GST Compensation Cess
period already Extended till March 2026, FM Nirmala Sitharaman
Union
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Wednesday, 9 March, 2022
said the GST
compensation cess period has already been extended
till March 2026 to enable the Centre to repay loans taken to compensate all
states for the year 2020. During an interaction with reporters, she said,
"It's not just for me to take a call. It's for the GST council to
decide and we have discussed it."
The
Union Minister was responding to a query on Karnataka
Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai's
statement requesting the Centre to extend the GST compensation period, which
ends in June.
Elaborating
further, Sitharaman said the GST council has already
decided to extend the compensation cess period till
March 2026.
"It
is already extended for paying off the loan, which was taken for all the
states, for the compensation that could not be paid in 2020. And again, which
could not be somewhat, not fully, paid in 2021," the Finance Minister
said.
As
for the GST amount between 2020 and 2021, which was due to the states, with
compounded interest at 14 per cent each year, she said in view of it, the
central government took a conscious decision at the GST council meeting that it
will borrow back-to-back and give it to the states.
"Both
the loan and the repayment, together with the interest itself, will require
compensation cess to be extended till March 2026 and
that's what we have done. So the amount collected from the extended cess collection will go towards payment of the compensation
amount borrowed and the interest on it," the FM explained.
On
the impact on import of edible oil into the country due to the Ukraine
crisis, Sitharaman said India is looking for
alternatives.
"Edible
oil is also an area where we have challenges, where we have to see how we can
address it," she said.
India
is encouraging farmers in the north east region to grow palm, since the
climatic condition there is similar to Malaysia and Indonesia.
We
have taken up palm mission and are helping farmers get into production of palm
oil in those areas, where palm can be cultivated, because we import huge
quantities of palm oil, both the crude and refined, she added.