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Finance Ministry Examines Issues In Converting GSTN To Government Company

Centre mulls overhaul of procurement procedures, salary structure as it looks to turn GSTN into a public company.

Top finance ministry officials attending a press conference following the 15th GST Council meeting. (Source: Ministry of Finance)
Top finance ministry officials attending a press conference following the 15th GST Council meeting. (Source: Ministry of Finance)

The finance ministry is examining various issues including overhaul of procurement procedures and the salary structure of employees as part of the proposal to convert Goods and Services Tax Network into a government company.

These two issues, along with other transitional and operational nuances, would be placed before the Union Cabinet for consideration once the GST Council clears the proposal of turning GSTN into a majority or fully-owned government entity, a person familiar with the matter told PTI.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had earlier this month asked Finance Secretary Hasmukh Adhia to “examine the possibility” of converting GSTN into a majority government company or a 100 percent government company. GSTN provides the information technology backbone for the new indirect tax regime.

Currently, five private financial institutions – Housing Development Finance Corporation Ltd., HDFC Bank Ltd., ICICI Bank Ltd., NSE Strategic Investment Corporation Ltd. and LIC Housing Finance Ltd. – hold 51 percent stake in GSTN, which was incorporated on March 28, 2013, in the erstwhile UPA regime. The remaining 49 percent is with the Centre and states.

The current structure of GSTN where financial institutions hold the majority 51 percent stake gives the entity flexibility in quick procurement through tendering process.

However, turning it into a government entity would mean that procurement – that currently occurs on a real-time basis – will have to be in sync with those of PSUs and state-owned companies, a source said.

Another aspect that would come into play could be the salary structure. Currently, the employee remuneration is at par with those in the private sector, but transforming GSTN to a government entity would change that, the person privy to the development added.

These issues are currently being discussed by the officials within the finance ministry, the source said, adding the ministry is hopeful of a seamless transition given that the GST collections have stabilised over the last nine months and businesses are familiar with the systems.

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The government’s stake in GSTN was initially kept at 49 percent and incorporated as a private company to “allow adequate flexibility and freedom” to “ensure timely implementation of the IT infrastructure” prior to GST rollout.

The new indirect tax regime, which subsumed over a dozen local taxes, was rolled out on July 1, 2017. Over one crore businesses are registered on the GSTN portal.

GSTN is a Section 8 company under the new Companies Act and hence is a not-for-profit entity.

The source said that there are no hindrances from the private shareholders in selling their stake to the government because GSTN does not give dividend.

The finance ministry is in favour of making GSTN a wholly-owned company with 100 per cent share holding, but a final call would be taken by the GST Council, headed by Jaitley and comprising state counterparts, in its next meeting.

After GST Council's clearance, the proposal will go to the Union Cabinet.

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