2019 4G LTE 4G VoLTE 5G 7th Pay Commission Aadhaar Actor Wallpapers Actress Wallpaper Adriana Lima AdSense Ahoi Ashtami Airtel Airtel DTH Akshay Kumar Alcatel Alexa Rank Amazon Android Android Pie Android Q Anna university Antivirus Anushka Sharma apna csc online Apple Apps Army Army App Asthma Asus Atal Seva mirchpur Athletics Auto Auto Insurance Avengers Axis Bank Backlinks Badhajmi Bajaj Bang Bang Reloaded Bank Battery Bhai Dooj Katha Bhakti Bharti Bhumi Pednekar Big Bazaar Big TV Bing BlackBerry Blogger BlogSpot Bluetooth BoB Bollywood Boot Boxing Breathlessness Browser BSEH Bsnl Budget Budhvar Business buy Cable TV Camera Car Car Loan Card Less ATM Cash CBSE Celebrity CEO Chandra Grahan Channels Chest Pain Chhath chrome Clean WhatsApp Cache Common Service Centres (CSC) Mirchpur Hisar Haryana - Front of Jyoti Sen Sec School Mirchpur Comparisons Computer Coolpad Corona COVID 19 COVID 19 HARYANA Credit Cricket Crime CSC Cylinder Dama Dard Deepika Padukone Defence Detel Dhanteras Diamond Crypto DigiLocker App DigiPay App Digital India App Digital Indian Gov Dish TV Diwali DNS setting Domain Donate Doogee DTH DTH Activation DTH Installation DTH Plans in India Dusshera E-seva Kender mirchpur Earn Money Education Electronics Email Entertinment Ex-serviceman Extensions Facebook FASTag Fatigue Festivals FlicKr Flipkart Foldable Smartphone Food Foursquare Funny Gadgets Galaxy Galaxy S8 Game Ganesh ganesh chaturthi Gas Problems Gastric Problem Gharelu Gionee Gmail God Google Google + Google Assistant Google Drive Google Duo Google Pixel Google Tez Google Voice Google+ Govardhan Puja GroupMe GST GTA Guide GuruSatsang Guruvar Hamraaz hamraaz app hamraaz app download hamraaz army hamraaz army app hamraaz army app download Hamraaz Army App version 6 Apk Happy New Year Hariyali Teej Hartalika Teej Harvard University Haryana haryana csc online HDFC Bank Headphones Health Heart Attack Heart Fail Heart Problems Heart Stroke Heena Sidhu Hello App Help Hernia Hindi History Hockey Holi Holi Katha Hollywood Home Loan Honor HostGator Hosting Hrithik Roshan HTC Huawei humraaz app iBall IBM ICICI Bank Idea Ilaj India india vs china indian army app Indigestion Infinix InFocus Information Infosys Instagram Insurance Intel Internet Intex Mobile iPad iPhone iPhone 8 IPL IRCTC iVoomi Jan Dhan Account Janmashtami Japanese Encephalitis Javascript JBL Jio Jio GigaFiber Jio Meet JioPOS JioRail JioSaavn Jokes Kamjori Karbonn Kareena Kapoor Kartik Purnima Karva Chauth Karwa Chauth Kasam Tere Pyaar Ki Katrina Kaif Kendall Jenner Keywords Kimbho Kodak Kumkum Bhagya Kushth Rog Landline Laptop Lava Lenovo Leprosy LET Lethargy LG Library of Congress Lifestyle Linkedin Lisa Haydon Livejournal Liver Cancer Loans LPG Gas mAadhaar Macbook Maha Shivratri Makar Sankranti Map Market Mary Kom Massachusetts Institute of Technology Meizu Messages Mi Micromax Microsoft Mobile Modi Mokshada Ekadashi Money Motorcycles Motorola Movie Muscle Pain Music Myspace Narendra Modi Narsingh Jayanti Nature Naukri Navratri Nemonia Netflix Network News Nexus Nia Sharma Nokia Notifications Nuskhe OBC Ocean Office Offrs Ola Cab OMG OnePlus Online Opera Oppo Oreo Android Orkut OS OxygenOS Padmavati PagalWorld Pain Pain Sensation Pakistan PAN PAN Card Panasonic Passwords Patanjali Pay Payment Paypal Paytm PC PDF Peeda Pendrive Pension Personal Loan Pet Me Gas PF Phone Photo PHP Pila Bukhar Pinterest Pixel Plan PNB Bank Pneumonia PNR Poco Poster PPC Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi Pradhanmantri Kisan Samman Nidhi Yojna Pradosh Pragya Jaiswal Prepaid Princeton University Printer Priyanka Chopra promote my youtube channel promote video on youtube cost promote youtube channel promote youtube channel free promote youtube video free PUBG Qualcomm Quora Quotes Race 3 Railway Rambha Tritiya Vrat RBI Realme Recruitment Redmi Relationship Religious Restore Results Review Rule Sai Dharam Tej Saina Nehwal Salman Khan Samsung Sanusha Satsang Video Sawan Somvar Vrat SBI Bank Script Sell SEO Serial Server Shabd Shahid Kapoor Shanivar Sharad Poornima Sharp Shiv Shopping Shreyasi Singh Shruti Haasan Signal Sim Smart Android TV Smartphones SMS Snapchat Social Software Somvar Sonakshi Sinha Sonam Kapoor Soney Songs Sony Xperia Space Speakers Specifications Sports Sql Stanford University State Bank of India Stickers Stomach Upset Story Sun Direct Sunny Leone Surabhi Sushant Singh Rajput Swadeshi Swas Rog Tata Sky Tax Tech Technology Tecno Telegram Telugu Thakan Tiger Shroff Tiger Zinda Hai Tips Tiredness Tollywood Tool Top Trending People Trading Trai TRAI Rules for cable TV Trailer Treatment Trends True Things Truecaller Tubelight Tulsi Vivah Tumblr Tv Twitter Typing Uber Umang App University of Oxford UP Board Upay Upchar Update USA USB Vacancies Valentines Day Verizon Vertu Viber Video Videocon d2h Videos Vijayadashami Viral Bukhar Viral Fever Virat Kohli Virgin Visas Vivo VLE Vodafone Voter Card VPN Vrat Katha Vrat Vidhi Wallpaper War Wayback Machine Weakness WhatsApp WhatsApp Cleaner WhatsApp Status WhatsApp stickers Wi-Fi WiFi Windows Windows 10 Wipro Wireless WordPress workstation WWE Xiaomi Xiaomi Mi 6 Yeh Hai Mohabbatein Yellow Fever Yo Yo Honey Singh Yoga yojna YotaPhone YouTube youtube promotion youtube promotion free ZTE अपच अस्थमा आलस्य इलाज उपचार उपाय उमंग ऐप कहानियाँ कुष्ठरोग कोरोना वायरस गुरुसत्संग घरेलू जन धन योजना जापानी इन्सेफेलाइटिस डिजिटल इंडिया डिजिटल इंडिया अप्प्स डिजिपे ऐप डिजीलॉकर ऐप थकान दमा दर्द निमोनिया नुस्ख़े पीड़ा पीतज्वर पीला बुखार पेट में गैस पैन कार्ड प्रधानमंत्री किसान सम्मान निधि बदहज़मी भक्ति मांसपेशियों में दर्द लीवर कैंसर वायरल बुखार वोटर कार्ड शब्द सच्ची बातें सत्संग वीडियो सरसों सीने में दर्द स्कीम स्वास रोग हर्निया

