The
outcome of the 2004 Lok Sabha elections is a categorical rejection
on the part of the Indian electorate of both religious bigotry and
blatant anti-poor economic measures passing as 'reforms'. There is
however a third dimension to the verdict: it marks the emergence of
regional parties and others with a strong regional base as entities
as powerful as the two major national parties. The proportion of total
votes cast for these other parties is about the same as that polled
by the Congress and the BJP together. The electorate has given a clear
signal that regional aspirations must be speedily fulfilled; otherwise
the integrity of the polity itself could be in danger.
To
honour this mandate, the Common Minimum Programme, drawn up by the
new government should have included a straightforward recommendation
for a realigning of Centre-State relations in favour of the States,
including suggestions for a drastic revision of the existing financial
relations. Unfortunately, the CMP does not mention any such agenda,
except the promise to set up another time-consuming commission to
go into the matter. Even more intriguing, one of the first tasks the
CMP has assigned for the new government is the introduction of a nation-wide
Value Added Tax, a number of steps have already been initiated towards
this effect.
This is certainly cause for concern, for the Value Added Tax actually
aims to replace sales taxation, the main revenue-raising instrument
at the disposal of State governments. As it is, the States are currently
under heavy financial crunch. The Constitution does not entitle them
to levy either income tax or corporation tax or wealth tax. They have
no right to determine either the rates structure or procedures relating
to excise duty imposed at the point of production of goods and services.
They cannot levy import and export duties. All these prerogatives
belong to the Centre. The States, besides, cannot raise money from
the market without permission of the Centre. They cannot have recourse
to the printing press in the manner the Centre can. All that the States
enjoy is the right to levy sales and purchase taxes, and such other
minor levies as amusement tax, road tax or excise duty on liquor.
They are allowed to tax agriculture. But, given the level of rural
poverty, such taxation is of extremely limited potential. For most
States, roughly between one-half to two-thirds of total revenues accruing
to them come from sales taxation. The proposal to scarp sales tax
and substitute it by the Value Added Tax is therefore prima facie
a further encroachment on their financial rights. Because of their
very narrow resource-raising base, the States have been compelled
to borrow heavily from the Union government, the burden of which is
staggering. It could be an impossible situation if they are now asked
to give up the right to levy sales tax and substitute it by a Centrally-directed
levy whose revenue prospects are indeterminate at this point of time.
Sales tax and Value Added Tax are distinct from each other. The former
is an impost on the sale of a commodity or service at the point of
sale. In contrast, VAT is a levy on goods and services which is related
to the value of the product or service even as it increases at each
stage of production. These technicalities apart, sales tax is specifically
listed in the Constitution as a prerogative of the States, while VAT
is not mentioned at all. An impression has been sought to be created
that whatever is now being done is at the initiative of the State
governments and in accordance with the unanimous decision of State
finance ministers reportedly reached at a meeting presided over by
the Union Finance Minister in 1999. This is a travesty of facts; the
initiative has come from New Delhi. The so-called empowerment committee
of State finance ministers, which is supposed to be looking after
the entire matter, is nominated by the Union finance minister, its
secretariat has been set up by the Ministry of Finance, the proposed
framework of Value Added Tax with uniform rates of taxation for different
categories of goods and services all over the country and uniform
procedures for administering the tax has been crafted by the Centre.
Why is this anxiety to rob the States of their right to impose sales
tax and substitute it by VAT? The VAT is a dream child of the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund, and is regarded by them
as an important adjunct of 'economic reforms'. There is here an identity
in the points of view of the Washington institutions and those held
by representatives of industry, that is, by the capitalist class:
they both want India to be an integrated market so that capitalist
enterprise can flourish without any let or hindrance. Just as there
is a single, Centre-imposed and Centre-administered excise duty at
the point of production, industrialists are keen to have a similar
single, Centre-administered tax at the point of distribution too.
VAT fits the bill: once it is uniformly applied all over the country,
a national market, it is fondly hoped, will emerge for all goods and
services; there will be no bother of separate rates of taxes for the
same commodity in different States, nor the irritant of observing
different procedures and of differences in definitions and terms.
An additional factor swaying the attitude of industrialists is perhaps
the belief that, in the case of VAT, they have to deal with only one
authority, while sales taxation involves negotiating at various levels.
The prosperity that has visited West Europe subsequent to the cross-over
to VAT is cited in this connection. On the other hand, the world's
leading capitalist country, the United States, has proved that there
can be life even without VAT: there, the concern for preservation
of States' rights has smothered all other considerations. In Canada
too, French-speaking Quebec has stayed away from the Value Added Tax
embraced by the other provinces. Moreover, traders as a class are
wary of VAT, mostly because of the kind of detailed accounts compliance
that the tax calls for. Small traders in particular - and not necessarily
only the dishonest ones - fear difficulties in the maintenance of
proper books.
Whatever the conceivable gains or losses to industrialists and/or
traders, in the Indian context the States are likely to lose from
the introduction of VAT. Apart from the fact that the States will
in the process be deprived of their major tax instrument --- sales
taxation --- they will also face other problems. The States constituting
the Union of India are at disparate stages of development. They have
varying structures of production and different patterns of consumption.
Some States may need to encourage industries in the State by dangling
a lower level of sales taxes to entrepreneurs compared to what prevails
in other States, or they may want to discourage the consumption of
certain commodities by raising the rates of sales tax. This weapon
will no longer be available to them.
Those who advocate VAT because it will, they believe, lead to market
perfection, are at best an optimistic lot. Varying rates of sales
tax are not the only impediment keeping India from the paradise of
an integrated market. Even if sales taxation is abolished, curtails
and monopolies will remain, inequalities in income and assets distribution
will persist, and so too other obstacles to the free flow of goods,
services, labour and capital from one part of the country to another.
Nor should we forget the Constitutional issues that are involved.
The States on their own cannot abolition sales taxation; nor can the
Centre. That is possible only if a Constitutional amendment is passed.
The enthusiasts for VAT obviously want to avoid that route. The Centre
has instead advised the States to have recourse to a subterfuge. They
have been urged to each pass enabling legislation in their respective
legislature with the objective of replacing the existing system of
sales tax with the Value Added Tax. The procedure proposed in the
body of the legislation is however to amend the existing sales tax
legislation. It is doubtful whether such a procedure will be considered
as legally valid in a court of law.
The preferred and wiser alternative would have been a Constitutional
amendment abolishing sales taxation and removing it from the State
list, at the same time introducing the Value Added Tax in the Union
list. Whether there will be enough support for such an amendment amongst
the States is doubtful; for then, the issue of abridgement of States'
rights would be glaringly brought into the open. Even if such a Constitutional
amendment were enacted, given the precedent of Kesavanand Bharati,
its validity too could be questioned, since, some will say, it damages
basic structure of the Constitution.
All told, the proposal to go ahead with the Value Added Tax is a retrograde
measure and deserves to be resisted. The priority in the fiscal sphere
should rather be on liberating the State governments from the huge
loan burden they at present carry.