The GST Council deciding
to advance the date for implementing the e-way bill - an electronic way of
tracking movement of goods -- system. Now, trial runs can be conducted from
January 16, and the full implementation will take place from February 1. The
originally scheduled date was June 1.
The logic behind the
e-Way bill is to track the movement of goods above Rs 50,000 within the state,
and from one state to another. It is supposed to check GST evasion and put to
rest the worries of different states that they were losing out on GST revenues.
The central government was equally keen to shorten the mismatches and delays in
matching invoices that is taking place at the moment.
But the current form of
the e-way Bill, despite the promises of technology like RFID that it promises
to apply, is quite regressive and puts onerous conditions of compliance. Any
good worth Rs 50,000 or above needs an e-way bill if it has to go beyond 10 K.M.s.
Any person or firm registered under GST will can generate the e-way bill -
including the transporter. The e-way bill needs to be generated before the good
is moved, and it has a limited validity period based on the distance covered.
For up to 100 K.M.s, an e-way bill is valid for 1 day. For 200 K.M.s, it is
valid for 2 days and so on.
If the good fails to be
shipped on the date of generation, the e-way bill can be cancelled within 24
hours. If a mode of transport is changed, a fresh e-way bill needs to be generated.
If some goods are sent back by the receiver, another e-way bill needs to be
generated.
All these are likely to
only delay the smooth movement of goods from one state to another. It could
also unleash exactly the kind of border check posts the GST had promised to
remove. And finally, it can create problems galore for everyone ranging from
physical dealers to e-commerce firms. For example, suppose a high end
television or audio set that costs over Rs 50,000 is shipped by a truck from
the factory to the dealer, and then sent on further by the dealer to the
customer's house, it will need two separate e-way bills. If the customer in the
meantime, cancels the order before it reaches him, another e-way bill will have
to be generated.
All these e-way bills
will then also have to be matched with the invoices. In general, it adds a
layer of complexity to the whole process of shipping goods from one state to
another. It adds also to the burden of the GST Network (GSTN), which is already
facing multiple problems in matching invoices.
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