View: Why GST is starting to look like an Indian wedding

View: Why GST is starting to look like an Indian wedding

India stands on the brink of one of its most momentous policy reforms in decades unprepared and uncertain. We're just a few days away from the launch of a new indirect-tax regime, the goods-and-services tax, or GST, and anxiety about its rollout is all-pervasive. 

The reform, which intends to knit India together into a single tax area for the first time, goes live on July 1 -- in fact, at the stroke of midnight. The Narendra Modi-led central government, always on the lookout for a bit of spectacle with which to entertain its voters, intends this to be commemorated with a midnight session of parliament, deliberately echoing India's freedom at midnight more than seven decades ago. 


Perhaps, though, the government should be thinking more about preparation and less about pageantry. The scale of the changes needed is daunting. India's banks, for example, have been caught by surprise. They expected that the new regime meant no change to the current system in which they register as taxpayers once, nationally; instead, they're being forced to register in each of India's dozens of states. Now they're rushing against the clock to do so. 

Smaller companies have been hit equally hard. The existing system allows them to maintain big, dusty ledgers and receipts, and all the paraphernalia of 19th-century accounting. The GST, on the other hand, is entirely online. Mom-and-pop outfits across the country are spending hard-earned money on computer hardware they're not certain about, and struggling to learn how to use buggy tax software for the first time. Companies such as Dell Inc. have even set up websites where they tout their existing computers as being special "GST ready" models. 

This sort of frantic preparation is visible in sector upon sector. It's not surprising, therefore, that appeals are coming in from everywhere to postpone the GST by a quarter. Industry associations, state governments, chartered accountants, and even central government ministries have begged for a little more time. 

Yet the government insists that no extra time is available, or even necessary. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said, with a touch of impatience, that "we don't have the luxury of time," and advised people to ignore the generally querulous atmosphere surrounding the rollout. In particular, he insisted the massive computing backbone needed for the task is ready, although it hasn't really been stress-tested yet. About 80 percent of existing taxpayers have managed to open an account on the new system, but complaints have been common. Internet forums usually dedicated to figuring out which sub-clauses of the Income Tax Act can safely be ignored are now overrun with posts complaining of the dread phrase: "Failed to establish connection to the server." 

In any case, even if the server does't fail, and everyone buys a computer and learns to use it in time, there's still likely to be a quarter or two of utter confusion as the new tax takes effect. That's adding to pessimism about growth over the rest of the year -- especially since an investment crisis and Modi's mismanagement have already pushed the economy into a slowdown. 

Given all this, the government is taking quite a risk in refusing to postpone the introduction. Remember the glitchy rollout of healthcare.gov in the U.S.? Opinions about an entire policy can solidify in the first few days of its implementation -- and a bad IT experience can disproportionately influence such opinions. 

My head tells me, therefore, that it would be best to push back the rollout while the system is stress-tested, open consultations are held on reducing adaptation costs and so on. But I have to admit my heart doesn't agree: It's quite exhilarating to see the government, which has a track record of timidity on major reform, for once showing a bit of determination. 

And I can't help being a bit hopeful as well. Perhaps a lot of the complaints are just people letting off steam. Jaitley pointed out that people have had a year to prepare, since the July 1 deadline has been known at least that long. (True, but the tax itself was only given its final shape a few weeks ago.) He could've argued with some justice that even if he gave in, then -- India being what it is -- people might well appear as unprepared in the last week before any later launch date as well. 

As many people have argued, if you want to really get how this country works, observe people planning an Indian wedding -- or watch Mira Nair's great movie about it. Nothing seems to be coming together until the last moment, but it all hangs together in the end. Let's hope that the GST rollout is just suffering from the Indian wedding syndrome.
Labels:

Post a Comment

[blogger][facebook]

Digitalindiagov.com

Satish Kumar

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Powered by Blogger.