GST Council approves 28% tax on online gaming; unconstitutional, irrational, says Gaming Federation

Update: 2023-07-12 10:21 GMT
Representative Photo | Photo: iStock

The GST Council on Tuesday (July 11) decided to levy the maximum 28 per cent tax on the full face value of bets in online gaming, casinos, and horse racing, lowered tax on food and beverages sold in multiplexes, and tweaked the definition of utility vehicles for the levy.

The panel also exempted GST (Goods and Services Tax) on import of cancer drug Dinutuximab, medicines used to treat rare diseases, and food used in Food for Special Medical Purposes (FSMP), besides satellite launch services provided by private operators.

Food and beverages consumed in cinema halls will attract a GST of 5 per cent, equivalent to the levy charged in hotels and restaurants, instead of 18 per cent which in many cases the cinema halls were charging.

Also read: Online gaming: Centre must tighten norms while states must find a balance

The definition of utility vehicles has been tweaked for the purpose of levy of a 22 per cent cess over and above the 28 per cent GST rate. The cess will be imposed on any utility vehicles of 1,500 cc and above engine capacity, length of 4 metres and above, and un-laden ground clearance of 170 mm.

This definition will, however, not cover sedans.

Max tax on online gaming, casinos not intended to kill the industry: FM

Giving details of the decisions taken at the 50th Council meeting, Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said the decision to levy maximum tax on online gaming and casinos was not intended to kill the industry but considering the “moral question” that it cannot be taxed at par with essential commodities.

“We are purely looking at that what is being taxed because it creates value, profit is being made… based on the wager people win. Today’s decision looks at what is to be taxed and what not,” Sitharaman said, adding that the IT ministry is looking at the regulatory aspect of online gaming, while the GST Council has taken a decision solely for tax purpose.

The tax on online gaming companies would be imposed without making any differentiation based on whether the games required skill or were based on chance.

Also read: New online gaming rules will help industry compete globally, curb betting, say players

Officials said the decision was taken to discourage young people from getting addicted to online gaming. Some state ministers raised concerns over how this addiction had become a menace.

Explaining the rationale for 28 per cent tax on online gaming and casinos, Sitharaman said it was impractical to meet the industry demand for levy of tax on platform fees as it was impossible for tax authorities to go after every player and find where all the bets have been placed.

“It is impossible to pierce the veil of opacity,” she said, adding that every state was in agreement that online gaming and betting should be taxed at the highest rate on the full face value.

On legal challenges mounted by some gaming companies against the levy of 28 per cent tax on full value, Revenue Secretary Sanjay Malhotra said the government would continue to fight those cases in the courts.

“28 per cent tax was always the case in online gaming. Today’s decision is only to clarify it and put an end to this debate,” he said.

Also read: ED raids foreign-registered online gaming portals; says Rs 4,000 cr funds sent abroad illegally

An amendment to the GST law to define online gaming, horse racing, and casinos as actionable claim, like lottery and gambling, is likely in the ensuing monsoon session of Parliament.

A group of ministers (GoM) on taxation of online gaming, casinos, and horse racing on whether to impose a 28 per cent GST on the face value of bets, or gross gaming revenue (platform fees) had submitted its report to the government in December last year.

Issue of GSTN sharing info with ED clarified

To a question, Sitharaman said AAP-ruled Delhi and Punjab raised the issue of the Enforcement Directorate sharing information with GST Network (GSTN).

“It was also clarified that this notification will empower our tax authorities with more information. The GSTN is the recipient of information. There were doubts that GSTN will start sharing information about private businesses with other law enforcement agencies, like ED. It was clarified that Director FIU will provide information to tax authorities wherever they feel there is any chance of tax evasion or money laundering. This information can be used by tax authorities,” Malhotra said.

Also read: Right on intention, poor on scoping: Industry body IAMAI on online gaming draft rules

The Council also approved the appointment and condition of services rules for setting up of dispute resolution appellate tribunals in all states. About 50 tribunals will be set up across the country and will start working in the next 4-6 months.

Unconstitutional, irrational, egregious: Gaming Federation

Commenting on the Council’s decision on online gaming, the All India Gaming Federation (AIGF), which represents companies like Nazara, GamesKraft, Zupee, Winzo, etc., said that the decision by the GST Council is “unconstitutional, irrational, and egregious”.

“The decision ignores over 60 years of settled legal jurisprudence and lumps online skill gaming with gambling activities. This decision will wipe out the entire Indian gaming industry and lead to lakhs of job losses, and the only people benefitting from this will be anti-national illegal offshore platforms,” said Roland Landers, CEO of AIGF.

(With agency inputs)

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