In November last year, the government had said that from
April 1 electronic invoice (e-invoice) would be
mandatory for businesses with turnover of Rs 100 crore.
Later in March 2020, the GST Council extended the
implementation date to October 1.
The Council also exempted insurance, banking, financial
instituions, NBFCs and passenger transport service from
issuing e-invoice. It had also decided to introduce the
new GST returns filing system in phases between October
2020 and January 2021.
Garg said in the last 3 years of GST, there has not been
a single month which saw returns being filed by all the
businesses registered under GST. About 70-80 per cent of
GST registered businesses file returns within the due
date.
“2019-20 has been a year of consolidation of compliance
requirement…. We took a call that instead of introducing
the new return system which we had promised, we will
carry out improvement in the existing return system and
take it closer to what we had promised in the new return
system to make the certainty of credit,” he said.
Garg said the GST administration is working on a
proposal to make a system available to businesses about
how much input tax credit (ITC) is available with a
taxpayer.
“The endeavour is to make life simpler for taxpayer. The
vision for 4th year of GST is compliance burden gets
reduced and e-invoice would help in this,” he said
With regard to GST audits, Garg said central tax
officers have been training state officers on the audit
experience, some of the states had some good strategies
which we are working on. “To the extent possible these
arre not going to be physical audits, these are more
going to be desk audits,” he added.
Source::: Financial Express,
dated 23/07/2020.