Selective indecision: on the GST Council’s 55th meeting, decisions
The latest GST Council meeting’s outcomes signal a capricious approach
That the Council also did not bother to consider initial recommendations of a ministerial panel tasked with rejigging the GST rates, nor take up a panel’s suggestions to review life and health insurance policies’ taxation despite a commitment to expedite this rethink, only diminishes expectations from the panel going forward. That the panel’s head left the meeting early, stating it will hold further deliberations on insurance policies’ levies soon, is not comforting, if not entirely casual — especially as the government has been promising action on this front since the Budget session. The dithering, for whatever reason, is beginning to hurt the industry too. In November, new life insurance business tanked for the first time this year as consumers held off on buying a cover in anticipation of a GST cut. The longer this indecision, and the feet-dragging on the broader rate rationalisation plan, launched over three years ago, persists, the worse will be the implications on consumption that has already turned tentative, and private investment plans that hinge on consumption as well as tax certainty. The Council’s decision to reverse an October verdict of the Supreme Court letting realty players claim input tax credits on costs of construction for commercial structures intended for renting or leasing purposes, will also have ramifications on India’s investment climate. With legal changes to take retrospective effect from July 2017, this is a blast from the past for investors spooked by similar taxation misadventures over the past decade.