The World Bank’s March 2018 version of ‘ India Development Update’ has some critical remarks on the goods and services tax (GST). But it isn’t as harsh as headlines have made it out to be.
The headlines have largely been driven by the following, “Comparing the design of India’s GST system with those prevailing internationally, we note that the tax rates in the Indian GST system are among the highest in the world. The highest GST rate in India, while only applying to a subset of goods and services traded, is 28%, which is the second highest among a sample of 115 countries which have a GST (VAT) system and for which data is available.”
Resistance to change is universal. Transition to GST is always difficult. Witness Australia’s A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act of 1999 (operational from 2000). Witness the debate about exclusion of basic food items, or the dispute between the federal government and the state government of New South Wales there.
I guess the time and the action bit are also obvious now. But this still begs the question. There is a Plain English movement that is not unknown in Australia. Couldn’t the language of 165.55 have been simplified to make it comprehensible to the non-lawyer? It should have been possible. It isn’t gibberish, nor is it gobbledygook.