Published & Updated as on - 2010-03-04
Says
construction attracts service tax only on 33 per cent of the value.
The government today said the net impact of the
service tax on real estate construction would be only 3.3 per cent, since
construction attracts service tax only on 33 per cent of the value.
The government had last week clarified through
the Budget that transactions such as leasing vacant land and commercial spaces,
payment made to developers before the grant of completion certificate and imposing
preferred location charges, among others, would come under the service tax net.
Developers said the proposal could push home
prices up by 10 per cent in Tier-II and Tier-III towns and 0.5-4 per cent in
big cities such as Mumbai and Delhi which have higher land prices. However, a
senior finance ministry official here said the net impact of the service tax
would be only 3.3 per cent, since there is an abatement of 67 per cent.
“There is a false impression being created that
prices will go up by 10 per cent but the fact is that 10 per cent service tax
is levied only on 33 per cent of the value,” said the official.
The budgetary clarification has been issued with
retrospective effect from 2007, when real estate transactions were brought
under service tax. Abatement scheme, under notification number 1/2006 dated
March 1, 2006, says that the contractor is entitled to claim abatement to the
extent of 67 per cent of the value of services rendered by him. In effect, the
contractor would have to pay service tax only on 33 per cent of the value.
Stung by new service tax proposals on property
transactions, real estate bodies such as the Confederation of Real Estate
Developers Associations of India and Maharashtra Chamber of Housing and
Industry plan to approach the finance ministry to seek rollback of some
proposals.
Developers have already increased prices by
15-20 per cent in the last nine months as demand for homes picked up. This
resulted in demand tapering in January and February.
Source:
Business Standard 4/3/10
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