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The tax department may invoke the anti-profiteering clause after the mechanism is put in place and may look into balance sheet of companies if they have gained from the GST and whether the benefits have been passed on to consumers.
“The machinery for the anti-profiteering authority may not be ready at present but any change in prices will be called into questioned,” Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia said, adding that any fluctuations in prices will be closely monitored.
The GST Council in its two-day meet finalised the rates for goods and services, giving companies adequate time to work out their pricing policies.
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“We expect companies to cooperate. We hope we don’t have to use the weapon (of anti-profiteering authority),” he said.
The GST Act includes the provision of setting up an anti-profiteering authority to ensure that companies pass on the benefit of tax reduction to customers.
The GST Council has fitted the goods and services in tax brackets of 5, 12, 18 and 28 per cent.
Adhia said that despite the higher standard rate of 18 per cent, service providers will get input tax credit that will lower the effective incidence of the GST to around the current incidence of 15 per cent.
The tax department feels tax cut benefits should be passed on to consumers through more transparent billing.
Several analysts have opined that consumers may have to bear the brunt of the higher tax.