At a meeting with his state counterparts, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has agreed to include in the Bill the mechanism of compensating states for all loss of revenue for five years.
The Bill in its present form provides that the Centre will give 100 per cent compensation to states for first three years, 75 per cent and 50 per cent for the next two years.
"The bill incorporating the changes in the wordings regarding compensation mechanism will go to Cabinet. Thereafter it will be taken up for discussion in the Rajya Sabha," an official source said.
Terming it a very big development, Chairman of the Empowered Committee of State Finance Ministers Amit Mitra had yesterday said that appropriate wordings on compensation would give confidence to the states regarding Centre.
"I cannot go into details of the wordings, I can only give you spirit of it. States are satisfied that in the constitutional amendment the wording (will be provided) by which states will be guaranteed five years of compensation if there is any loss of revenue," Mitra said.
With Congress demand of getting GST rate capped in the Bill delaying its passage, the Centre yesterday built a broad consensus with the states that the rates should not be mentioned in constitution and instead could figure in GST law.
It was also assured that the tax rate in the new regime, which is to be decided by the GST Council, will be less than what it is at present.
This CST will no longer be available in the new regime and a 1 per cent additional tax was proposed to make up for that.
The GST Bill, which intends to convert 29 states into a single market through a new indirect tax regime, was earlier planned to be introduced from April 1 this year, but the deadline was missed as the legislation to roll it out remains in limbo in the Opposition-dominated Rajya Sabha.
