Budget 2017: FM Arun Jaitley May Hike Service Tax To 16-18 Pct


NEW DELHI: Finance Minister Arun Jaitley may hike service tax rate to 16-18  pct from the current 15  pct in the Budget, due on Wednesday, as a precursor to the Goods and Services Tax (GST) rollout.

The move, that will make flying, eating out, phone bills and a host of other services expensive, would be an attempt to take the rates closer to the proposed tax slabs for GST.

GST, which will subsume central and state levies like excise duty, service tax and VAT, is scheduled to be rolled out from July 1.

The tax slabs decided for the GST are 5, 12, 18 and 28  pct and taking service tax closer to one of the slabs is a logical move in the Budget, tax experts said.

Tax experts say, Jaitley, who had in his previous budget hiked service tax rate by 0.5  pct to 15  pct, may raise the levy by at least one percentage point to 16  pct.

Some others feel there could be different service tax rates with a lower 12  pct for basic services and a higher 18  pct for the rest.

Also, a higher service tax for April-June will help the government garner more revenue to meet expenses on schemes and programmes it may be planning to contain the impact of demonetisation.

A service tax rate closer to the GST rate will also help consumers avoid a greater price shock when the new national sales tax is rolled out.

While service tax until now is a central levy, it will be equally split between the Centre and states under the new GST regime. Most services, except essential ones like primary healthcare and basic education, will be covered by GST.

Service tax was budgeted to provide 2.31 lakh crore in 2016-17, more than 14  pct of the Centre's total tax revenues of 16.30 lakh crore.

This will be the third time that Jaitley will raise service tax rate. Service tax from June 1, 2015 was hiked from 12.36  pct to 14  pct. A 0.5  pct Swachh Bharat Cess was levied on all services, taking the total incidence of service tax to 14.5  pct from November 15, 2015.

In the last Budget, he imposed a Krishi Kalyan Cess at the rate of 0.5  pct on all taxable services to take the levy to 15  pct.

Read Also:

India's Forex Reserves Cross $360 Bn

India Becoming One Of Most Transparent, Open Economies: Jaitely

Source: PTI