GST a Congress Bill, party's negativism hurting economy: Arun Jaitley

The government needs Parliament to approve the Constitution Amendment Bill

Update: 2015-08-02 14:53 GMT
Minister of Finance Arun Jaitley

New Delhi: Racing against time to get the GST bill cleared from Parliament, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley attacked the Congress for blocking the legislation that it had itself brought in and said 'obstructionist' tendencies  and negativism were hurting the country and its economy. 

Acknowledging that there may be merit in Congress' demand for 18 per cent rate of GST, he said the NDA government  has "not made any significant modifications" to the bill that  the Congress-led UPA government had proposed in 2006-07  Budget, "except to bring a consensus between manufacturing and  the consuming states".  "The state governments belonging to the Congress party have consistently supported the proposal. Is it only out of an  obstructionist attitude that the Congress has adopted a  negative role?" he asked. 

The government needs Parliament to approve the Constitution Amendment Bill in the current monsoon session  ending August 13 before half of the 30 states clear it and the  new regime is rolled out from April 1, 2016, so that a  nationwide Goods and Services Tax (GST) can replace all  existing indirect taxes like excise and VAT. However, Parliament proceedings have been repeatedly getting disrupted over issues like Lalit Modi controversy and  the Vyapam scam for the past two weeks. 

"Since Parliament is not functioning and there is no way  to clarify these points before the same, I am constrained to  place the above facts in public domain," Jaitley wrote in a  Facebook post titled 'Dissent or Disruption ? The Congress  Party’s Position on GST'.  He said the Congress and its leader "may be upset with  the government for political reasons. They may be upset with the electorate for the 2014 verdict". 

"The Congress party should accept and seriously  introspect after having ruled the country for the longest  period of time, that negativism hurts the country. Should its  obstructionist tendencies inflict an economic injury on the  country?" he wrote.          

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