‘One nation, one tax’: Indian parliament passes landmark tax reform bill

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India’s upper house of parliament on Wednesday passed a landmark tax reform bill that will pave the way for the introduction of a new national sales tax, creating a common market across the country for the first time.

After hours of debate, lawmakers unanimously voted in favour of introducing the long-awaited Goods and Services Tax (GST) after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government reached a consensus with the Congress party and other opposition party members.

The GST will replace a patchwork of central and state levies on goods and services and is one of the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party government’s biggest reforms since taking power in May 2014.

Modi described the bill’s passage as a “truly historic occasion” and thanked members of all parties for their support.

“We will continue to work with all parties and states to introduce a system that benefits all Indians and promotes a vibrant and unified national market,” Modi tweeted after the bill received the thumbs up.

The battle to introduce the economy-boosting GST has been one of the fiercest of Modi’s premiership, with Congress repeatedly blocking the bill for more than a year, before finally agreeing to several amendments.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley hailed it as a “great day for Indian democracy and federalism” once the bill had passed.

“It integrates India into one economic entity… India becomes a big market, there will be a seamless transfer of goods and services across the country,” he said earlier on Wednesday.

Not all lawmakers agreed. Members of AIADMK, the ruling party in Tamil Nadu state, abstained from voting and staged a walkout in protest at the bill.

Analysts say the GST could cause India’s manufacturing powerhouses — such as Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra and Gujarat — to lose revenues they currently get from selling goods across states. However, a key amendment to the bill means they will be compensated for any revenue loss for five years.

Businesses have pushed hard for years to bring in the tax, saying it will boost economic activity, with lobby group the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) estimating it will add 1.5 to 2 percentage points to the annual GDP growth rate.

“It is very much in the category of what one would call a big-bang reform,” CII president Naushad Forbes told AFP.

“It’s a huge potential efficiency gainer,” he added.

India’s GDP expanded 7.6 per cent in 2015-16, making it the fastest-growing major economy in the world.

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