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regular-article-logo Friday, 10 January 2025

Rationalise GST slabs, provide relief to middle class, lower income groups: Congress leader Sachin Pilot

Pilot demands slabs be rationalised instead of giving tax breaks to a select few and burdening 80% of the country's population

PTI Published 09.01.25, 06:54 PM
Sachin Pilot.

Sachin Pilot. PTI picture.

Ahead of the Union Budget, Congress general secretary Sachin Pilot on Thursday demanded that the Centre rationalise goods and services tax (GST) slabs and provide relief to the middle class and lower income groups.

Addressing a press conference here, the former Union minister said the BJP-led NDA government should unveil GST 2.0 in the budget for fiscal year 2025-26 to be presented in Parliament on February 1.

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GST, a single tax on the supply of goods and services levied on every value addition, came into force on July 1, 2017, when the BJP was in power at the Centre. After subsuming majority indirect taxes, GST became a single domestic indirect tax law for the entire country.

''GST, when it was conceived by the (Congress-led) UPA, was supposed to widen the tax bracket, but it has ended up increasing income of a few persons and providing no relief to the middle class and lower income groups,'' Pilot noted.

Only 5 per cent people in the country pay income tax, while the rest of the population pays GST which burdens the middle class and professionals, the Congress leader emphasised.

The BJP opposed GST, Aadhaar project and DBT (Direct Benefit Transfer) when they were conceived during the UPA rule, but supported them after coming to power, he said.

The saffron party also opposed FDI in retail and defence when in opposition, but became a strong promotor of the measure on assuming office, Pilot maintained.

He insisted the BJP government brought a "flawed" GST system and demanded that slabs be rationalised instead of giving tax breaks to a select few and burdening 80 per cent of the country's population.

Pilot said GST is a consumer-based levy and the Congress was against lopsided approach to tax collection.

The former Rajasthan deputy CM asserted the Congress was pro-industry and in favour of investment, but was against discriminatory disposal of resources.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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