&w=3840&q=100)
Proposed GST rate tweaks on automobiles may end classification disputes
Presently, automobiles are taxed at 28 per cent, which is the highest GST slab. A compensation cess, ranging from 1 to 22 per cent, is levied on top of this rate, depending on the type of vehicle.
The total tax incidence on cars, depending on engine capacity and length, ranges from 29 per cent for small petrol cars to 50 per cent for SUVs.
Electric vehicles are taxed at a 5 per cent rate.
Sources said, as per the Centre's proposal for moving the GST system to a two-tier rate structure of 5 and 18 per cent and a 40 per cent slab for a select few items, automobiles will be placed in a slab to put an end to disputes arising due to the classification of cars by engine capacity and length.
A lower GST rate will boost demand and sales, as cars will become affordable. Thereby boosting consumption, a key idea behind the GST overhaul proposal mooted by the Centre.
The Centre's proposal, which includes doing away with the 12 and 28 per cent slab, will be discussed by the Group of Ministers (GoM) on GST rate rationalisation on August 21. Thereafter, the GST Council, comprising the Centre and state finance ministers, will likely meet next month and approve the final GST rate structure.
Currently, GST is a four slab structure of 5, 12, 18 and 28 per cent, where essential items are either taxed at nil or a 5 per cent rate and luxury and sin goods are at 28 per cent slab.
The Centre has proposed to the rate rationalisation GoM to have only 2 slabs in GST -- 5 and 18 per cent -- and a 40 per cent rate only for a select few goods.
Sources said the 40 per cent rate would apply to 5-7 goods.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
43 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Reforming the GST regime
The Goods and Services Tax (GST), when it was finally implemented after decades of labour, was India's largest ever indirect tax reform. It created a nationally unified market and a unique federal forum for governing it. Doing away with state-level bumps in the indirect tax regime, however, was only one of the GST's promises. It was also expected to make the tax regime simple, especially in terms of slabs. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Independence Day speech has raised hopes of this promise being fulfilled eight years after GST's roll out. Speaking from the ramparts of Red Fort — the directional changes were later shared by finance ministry officials — Modi said that the Union government has sent a proposal to the Group of Ministers (GoM) constituted by the GST Council to unleash second generation reforms in GST, which, among other things, will bring most items under just two slabs of 'standard' and 'merit' with some exceptions being put under 'special rates'. HT reported earlier that the Centre has been mulling this, but also pointed out how the GST Council has not met for a long time now. While Modi announced that the reforms, especially on the slab front, would likely be rolled out before Diwali (second half of October), a GST Council meeting is yet to be notified. The idea, at least in principle, ought to be welcomed unequivocally. It will simplify the tax regime and take politicking out of setting tax slabs. However, the devil may very well lie in the details. Any large-scale revision in GST slabs will have to take into account its revenue implications as well as a possible inflationary impact. These two are likely to work in opposite directions and are critical factors for the fiscal and political health of the governments in charge, both in the Centre and the states. One would like to believe that a large part of this homework has been done by the GoM and state governments are on the same page with some of these salient findings. We will know more when these proposals are discussed in the next GST Council. A simplified GST is a much-needed step in India's long, even if gradual, road to reforms. Ideally, this reform should have happened earlier and definitely not in the current environment of global economic turmoil. But that's what political friction to reform sometimes entails.


The Hindu
43 minutes ago
- The Hindu
GST slab cuts will boost real estate industry: Kishan Reddy
Union Minister for Coal and Mines G. Kishan Reddy, on Sunday, said that reducing GST slabs as announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his Independence Day speech is sure to put more money in the hands of people. This, in turn, should help in buying a house, which is a long-felt emotional need for many people, he said. The Modi Government policies in the last 11 years has not only helped the middle class fulfil their dream of owning a house, but also fuelled the growth of the real estate industry, he maintained while addressing the Confederation of Real Estate Developers Association of India, Hyderabad chapter (CREDAI) on the second day of property show here. With the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) keeping interest rates low, housing loans have become affordable and monthly instalments within the income range. So, more citizens are likely to opt for buying a new home and expand the real estate market, he said. The Centre's 'Ease of Living' policy to improve the basic civic amenities in the urban areas has also aided in giving a boost to the industry. The Minister said that 20% population have been lifted out of poverty during the NDA regime, and he expressed the hope that as they move up the income ladder, the demand for housing will only rise. The Centre has been carefully balancing the need for policy changes to give a filip to the industry and also protect the rights of the home buyers by bringing about the Real Estate Regulation Act (RERA) to bring transparency and accountability to the processes, he said. Mr. Reddy also expressed satisfaction over the Telangana Government forming the Real Estate Apellate Tribunal finally last year and noted that 10,000 projects as well as 4,000 agents have been registered with RERA-TG. CREDAI-Hyderabad president N. Jaideep Reddy, president-elect B. Jagannath Rao, and general secretary K. Kranti Kiran Reddy, were also present, said a press release.


Economic Times
an hour ago
- Economic Times
India confident of meeting fiscal deficit target, despite planned tax cuts
India remains confident in achieving its fiscal deficit target of 4.4% for the current fiscal year, even with planned consumption tax cuts. Prime Minister Modi announced significant changes to the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime, aiming to reduce the cost of daily essentials and electronics. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads India is confident of meeting its fiscal deficit target of 4.4% for the current fiscal year, according to a government source with knowledge of the matter, despite its plans to cut consumption tax later this the biggest tax overhaul since 2017, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday announced sweeping changes to the complex goods and services tax (GST) regime which will make daily essentials and electronics cheaper."India's federal and state governments have options to offset any loss of revenue due to lowering of rates," the government source said without providing further source also said it will end the practice of collecting compensation cess by December. The GST compensation cess is an additional levy imposed on certain items to compensate states for any revenue loss incurred due to the implementation. India's finance ministry did not respond to a request for comment sent outside of office hours.