The finance ministry has received requests to reconsider the imposition of 5% Goods and Services Tax (GST) on pre-packaged and labelled food items like pulses and rice.
Minister of state for finance Pankaj Chaudhary explained when this tax will not apply. He said that when sold in loose form (not in pre-packaged and labelled form), food grains, flour, pulses, curd, lassi, buttermilk, and paneer continue to remain exempt from GST and their consumers are not impacted by the tax.
But in the case of pre-packaged and labelled forms of such commodities, considering that the taxpayer would get an input tax credit on the inputs and input services, the net impact of GST would be marginal for consumers. Further, the supplier of such pre-packaged and labelled commodities eligible for availing threshold exemption or composition scheme would be entitled to exemption or composition rate, as the case may be.
GST rates are prescribed on the recommendation of the GST Council, which is a constitutional body comprising of representatives from the states, union territories and the Centre, taking into account all the relevant factors.
At its 47th meeting held in Chandigarh on June 28, the Council had made a unanimous recommendation for the imposition of GST on ‘pre-packaged and labelled’ form for specified goods like pulses, rice, flour, paneer, etc., at a nominal rate of 5%. The change was effective from July 18 and has led to protests from some of the opposition parties that demanded a roll back of the tax increase.
The minister did not comment on whether there is a re-think on the imposition of a 5% tax on these items.