“Therefore, let me say, that it is the people who have
compelled this reform and brought the Centre and states
together,” he said. The finance minister said the Centre
was aware of several issues being raised, adding that he
was “conscious” of the difficulties, and therefore,
constant interactions were happening on GST.
Pitching the new taxation law as a key economic reform
in post-independent India, Jaitley said, “Our next
generation will be horrified with the idea of what
originally our indirect tax system was.”
“Politically we became one, for all commercial and
economic purposes we were not one,” he said. Besides
different Central taxes, states levied their own taxes
and 17 such taxes had to be integrated into one and this
brought in benefits like doing away with multiple
taxation and ensuring free flow of goods across the
country, saving on fuel, money and man hours, he said.
Multiple returns, which often led to corruption,
harassment and compliance burdens had also been done
away with, he said, adding the country needed revenue to
address important issues like procuring of arms and
ammunitions for the army.
Saying that the army required weapons in a modern
warfare, he, however, wished a war did not take place.
When concerns were raised by manufacturing-oriented
states Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Gujarat
over possible loss of revenue due to GST, the government
has assured to compensate for them. “However, when the
earlier government had tried it, they had not assured
the states of a compensation,” he said in an apparent
reference to the Congress-led UPA.
Recalling the course of GST rollout, he said along with
other states, Jammu and Kashmir also passed the
legislation, in the face of separatists questioning the
economic integration. “The separatists started saying
why should you economically integrate. But the consumer
started saying if you did not integrate, I will not get
the benefit of input credit and I have to pay tax twice
over. So it was really an idealogical debate between the
consumer and separatists,” he said.
Following the rollout of GST, the number of registrants
originally paying taxes like VAT, Excise and Service
Tax, which was around Rs 80 lakh, was growing and this
gave the government a “slight comfort level,” Jaitley
said.
And once this base starts expanding, it meant greater
compliance and it was also an evidence that registration
was a simple process, he said. Further, the government
had started off with multiple slabs to prevent
inflationary impact on products. Underlining the
Narendra Modi-led government’s push on reforms, Jaitley
said in the last three years, the prime minister has
been “forcing one or two important changes.”
“The changes really are that we create an environment
which is business friendly in which your interface with
government is the least, which is business friendly.
We have eased the system,” he said. Also, there was no
discretions in allocation of spectrum or minerals, and
these were being decided by market mechanisms, he said.
“If we today aspire to become a developed economy from a
developing economy, if we continue to make changes and
reform at this pace, we have the capacity to transform
ourselves into a developed economy, improve the lives of
our people and become a strong country,” he added.
For that, India has to become a country where it is easy
to do business and a country where businesses are done
in the most ethical manner, Jaitely said, adding each
step of the government was guided and motivated by this
consideration. Nobody realised how the Insolvency and
Bankruptcy Code would function when it was passed, he
said, adding earlier those who took of rupees from banks
and default on repaying them thought bankers could do
nothing except have sleepless nights.
“The IBC has actually reversed this situation, that if
you did that (default on payments), you have to exit and
someone else has to control that business,” Jaitley
said. Earlier in the day, Jaitley, along with Minister
of State for Commerce and Industry, Nirmala Sitharaman
interacted with industrialists here. Later, he also
visited the memorial of late Tamil Nadu chief minister J
Jayalalithaa at the Marina Beach here and paid floral
tributes.
Source::: Hindustan Times,
dated 31/07/2017