given up. There is now talk of four or even five rates— possibly at 10, 12, 16 and 25 percent. One more rate band above 25 percent should not be ruled out for some luxury items like cars.
Second, the fiction that we can have
a revenue neutral rate (RNR) right at the outset has also been given up. It is
now openly acknowledged that this is not possible, as Swarajya pointed out last
week. Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia has been quoted by the media as saying
that RNR will not be possible initially and that, as
in some European countries, “we too may have to begin with multiple rates and
this is required to protect the poor and the middle class”.
RNR will actually be possible only
once we know how revenue actually shapes up after varying rates are accepted for
various product categories. It is not possible to start with an RNR upfront. It’s
like putting the cart before the horse. Rates can converge later with
experience.
In fact, Adhia had said as much in an
earlier article written along with Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian in
The Hindu, where he refuted the idea
that India will have a perfect GST at the outset: “In no country is the GST —
even today after many years of implementation — perfect, and was therefore
quite flawed at inception. In complex systems, change is introduced, learning
from implementation takes place, leading to further and better change. That is
what happened with the implementation of the value-added tax by the states and
that is what will happen with the GST. It is far better to start and allow the
process of endogenous change to unfold over time than to wait Godot-like for
the best time and the best design before it is introduced.”
The article also acknowledged that
one must be “realistic about the timeframe for assessing the GST. The GST is
fiendishly and mind-bogglingly complex to administer. Such complexity and lags in
GST implementation require that any evaluation of the GST— and any
consequential decisions— should not be undertaken over short horizons (say
months) but over longer periods, say, one-two years.”
One should add that even two years
may not be long enough to evaluate or fix GST. But what is encouraging is that
the NDA government is working on the right trial-and-error method of implementing
GST. It does not matter how long it takes to fix GST, or how fast we go, but if
the direction is right, speed matters less.