GST Group of Ministers (GoM0
x

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman chairs a meeting of Group of Ministers (GoM) constituted by the GST Council on Compensation Cess, Health and Life Insurance, and Rate Rationalisation at Vigyan Bhavan, New Delhi. Photo: X | @FinMinIndia

GoM on rate-rationalisation accepts Centre's proposal of two-slab GST of 5, 18 pc

The six-member GoM accepted the Centre's plan to remove 12 per cent and 28 per cent tax rates while proposing a 40 per cent levy on ultra-luxury and 'sin' goods


The Group of Ministers (GoM) of state ministers on GST rate-rationalisation on Thursday (August 21) accepted the Centre's proposal to move to a two-slab structure of 5 and 18 per cent.

Bihar Deputy Chief Minister and convenor of rate-rationalisation GoM Samrat Choudhary said the six-member state ministerial panel has also accepted the proposal of removing the 12 and 28 per cent slabs.

Also Read: Downward GST revisions spark further revenue-cut fears in states

"Both the proposals of the Centre have been accepted by the GoM on rate rationalisation," Choudhary told reporters after the meeting of the panel.

Ultra-luxury, ‘sin’ goods

Uttar Pradesh Finance Minister Suresh Kumar Khanna said the Centre's proposal also includes levying 40 per cent tax on ultra-luxury and ‘sin’ goods.

West Bengal Finance Minister Chandrima Bhattacharya said her state has proposed a levy on top of the 40 per cent GST rate so that the current tax incidence on ultra-luxury goods, like cars and sin goods, is maintained.

Also Read: FM Sitharaman unveils sweeping GST reform plan to GoMs

Bhattacharya said the Centre's proposal did not mention the revenue loss that would accrue to the Centre and states after the implementation of the new GST slabs.

At present, Goods and Services Tax is a 4-tier structure of 5, 12, 18, and 28 per cent. While food items are either taxed at 0 or 5 per cent, luxury and sin goods are taxed at 28 per cent.

On top of the 28 per cent slab, cess at varied rates is levied on demerit and luxury goods, like cars.

(With agency inputs)

Next Story