The Development Bank of Singapore (DBS) today said the Goods and Services Tax (GST) bill passed overwhelmingly by the Parliament last night is a "positive development" likely to provide temporary boost to thedomestic markets.
"It is a positive development. (But) April 2017 deadline (to implement the GST) looks quite challenging... Actual mechanism has not been thrashed out yet, that would be next contentious issues," said Radhika Rao, vice president and economist at DBS.
"It is not going to be easy to get some of the consensus on some of the finer details. It could be a time-consuming process.
"These developments will be watched closely especially given the busy state election calendar in 2017," she wrote in the bank's daily market report.
Price impact will be the highest if a single GST rate is adopted, but it is more likely that a tiered system would prevail, maintaining food and essentials at low rates whilst sin taxes form the highest bracket, according to DBS.
Leading US dailies said the passage of the bill was an "important step" in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's campaign to modernise India's economy and over the long term, will attract foreign investment, boost manufacturing and exports and create jobs.
The New York Times, in its report on the passage of the GST bill in the Upper House of Parliament, said it is the "most important economic measure since India opened its markets in 1991".
"The Goods and Services Tax is widely viewed as a breakthrough that will allow the authorities to confront the problem, eventually creating a more unified economy that will allow businesses to expand nationwide far more easily," it said.
The report added that while the GST reform is likely to
lead to an inflationary bump, over the long term, it is "expected to attract foreign investment and bring down the cost of capital goods, lift manufacturing and exports, increase tax collections and - perhaps most important, in a country where one million young people enter the work force each month - create jobs."
"Shifting to a GST would help ease the burdens of double taxation and other distortions caused by the current system. The move, which India's government first proposed a decade ago, would also lower barriers to interstate commerce. Some have compared it to the abolition of customs duties within the European Union," it added.
It, however, said that the benefit to India's economy as a whole may not be immediate and the GST could add to inflation at a time when price growth is already picking up.
The US-India Business Council (USIBC) termed the passage of GST bill by the Indian Parliament as a "game-changer" that will boost economic growth by streamlining domestic supply chains and removing the compliance burden of contradictory state tax regimes.
While congratulating India, the body said this is a significant milestone in the country's ongoing efforts to improve its ranking in the World Bank's ease of doing business index.
"A simplified tax structure can usher in greater compliance, increase the number of tax payers and therefore, widen the tax base resulting in higher tax revenue for the government," USIBC president Mukesh Aghi said.
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