New Delhi: The issues of draft model laws for implementation of the new GST regime from April 2017 and its jurisdiction will be form the forefront of discussion in the GST Council meet at the two-day meeting starting Friday.
The meet will be attended by Union Finance Minister and state representatives.
The model Goods and Services Tax (GST) law, Integrated GST (IGST) law and compensation law will be discussed tomorrow.
The finalisation of these laws, on which the Centre had last week invited public comments, by the Council will pave the way for their introduction in the ongoing Winter Session of Parliament, which ends on December 16.
The Council is also likely to take up the vexed issue of cross empowerment of states and the Centre to avoid dual control -- an issue which has remained a contentious one during the previous two GST Council meetings.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had called for an informal meeting with his state counterparts on November 20 to thrash out a political solution, but the meet failed to arrive at a common ground on how the Centre and states will control assessees under the new regime that will subsume an array of taxes such as excise duty and service tax as well as VAT.
With states unrelenting on their position of being given right to control all assessees with up to Rs 1.5 crore annual turnover, it was decided that officials will meet and work out a possible arithmetic for addressing the issue.
States like West Bengal, Kerala, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu have insisted on exclusive control over small taxpayers, who earn less than Rs 1.5 crore in annual revenue, for both goods and services.
The government hopes to implement GST from April 1 next year and for that to happen, the supporting legislations have to be ratified by Parliament in the ongoing session.
Jaitley had last month stated that the proposed GST needs to be rolled out by September 16, 2017 before the validity of the Constitutional Amendment brought in by Centre and ratified by states expires.
At its last meeting, the Council agreed on a four-slab structure ? 5, 12, 18 and 28 per cent along with a cess on luxury and 'sin' goods such as tobacco.
The GST compensation law provides that states will receive provisional compensation from the Centre for loss of revenue from implementation of GST every quarter, but the final annual number will be decided after an audit carried out by CAG.
The compensation will be met through levy of a cess called 'GST Compensation Cess' on luxury items and sin goods like tobacco for the first five years. A fund of Rs 50,000 crore 'Compensation Fund' will be created by levying cess on luxury and sin goods.
With PTI Inputs
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