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VAT within service sector mooted
By Our Special Correspondent
CHENNAI, FEB. 10. It is advisable to experiment first with the
value added tax (VAT) system within the service sector, before
attempting to integrate the service tax with the Central or State
VAT systems, Dr. P. V. Govinda Rao, Chairman of the Committee on
Taxation of Services, said here today.
Expressing his ``personal views as an economist'', Dr. Rao said
though the committee was yet to take a firm view on several
aspects, certain facts needed to be highlighted. These included
the untenability of the general impression that services were at
present almost wholly exempt from tax and that the entire burden
of indirect taxes was being borne by the manufacturing industry.
Addressing the two-day conference on value added tax, organised
by the Confederation of Indian Industry-Southern Region (CII-SR),
Dr. Rao, who is also Director of the Institute of Economic and
Social Change, Bangalore, pointed out that the upper end of the
hotel and tourism industry, road transportation, electricity and
entertainment were already subject to taxation at the State
level, while the Centre had introduced service tax on 26 services
in the past few years.
Since the States were hardly in a position to introduce a State-
level VAT on goods even from April 2002, any attempt to integrate
the service sector in a unified VAT, that too without solving the
issue of Centre v States' jurisdiction to tax services, would
lead to complications. A better option would be to grant to those
services which were already in the service tax net, credit
against service tax paid by them. For example, service tax on
share brokerage that might have been paid by an insurance company
could be set off against service tax remittable by the insurer,
thus eliminating the phenomenon of cascading (or `tax upon tax')
within the service sector.
In the long term, the VAT rate on goods should be lowered and the
service tax raised (from the present five per cent) to charge a
common VAT at a single rate. Also, all services, except basic
health care, basic education and basic government services,
should be brought into the service tax net, Dr. Rao said.
Dr. Raja J. Chelliah, Chairman, Madras School of Economics, said
elimination of `tax on tax' in the case of inputs implied by the
VAT system would boost the competitiveness of the manufacturing
sector, while reduction and ultimate zero rating of the Central
sales tax (CST) would prevent ``export of tax'' to consumers in
other States.
At the same time, reversion to multi-point tax with credit for
tax already paid by dealers at various stages of the distribution
chain would help collect tax on value-addition in the post-
manufacturing stages which at present escaped taxation. VAT would
also help eliminate evasion at the first (and, at present, sole)
point of tax by dealers (resellers) who falsely claimed to have
bought their wares at the second or subsequent point of sale and
obtained tax exemption, Dr. Chelliah added.
Mr. Abhay Tripathi, Director-Sales Tax, Department of Revenue,
Union Government, said the Centre was only acting as an ``honest
facilitator'' of tax reform at the State level, and decisions to
fix a floor level of ST for different commodity groups to avoid
competition in tax concessions between States, and later to
introduce a State-level VAT were taken by consensus by Finance
Ministers of the States. There was no ``imposition'' by the
Centre, he added.
Prof. Parthasarathy Shome, RBI Professor, Indian Council for
Research in International Economic Relations (ICRIER), said the
VAT system required countrywide coordination by way of sharing of
information and use of information technology to combat fraud.
Mr. P. C. Cyriac, Principal Commissioner and Commissioner of
Commercial Taxes, Tamil Nadu, said the recent steps taken by the
State like enhancing the self-assessment limit to Rs. 1 crore of
turnover and simplification of registration and renewal were
aimed at facilitating introduction of VAT. He said one of the
proposals under consideration in connection with VAT was to offer
tax credit on inputs in the case of branch transfers (namely,
consignments sent outside the State to own offices/warehouses)
provided the assessees were prepared to treat the purported
transfers as inter-State sales subject to CST.
Mr. Cyriac inaugurated the web site, www.indianvat.com, put up by
the CII.
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