As part of cons of GST on MSME sector, the study highlighted - burden of lower threshold, no tax differentiation for luxury items and services, increase in cost of product, selective tax levying, burden of higher tax rate for service provider, excess working capital requirement, realignment of purchase and supply chain, dual control, high compliance burden and tax on advances, taxation under reverse charge for un-registered purchases, taxation on stock transfers and deemed supplies, time limit for return of goods sent on sale or return basis, condition of payment and filing of return for availing input tax credit and power to arrest and prosecution.
The study said that these pros offset the cons, as such the way forward while hopes rests with GST to boost the GDP growth and reduce the fiscal deficit.
Considering that all compliance procedures under GST — registration, payments, refunds and returns will now be carried out through online portals only and thus MSMEs need not worry about interacting with department officers for carrying out these compliances, which was earlier a cumbersome task.
Furthermore, Indian MSMEs would be able to compete with foreign competition coming from cheap cost centers such as China, Philippines, and Bangladesh.
The GST regime will usher in lower taxes, seamless input tax credit, logistics savings and market share swings from unorganized to organised players.
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