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Businessman Pankaj Jain is so worried about the impending launch of a new sales tax that he is thinking of shutting down his tiny textile factory for a month to give himself time to adjust.
Jain is one of the millions of small business owners who face wrenching change from India's biggest tax reform since Independence that will unify the country's $2 trillion economy and 1.3 billion people into a common market.
But he is simply not ready for a regime that from 1 July, will for the first time, tax the bed linen his 10 workers make and require him to file his taxes every month online.
On the desk in his tiny office in Meerut, two hours drive northeast of New Delhi, lay two calculators. Turning to open a metal cabinet, he pulled out a handwritten ledger to show how he keeps his books.
"We will have to hire an accountant and get a computer," the 52-year-old told Reuters, as a dozen ancient power looms clattered away in the ramshackle workshop next door.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government says that by replacing several federal and state taxes, the new Goods and Services Tax (GST) will make life simpler for business.
With a flourish, the tangle is gone and Bachchan proclaims: "One nation, one tax, one market!"
By tearing down barriers between India's 29 states, the GST should deliver efficiency gains to larger businesses. HSBC estimates the reform could add 0.4 percent to economic growth.
Yet, at the local chapter of the Indian Industries Association – which groups 6,500 smaller enterprises nationwide – the talk is about how to cope with the aftermath of the GST rollout.
A big concern is GST's sheer complexity – with rates of 5, 12, 18 and 28 percent – and myriad exceptions, it contrasts with simpler, flatter and broader sales taxes in other countries.
The official schedule of GST rates runs to 213 pages and has undergone repeated last-minute changes.
"Rubber goods are taxed at 12 percent; sporting goods at 18 percent. I make rubber sporting goods – so what tax am I supposed to pay?" asks Anurag Agarwal, the local IIA Secretary.
The top government official responsible for coordinating the GST rollout rebuts complaints from bosses that the tax is too complex, adding that the IT back-end that will drive it – crunching up to 5 billion invoices a month – is robust.
"It is a technological marvel, as well as a fiscal marvel," Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia told Reuters in an interview.
The government will, however, allow firms to file simplified returns for July and August. From September, they must file a total of 37 online returns annually – three each month and one at the year's end – for each state they operate in.
One particular concern is how a new feature of the GST, the input tax credit, will work. This allows a company to claim refunds on its inputs and means it should only pay tax on the value it adds.
The structure will encourage companies to buy from suppliers that are GST-compliant, so that tax credits can flow down a supply chain.
Adhia played down the risk of job losses, however, saying this would be offset by new service sector jobs.
The prospect of disruption is drawing comparisons with Modi's decision last November to scrap high-value banknotes that made up 86 percent of the cash in circulation, in a bid to purge illicit "black money" from the system.
The note ban caused severe disruption to the country’s cash-driven economy and slammed the brakes on growth, which slowed to a two-year low in the quarter to March.
"It could throw the business out of gear – it can affect your volumes by at least 30 percent," said the head of one large cement company in the Delhi region.
Back in Meerut, Pankaj Jain worries that hiring an accountant and charging 5 percent GST on his bedsheets could eat up to two-thirds of his annual profits of Rs 4,00,000-5,00,000.
"I know my costs will go up, but I don't know about my income," he said. "I might even have to shut my shop completely and go into trading."
(This article has been published in an arrangement with Reuters.)
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