India to cut tax burden on several items to ease pain for small businesses

Reuters  |  NEW DELHI 

(Reuters) - will slash by nearly three-quarters the number of items subjected to the highest rate of a new nationwide tax, a state official said on Friday, as pressure grows for the to reduce the burden on businesses amid an economic slowdown.

The launch of a new nationwide goods and services (GST) in July transformed India's 29 states into a single customs union, but traders and small businesses complain it has increased their administrative and financial burden.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's will cut to 50, from more than 200, the number of items taxed at a rate of 28 percent, the deputy chief minister of the eastern state of Bihar said, after a meeting of national finance officials.

"We've limited the number of items in the 28 percent list to 50 items," said Sushil Kumar Modi, adding the move could cost the exchequer around 200 billion rupees ($3.07 billion) this fiscal year.

Modi faces criticism for the economic disruption caused by the roll-out and last year's shock removal of higher-value bills from circulation.

As a result, India's economy is expected to grow at its slowest pace in four years in the fiscal year that ends on March 31, a poll found.

The "panic-stricken govt has no option but to concede demands for change" in the tax, India's former Finance Minister, P. Chidambaram, said on social network Twitter on Friday.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who chairs the council on the tax, will hold a conference later on Friday.

($1=65.0600 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Krishna N. Das; Editing by Malini Menon and Clarence Frenandez)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, November 10 2017. 15:03 IST