Removal of Inverted Tax Structure on MMF Textiles

Value chain and uniformity of rates bring relief to the Textiles sector.

A Uniform rate of 12% for the entire value chain of the MMF textiles sector will reduce the compliance burden of the industry players. MMF textiles sector will be benefited and will save a lot of working capital. It will provide clarity to the industry and settle, once and for all, the issues caused by the inverted tax structure

The Government has notified uniform goods and services tax rate at 12 % on MMF, MMF yarn, MMF fabrics and apparel that has addressed the inverted tax structure in the MMF textile value chain. The changed rates will come into effect from 1st January 2022. This will help the MMF segment grow and emerge as a big job provider in the country.

The Textiles & Apparel (T&A) industry was having long-pending (first under sales tax then, under VAT and finally under GST regime) demand for removal of inverted tax structure on manmade fibre (MMF) value chain. The GST on MMF, MMF Yarn and MMF Fabrics were 18%, 12% and 5% respectively. The taxation of inputs at higher rates than finished products created a build-up of credits and cascading costs. It further led to the accumulation of taxes at various stages of the MMF value chain and the blockage of crucial working capital for the industry.

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Though there is a provision in GST law to claim the unutilised Input Tax Credit (ITC) as a refund, there were other complications and resulted in more compliance burden. The inverted tax structure caused an effective increase in the rate of taxation of the sector. The world textiles trade has been moving towards MMF but India was not able to take advantage of the trend as its MMF segment was throttled by an inverted tax regime.

This 12% uniform GST rate is likely to contribute positively to the growth of the sector in the following ways:

i) The uniform rate of 12% for the entire value chain of the MMF textiles sector will be benefiting and save a lot of working capital. It will reduce the compliance burden of the industry players. This is a welcome step by the Government with no inversion.

ii) The uniformity of GST rates will be helpful to resolve the ITC residues that accumulated due to the inverted tax structure earlier.

iii) The uniformity in the GST rates shall be 12% GST on job work related to dying and printing services will benefit the industry to absorb and recover unutilised ITC.

iv)The significant portion of MMF products (output) is expected to be exported, it will lend a better scope for encashing the unutilised ITC. Also since tax on input will get refunded, on output (export) which will be zero-rated, it would not add to cost and make exports competitive.

v) Uniform 12% GST will help the industry having a huge portion of piled up opening ITC by enabling them to encash the same progressively.

Differential rates for garments create problems in compliance with the tax regime. MMF garments cannot be identified easily and cannot be taxed differently, hence there is a need for a uniform rate. 

Uniform rate makes it simple and since there is so much high potential of value addition in the garment segment that the increase in rate is likely to be absorbed in value addition. It will provide clarity to the industry and settle, once and for all, the issues caused by the inverted tax structure.