-import business:
Even if a firm’s annual turnover is less than 20 lakh,
it must register as a regular dealer to export or
import. No registration would lead to loss of business
for a lakh small firms that contribute over 40 per cent
of India’s exports.
4 No sale on e-commerce websites: A small firm must
register as a regular dealer to sell. This condition
will affect more than 50,000 entrepreneurs selling
through eBay, Flipkart or Amazon, and other e-commerce
websites. They could be housewives, students, small
traders, retired army personnel, small craftspersons, or
manufacturers.
Low risk and low investment make selling on e-commerce
sites safe and attractive.
No wonder e-commerce is propelling an entrepreneurship
boom in small cities. The e-commerce provisions have not
become operational yet.
5 No sale to other States: A composition dealer cannot
sell to other States. Earlier, large firms purchased
from small firms of the same State to avoid paying
Central Sales Tax, which was payable on purchases from
other States.
But under GST, large firms are free to source from any
State as they get input tax credit on such supplies. So
small firms face double trouble. They may lose their
existing customer base. Also, they cannot supply to
other States.
6 Loss of orders from large firms: If one regular GST-registered
firm buys from another GST-registered firm, the seller
pays the tax and the buyer gets the input tax credit.
But, if such firm buys from an unregistered firm or a
composition dealer, the buyer has to pay tax. As this
increases the buyer’s compliance burden, he would avoid
a non-registered firm.
Reluctant dealers
An inspector will knock on the doors of a garage owner
with sales of 2 lakh a month unless he registers as a
regular dealer. Others may expect a similar fate. Why
then are small firms reluctant to enrol as regular
dealers? There are two reasons for this.
For one, tax liability shoots up on registration.
Consider an example. Pre-GST, a small firm making a
product that attracted central excise duty @12.5 per
cent and VAT @ 5 per cent paid only VAT as manufacturers
with turnover below 1.5 crore were exempt from central
excise. Now, if such a firm registers as a regular
dealer, his liabilities shoot up from 5 per cent to 18
per cent. For large firms, tax liabilities remain more
or less the same. For another, there is the high cost of
regulatory compliance.
A regular GST dealer must file 37 returns for each State
in which it operates. He also must keep records, meet
audit requirements. The small turnover does not justify
high compliance costs. Also, most dealers are not tech
savvy. In order to enter the GST regime, they need
expert help and a mind-set change.
Way out
Two actions will help small firms. One, an increase in
the GST exemption limit from the current 20 lakh to ₹1
crore will free them from the tax burden so that they
focus on growth and job creation.
This step would be broadly tax neutral if we factor the
earlier available 1.5-crore central excise exemptions.
Two, free small firms to do all the business large firms
are allowed to do. Concessions should extend to
exporters, inter-State sales and transactions on
e-commerce websites.
Source::: Business
Line,
dated 31/07/2017.