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GST Council Finalises Rates For Services, Healthcare, Education Are Exempt

The regime will kick in from 1 July.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

SRINAGAR -- India has finalised four tax rates that will apply to services including telecoms, insurance, hotels and restaurants under a new sales tax which should be rolled out on 1 July, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said on Friday.

The tax rates for services will be 5, 12, 18 and 28 percent - in line with those applying to goods.

Telecoms and financial services will be taxed at a standard rate of 18 percent while transport services will be taxed at 5 percent, Jaitley said.

"The net effect of Goods and Services Tax will not be inflationary," Jaitley told reporters after a meeting of the GST Council in Srinagar, summer capital of Jammu and Kashmir state.

The council, comprising federal and state finance ministers, fixed rates on Thursday for more than 1,200 items under the Goods and Services Tax, amid demands by some states to keep essential items under the lower tax category.

The new tax is likely to be non-inflationary as the government has kept a majority of food items, with a combined weighting of nearly 50 percent in the consumer price index, out of the tax net.

Basic food items like cereals, eggs and meat will attract zero tax while processed food items will be charged between 12 and 28 percent.

The long-awaited Goods and Services Tax has been hailed as India's biggest tax overhaul since independence in 1947. It will replace a slew of federal and state levies, transforming Asia's third largest economy into a single market.

"GST regime will usher in lower taxes, seamless input tax credit, logistics savings and market share swings from unorganized to organized players," said Aditya Narain, Research head at Edelweiss Securities Ltd.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who completes three years of his term this month, had said the new tax will not cause price rises, while aiming to bring down tax leakages in the complex tax system.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.