GST gains: Prices of flats may
drop by up to 5%,After
allowing for credit for taxes paid on inputs such as cement, steel, paints and
other items, the actual burden will be lower
Housing price are likely to fall by up to 5%
following the implementation of goods and services tax (GST) after the Centre and
states decided to peg the levy at 12% on finished houses or apartments.
After allowing for credit for taxes paid on inputs
such as cement, steel, paints and other items, the actual burden will be lower.
As a result, the price of a Rs 1-crore apartment may come down by Rs 3-5 lakh,
said a consultant.
The net price of houses in the affordable segment,
which cost up to Rs 30 lakh (at Rs 3,500 per sq ft of built-up area) should
fall by 5%. Once GST kicks in, home buyers will not have to pay the 4.5%
service tax on the final price that they shell out while taking possession.
As a result, tax consultants and realtors said that fixing the GST rate at 12% was a customer-friendly move and would lead to either lower tax liability or be tax neutral.
For a premium product, however, Credai chairman and CMD of ATS Infrastructure Geetambar Anand said that at 12% GST, customers will benefit from projects that cost up to Rs 6,000 per sq ft.
As a result, tax consultants and realtors said that fixing the GST rate at 12% was a customer-friendly move and would lead to either lower tax liability or be tax neutral.
For a premium product, however, Credai chairman and CMD of ATS Infrastructure Geetambar Anand said that at 12% GST, customers will benefit from projects that cost up to Rs 6,000 per sq ft.
A premium project may not gain significantly as
developers build high margins into such properties. Manoj Gaur, Credai
vicepresident and MD of Gaursons, said that if input credits are allowed
properly, the 12% GST rate is favourable to buyers.
Suresh N Rohira, partner, Grant Thornton India,
said that GST at 12% would certainly bring down the tax liability in the
affordable segment. He said that the taxes on inputs for construction are more
than 12% of the final price.
But if a developer is working with a high margin,
which is the case in premium project, the net tax will remain significant.
Priyajit Ghosh, partner – indirect tax, KPMG India, said that under the GST
regime, 12% GST on construction sector would make the sector better off.
Because of input credit, the net tax on finished product would have a downward
pressure.
According to a Crisil report, at present, a
developer pays excise tax and VAT on inputs like cement and steel at 27.7% and
18.1% respectively, which vary from state to state. Now, cement and steel will
be taxed at 28% and 18% respectively under GST.
Similarly, other inputs like paints and white goods
are going to be taxed at 28%. But the final product that is a housing unit will
be taxed at 12%, with the allowance of credit against taxes paid on inputs. But
as 12% tax will be levied on entire cost including the land, the amount will be
sufficient enough to provide for the input credit, said Ghosh.
He said that 12% tax rate is favourable to the
industry. For normal houses (up to Rs 6,000 per sq ft), 12% GST on a finished
house or an apartment will be effectively reduced to near zero as the developer will take the
credit for taxes he paid on inputs. At the same time, the buyer will not have
to pay the service tax4.5% of the price of the house. This will reduce the cost
of acquisition of the house. In some cases, even input credit could be more
than the GST levied on the finished product, but a developer can claim a
maximum credit to the extent of the GST he would be paying on the finished product.
Take a simple example: A developer is completing a housing project where the work has been awarded to a contractor. The cost of construction is around Rs 2,000 per sq ft, the going rate in the market for average quality. The contractor will collect a tax at 18% on the amount at which he is completing the work. In this case, he will collect a tax of Rs 360 on Rs 2,000 per sq ft from the developer. If the developer sells the house at Rs 3,000 per sq ft built-up area, which is the going rate for the affordable segment housing, he will pay a tax at 12 % on the final cost. In this case, it will be also Rs 360 per sq feet.
Therefore, his fresh tax liability would be nil. If
other expenses and tax paid thereon is included, the developer could have
claimed more. But under GST, he can claim only up to the fresh tax liability.
But the service tax that a buyer pays so far at the rate of 4.5% will not be
levied now. So the next cost for buyers of not-so-premium houses will decline.
But if the product is in the premium segment, the entire input tax credit is
not sufficient to bring down the fresh tax liability to nil.
A premium
construction can be done at Rs 5,000 per sq ft. The net tax collected by works
contractor would be Rs 900 per sq ft from the developer. But while selling at
Rs 10,000 per sq ft, the developer needs to pay Rs 1,200 per sq ft. Therefore,
after adjusting against the taxes on input, he will have to pay Rs 300 per sq
ft or 3%, which he will recover from the customer. But as the developer will
also pay taxes on other expenditures, the net tax liability at 12% GST on
finished product would be very small.
Source: ET Realty
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