December meeting of GST Council likely
to consider GST on natural gas
The GST Council, at its December 21st meeting in
Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, may consider fixing the date on applying GST on natural
gas.
A request has been made to the Finance Ministry, a
senior Government official told businessline. It is expected that this
will be included in the agenda for the upcoming meeting of the Council. A
provision in the 101st Constitution Amendment Act says the GST Council will
recommend the date on which the goods and services tax be levied on petroleum
crude, high speed diesel, motor spirit (commonly known as petrol), natural gas
and aviation turbine fuel.
Natural gas, along with crude, petrol and diesel, is
under GST. What is to be decided is the date from which GST is to be levied.
Till this happens, these continue to be part of old taxation system i.e.
Central Excise Duty and VAT/Sales Tax. Some of these products attract levies at
ad valorem (percentage of value) and some at specific rate (fixed amount
irrespective of base value).
Excise duty
As of now, natural gas attracts NIL central excise
duty for gaseous and 14 per cent for compressed. However, VAT/Sales differ from
States to States. It is 3 per cent in Maharashtra while 15 per cent in Gujarat.
Similarly, while central excise duty on petrol and diesel are ₹19.90 and
₹15.80, respectively, rate of VAT/Sales tax varies from States to States
ranging between 1 per cent and 35.2 per cent. Once dates are finalised for GST,
prices of these products could come down.
The GST Council, in its 45th meeting held on
September 17, 2021, had considered inclusion of petrol/diesel and other
petroleum products under the GST regime but the matter was deferred till
detailed deliberations on account of substantial repercussions on state and
central exchequer were held. The issue has not been taken up by the Council as
an agenda item for any further deliberation till date.
Key revenue source
A reason for not imposing GST on petroleum product
is revenue consideration. Collection from petroleum products has been a major
source of revenue for States and the Centre. Data from PPAC (Petroleum Planning
and Analysis Cell) show during April-September period of the current fiscal, 28
States and 8 Union Territories together collected over ₹1.43 lakh crore
from POL (petroleum, oils, and lubricants). The Centre got over ₹1.22
lakh crore through central excise duty on petroleum products. Because of such a
high collection, the Centre and the States have not been able to evolve a
consensus on this issue.
At the same time, there is the issue of rate. Under
GST, maximum rate could be 50 per cent (28 per cent slab rate and 22 per cent
compensation cess). Going by the principle of RNR (Revenue Neutral Rate), rates
for petrol and diesel could be more than 50 per cent. However, there should not
be problem for natural gas as the present rates (Centre and States/UT together)
are below 50 per cent. This is the reason why there has been an effort to start
GST on petroleum products with natural gas.
www.thehindubusinessline.com,
dt. 29-11-2024