The government has some elaborate plans to ring in the much-anticipated Goods and Services Tax, the biggest tax reform that the country has seen. There are hectic preparations underway at the Central Hall of Parliament where the government plans to hold a launch event at midnight June 30. The government’s midnight plans to usher in the sweeping tax reform has already drawn comparisons with the tryst with destiny on the midnight of August 15, 1947.
The government will use the circular-shaped Central Hall, perhaps for the first time, to launch a new taxation system that is set to dramatically re-shape the over $2 trillion economy.
The launch event is scheduled start at 11 pm on June 30 and extend into a few minutes after midnight, coinciding with the rollout of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley informed today.
The government also plans to sound a gong at midnight to signify that the GST has arrived.
The launch programme will see members of both Houses of Parliament in a joint sitting in the Central Hall of Parliament where the President, Prime Minister and the Finance Minister are likely to address. However, this will not be a joint session of Parliament but just a function to usher in the tax reform.
Conceptualised and originally piloted by President Mukherjee as the Finance minister in the previous UPA regime, the new tax code unifies more than a dozen separate levies to create a single market with a population greater than the US, Europe, Brazil, Mexico and Japan put together. GST will simplify a web of taxes, regulations and border levies by subsuming an array of central and state levies including excise duty, service tax and VAT.
At the June 30 function, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh would also occupy the high table along with another former PM HD Deve Gowda in the Central Hall.
Chief ministers of all states will be invited for the event as GST represented an unprecedented exercise in fiscal federalism, sources said, adding GST council members will be the guests.
The GST council, that brings together the central and state governments, has met 17 times to thrash out how the tax will work.
Originally, the launch of GST, which has been in works for over a decade, was to be done from Vigyan Bhawan – the largest convention centre in the national capital that has hosted majority of the meetings of the GST Council.
Dubbed as the most significant economic reform since BJP government came to power in 2014, the GST is expected to add as much as 2 percentage points to the GDP growth rate besides raising government revenues by widening the tax net.