Thursday, November 7, 2024
₹0.00

No products in the cart.

HomeGST NEWSGST May Not Reduce Deficits of State Governments, Says Report by S&P...

GST May Not Reduce Deficits of State Governments, Says Report by S&P Global Ratings

Date:

Related stories

Service of Show Cause Notice on driver is not sufficient to be equated with adequate opportunity.

Case Details: Particular Details Case No. WP(MD)No. 24778 of 2022 Case Name Ramki Cements Pvt...

Anticipatory Bail for offences committed under GST Act

Case Details: Particular Details Case No. Bail Appln. No. 3771 of 2021 Case Name Tarun Jain...

A report by S&P Global Ratings said that GST will not help tackling the deficits of the State Governments. Also saying that policy implementation has been sub-par in India.

Singapore Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime in India is not likely to reduce the deficits of state governments significantly, amid large and growing expenditure mandates for the social sector as well as capital spending, says a report.

According to S&P Global Ratings the institutional framework for Indian states is evolving, but there is structural deficits due to persistent revenue expenditure mismatch.

S&P Global Ratings credit analyst YeeFarn Phua in the report titled “Public Finance System Overview: Indian States” noted that the passage of the GST bill in 2017 is a major overhaul of tax structure and will help to widen the tax base and improve revenues of state governments.

“However, states will continue to run large deficits because a significant part of this imbalance is from the expenditure side. States are unable to cut expenditures because of large and growing expenditure mandates for the social sector as well as capital spending. Therefore, the revenue-expenditure gap will remain large,” said Phua.

Further, policy implementation remains sub-par in India, the report noted.

Another significant development in recent years has been the adoption of an amended Fiscal Responsibility Management (FRBM) Act, which forms the fiscal framework, in March 2018, the report noted.

Under the amended FRBM Act, the government will target a debt-to-GDP ratio of 60 per cent with the split being 40:20 for central government and states.

Further, the government will use fiscal deficit as the key operational target, the report said but added that the FRBM committee lacks the authority to mandate its core recommendations.

Source : https://www.news18.com/news/business/gst-may-not-reduce-deficits-of-state-governments-in-india-says-a-report-by-sp-global-ratings-2131419.html

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here