"We intend to have these rules approved by the GST council in its meeting on September 30 so that business systems can be modified by all," Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia tweeted.
The draft rules, on which the Central Board of Excise and Customs (CBEC) has invited comments by Wednesday, come less than a week after the first meeting of the GST Council.
"Business community may view them and give quick comments, if any, by 28th night on gst-cbec@gov.In," Adhia said.
The non-residents, who will come under the purview of GST, will be required to electronically submit the application for registration at least 5 days prior to the commencement of business and deposit full tax liability in advance.
The government aims to implement the new indirect tax regime Goods and Services Tax (GST) from April 1, 2017, and to that effect the GST Council will hold its second meeting on September 30. The meeting would finalise rules for GST.
The draft rules also provide that if a tax official fails to take action on registration application within a stipulated time-frame, the application for grant of registration shall be deemed to have been approved.
The tax authorities will use PAN, one time password and Aadhaar number to verify the details of the applicant.
If there are defects in the GST registration application,
the applicant has to be intimated within three working days and after receiving clarification, he will be granted registration within 7 days from the date for receiving of reply.
There will also be a provision for grant of separate registration for business verticals of the same organisation.
Nangia & Co Director Rajat Mohan said, "Government is working enthusiastically and is moving with lightening speed in hitting bull's eye for April, 2017."
In all, the CBEC has come out with 17 rules and 26 forms for registration, five rules and one form for invoice and four rules and seven forms for payment.
Invoice rules prima facie prescribed that number of details should be mentioned in an invoice e.G. Description of goods, HSN code of each good supplied, quantity of goods, rate (per item), discount offered, freight, amount of tax (under reverse charge), electronic reference number etc.
Divyesh Lapsiwala, Tax Partner, EY India said some of the provisions such as electronic authentication for registrations, special application for non-resident dealers, and self-updation of non-core details without needing an approval are positive changes.
"Further, it appears that e-com companies may end up with multiple registrations due to TCS provisions," he said.
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