advertisement
As a whole, states' revenue may clip past at a CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate) of 16.6 percent in FY18 over FY16 under the GST; However, 11 of them may need an additional Rs 9,500 crore compensation from the Centre this year, says a report by India Ratings.
This is needed as it expects the GST component of the states' own tax revenue for all the states to drop to 15.5 percent in FY18 with a baseline scenario of 16 percent as input tax credit is available on both goods and services under GST.
"The total compensation amount, therefore, would increase to Rs 9,500 crore in FY18 (baseline scenario Rs 5,600 crore). This is based on the assumption that in the final production of goods and services, service tax accounts for 10 per cent," it said.
"If we combine the 5 percent efficiency gain with 10 percent input tax credit on services tax, then only five states, namely Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Odisha, Punjab and Tamil Nadu, would need compensation from the Centre and total compensation amount would drop to Rs 3,700 crore in FY18," the agency said, adding it expects GST to have a positive impact on the states' finances in the medium to long term.
The nine state-level taxes, included in GST are state VAT, central sales tax, purchase tax, luxury tax, entry tax (all forms), entertainment tax (except those levied by local bodies), taxes on advertisements, taxes on lotteries, betting and gambling and state cesses and surcharges in so far as they relate to the supply of goods or services.
At an aggregate level, state taxes that are subsumed in GST account for 55 percent of the states' own tax revenue and grew at 14 percent during FY12-FY17.
"This is exactly the rate at which if state taxes that are subsumed in GST grow in FY18 over FY16 then centre will not be required to compensate states for any revenue loss. However, there are wide variations across states, with subsumed GST taxes growing at just 8.47 percent for Punjab in FY12-FY17, but 39.70 per cent for Telangana," it noted.
To be able to absorb the positive impact of GST on state finances, the report believes states will have to keep a constant vigil on the buoyancy of taxes that are outside the purview of GST as also their own non-tax revenues.
(#TalkingStalking: Have you ever been stalked? Share your experience with The Quint and inspire others to shatter the silence surrounding stalking. Send your stories to editor@thequint.com or WhatsApp @ +919999008335.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)