A crucial meeting of the GST Council on Monday failed to reach a consensus on ways to compensate states as the panel was split on political lines over using borrowing as a tool.
Briefing reporters after a marathon meeting of the panel, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said 21 states had opted for one of the two options the Centre had previously suggested for borrowing to meet the shortfall in GST collections.
But some states did not opt for any of the two options, and the Council decided for more deliberations, she said, adding the panel will meet again on October 12.
She said the panel decided to extend using GST cess collections to compensate states beyond previously agreed June 2022 timeframe.
The panel besides easing compliance burden of small taxpayers also exempted satellite launch services by ISRO and Antrix, Finance Secretary Ajay Bhushan Pandey said.
Photograph: PTI Photo
GST payout: Why Centre is avoiding a vote
GST needs a political fix, not a legal one
SC seeks Kamath recommendations on interest waiver
'Secret' process on to extradite Mallya: Govt to SC