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Bengal

Will do everything to ease GST woes: Mamata

Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Tuesday lashed out at the Centre for destroying the federal structure of the country as the state governments were being forced to follow their (Centre's) policies despite having objections.
The West Bengal Assembly on Tuesday passed the State Goods and Services Tax (SGST) Bill, 2017, even as Banerjee said her party TMC's ideological position on GST would not alter.
"The common people are facing problems and since we (TMC) value democracy the party will stand behind the masses," she said speaking in the Assembly after the passing of the Bill.
"The Centre could have fed many poor people with the money which had gone in the ad spend for creating awareness about GST... The country is now in an acute crisis," she said.
The state had issued an ordinance in June end to facilitate treasury operations by the government from July 1, the date of implementation of the new tax regime across the country.
Banerjee said the government had "no option" but to issue the ordinance on GST as otherwise, the state would not have been able to conduct any treasury operation.
"The state government is sitting before the nozzle of a gun and the central government machinations forced us to do that," she said.
The chief minister said the state government was clearly against the hasty implementation of the new tax regime and had urged the Centre to postpone it by two months. "But we were really hard-pressed and so the ordinance had to be issued."
The government, she said, needed money to pay salaries, make developmental expenditure and others. As the ordinance had a definite lifetime, it had to be ultimately ratified by the Assembly.
She said owing to many objections raised by state finance minister Amit Mitra at the GST Council meetings, taxes on many items of common use had been lowered.
Crediting former finance minister Asim Dasgupta, also the chairman of the empowered committee of finance ministers on GST then, for preparing the initial draft, she, however, decried his midnight presence in the Parliament session when the new tax regime was formally introduced.
She questioned the presence of Dasgupta, who cited personal reasons for being present there, although his party (CPI-M) had boycotted it.
Dasgupta had endorsed it by his presence, she said.
On her party's stand, she said, "Previously we had supported GST as it was portrayed to be uniform across the nation, but the experience is totally different."
The textile sector, medicine shops, small businessmen had been affected by the new tax law, she said, adding that demonetisation and GST were "two big scandals" perpetrated by the BJP-led government at the Centre. Mitra said in the Assembly that even in the last meeting of the GST council on Saturday it was only he who continued fighting and ensured a drop in GST from 18 per cent to 5 per cent in textile, embroidery, stitching and government works contract, etc.
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