The States have got more revenue than earlier following the GST rollout, says Sitharaman [View in browser]( [See all newsletters]( 23 September 2024 GST Council discussing compensation cess, rate rationalisation: FM [Nirmala Sitharaman, Finance Minister, at an interaction with The Hindu Group of journalists, in Chennai ] The GST Council is discussing is seriously discussing rationalisation, going through GST rates âitem by itemâ, the Union Finance Minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, said in an interaction with the journalists of The Hindu group of publications, on Saturday. Discussions have been going on in the GST Council on questions such as whether there should be four rates (5, 12, 18 and 28 per cent) and which items should attract what rate. - Also read: [Despite legal clarity, bringing online money gaming entities under tax net remains an uphill task: DGGI]( GST compensation Answering a question on GST compensation and the compensation cess, the Finance Minister categorically said that continuing to give GST compensation to States was out of the question. Whether the compensation cess (which is to end in March 2026) would continue or not or if it would continue, and in what form, is currently being discussed by the GST Council. Sitharaman said the States were better off after GST as they got more revenue than before. She noted that the revenue of Tamil Nadu, for example, never grew more than 6.5 per cent before 2017. Taking that as the baseline for calculating the Stateâs tax revenues, assuming GST had not been there and comparing it with what the State got after GST, she said the State was better off by â¹1 lakh crore. On the government continuing to levy a cess (even after the compensation ceased), she said that levying a cess to raise revenue was âconstitutionally legitimateâ. On disaster relief Responding to a question on the Central government not giving enough money for disaster relief â a strong complaint of the Tamil Nadu government â she said allocations made out of the National Disaster Relief Fund are governed by norms set by the Finance Commission, and the Central government could neither favour nor deny any State. She said that funds were always given to all States as per the standard operating procedure. She also wondered why even after the Central government organised a loan of â¹9,000 crore for drainage projects in Chennai, the city suffered during the Michaung hurricane. Sitharaman also vehemently disagreed that the government of India was not releasing funds for the second phase of Chennai Metro, stressing that the State had, in 2018, taken a conscious decision to make it a state sector project, where the Centreâs role was only to arrange international loans. She said the Centre had indeed arranged for â¹32,000 crore of loans from international development agencies. On a question about holding the Census, the Finance Minister said that because of the Covid pandemic and the elections, it could not be done earlier. But it would be done soon, as announced. She stressed that nobody, including the government of India, was against the Census being conducted. You Might Also Like [Modi-Biden meet pushes defence industrial partnership]( [Economy]( [Modi-Biden meet pushes defence industrial partnership]( [MFIs may grapple with muted growth, higher stress in FY25]( [Money & Banking]( [MFIs may grapple with muted growth, higher stress in FY25]( [PSUs line up to list their green ventures on exchanges]( [Companies]( [PSUs line up to list their green ventures on exchanges]( [Air India takes on competition with new products, improved service]( [Logistics]( [Air India takes on competition with new products, improved service]( Stay informed Subscribe to businessline to stay up-to-date with in-depth business news from India [arrow]( Copyright @ 2024, THG PUBLISHING PVT LTD. If you are facing any trouble in viewing this newsletter, please try [here]( Manage your newsletter subscription preferences [here]( If you do not wish to receive such emails go [here](