Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Thursday, Nov 16, 2006
ePaper


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Industry & Economy - Taxation
Government - Politics
States - Tamil Nadu
VAT Bill to be introduced in monsoon session

Our Bureau

`Setting up an advisory committee under study'


VAT procedures
Traders registered under TNGST must apply for the Taxpayer Identification Number, registration number under VAT
Facilities available online at http: //www.tnsalestax. gov.in


MR S.N.M. UBAYADULLAH, Minister of Commercial Taxes.

Chennai , Nov. 15

The Tamil Nadu Government will table the VAT Bill in the monsoon session of the Assembly to pave way for the shift to value-added tax from January 1, 2007, according to the Minister for Commercial Taxes, Mr S. N. M. Ubayadullah.

The State Government has announced that the session starts on December 4.

Addressing a press conference here on the preparations to shift to VAT from the present sales tax, he said that traders registered under the Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax (TNGST) must apply for the Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) and registration number under VAT. The commercial taxes department has started the process today and facilities are also available online at http: //www. tnsalestax.gov.in.

There are over 3.90 lakh dealers registered under TNGST, and they would all have to apply for VAT registration.

The procedures for VAT payment and refund are being streamlined. The rules and rates of taxes on items would follow after the Bill is passed in the Assembly. An `advisory committee' along the lines of the sales tax advisory committee, an industry demand, is being considered, he said.

Loss to TN

The Minister said that estimates indicate that Tamil Nadu faces a revenue loss of over Rs 3,000 crore due to the shift to VAT. Under the existing terms, the Centre will have to compensate 75 per cent of the loss due to the shift to VAT from 2007. Tamil Nadu's revenue neutral rate is well above 15 per cent because its tax rates go up to 20 per cent under sales tax. (There are seven tax rates apart from three per cent on inputs at concessional rates, surcharge of five per cent, and additional sales tax and resale tax of one per cent.) Most of the other States' revenue neutral rate is lower than 12.5 per cent. The revenue loss is because under VAT there are just three slabs of taxation - one per cent, four per cent and 12.5 per cent. But the number of taxpayers and compliance is expected to increase with the shift to VAT and this would compensate in the long term. According to the Commercial Taxes Commissioner, Ms S. Malathi, sales tax revenue up to October was Rs 11,300 crore, which is a 20 per cent growth over the same period previous year. (The total revenue in 2005-06 was Rs 16,615 crore and in 2004-05 Rs 13,908 crore.)

New scheme

The outstanding revenue, including arrears and tax deferrals, is about Rs 8,000 crore. A `samadhan' scheme announced to expedite settlement of arrears is on and will be open for another month. But the scheme has not received a `big response' as of now with collections at about Rs 20 lakh. It may be recalled that the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, Mr M. Karunanidhi, had announced in the budget session that shifting to VAT was inevitable due to the widespread demand from traders and manufacturers. Tax incentives such as deferrals, exemptions and waivers granted to industries will continue under VAT till the end of the incentive period.

More Stories on : Taxation | Politics | Tamil Nadu

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
Global investment banks, consulting firms a hit at IIM (B)


National body for bio-diesel producers
IndianOil forms group for implementing biofuel projects
Will `emerging' economies ever emerge?
Trade promotion board mooted to attract investments to Kerala
Meet to showcase engg exports capability
Italy fest to explore investment prospects
Call for greater Indo-Italian biz ties
Laos invites Indian investors
PM flags off youth meet on health
`SEZs not a threat to food security'
IOC drops plan to take stake in Indonesian refiner
Award for BPCL
Petronet may source 1.25 mt LNG from Qatar
DS Constructions, Israel Electric pact
More time for installing power meters
VAT Bill to be introduced in monsoon session
Uzbek woos investors in textile sector
4 new German visa centres
New strategy to be charted out for SMEs growth
Bank guarantees mooted for captive coal blocks
Doordarshan's Indian classics to be shown in theatres
Tata Elxsi to expand in Kerala
Alumni sponsor scholarships at IIM-A
Use IT and cut costs, Kalam tells construction sector
Delhi traders begin hunger strike
Plea to raise abatement rate on watches to 50%
Why the Indian housewife deserves paeans of praise
Shrimp row with US: Centre to press for dispute panel
Industry against job quota, reservations in private sector
Against reservation
`Interest rate cap will hurt access to finance'
Engg export promotion body plans expo in Cairo
Seminar on export procedures
Reining in white-collar crime


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2006, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line