A
whopping Rs 50-100 crore Goods and Service Tax (GST) burden stares at the
Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD) which manages the world’s richest temple
of Lord Venkateswara at Tirumala. This is thanks to the flagship tax reform
regime of the Modi government – GST – that rolls out from 1 July.
The
ancient Vaishnavite shrine has all along been exempted from sales tax, wealth
tax and income tax besides VAT by the Centre and state governments in the past
and the current mandatory slapping of GST on temples is annoying a lot of
people. “The ruling BJP and NDA spent thousands of crores on cleaning river
Ganga and building Ram temple at Ayodhya but is slapping such a huge burden on
Hindu devotees,” said C Rangarajan, president of Telangana Archaka Samakhya, an
association of priests.
There
are 3,000 temples in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, of which over 70 percent
will come under the tax net of Rs 20 lakhs annual revenue. So far, most temples
enjoyed exemption from VAT, by the respective state governments. This power has
been withdrawn thanks to the GST regime and made it mandatory for these temples
to be taxed. There has been a wave of protests and outbursts from pious and
devout Hindus in the recent past over this.
According
to unofficial sources, the pilgrimage and temple visits by the devout
throughout the year brought additional revenue of 12 percent in the form of
spending on transport and hospitality industry to the state exchequer.
The temple of Lord Venkateswara at Tirumala managed by the TTD
will be worst hit. It has a footfall of almost one lakh devotees per day and a
Hundi collection of Rs 2-3 crore daily. GST will now onwards be slapped on
rest-houses and services including arjita sevas and special
darshan tickets.
In April this year, the TTD declared that it earned Rs 1,038
crore through cash offerings from devotees in 2016-17. During the last
financial year, over 2.68 crore devotees visited the shrine and a total of
10.46 crore laddus were sold. The TTD has approved a Rs 2,858 crore
annual budget for 2017-18 without any allocation towards tax payments. “We
spend most of our receipts from sale of laddu prasadam, rest
houses, tonsuring and others for welfare of devotees and also on our
educational, medical services and on Sanatana Hindu Dharma Pracharam,” said
Executive Officer, Ashok Singhal defending the demand for waiver of GST for
Tirumala.
AFP
However, GST has been exempted on prasadams (what
temples offered as takeaway) following representations from Andhra Pradesh and
Uttar Pradesh governments, which is a major saving grace for TTD. Obviously the
revenue from sale of famous laddu prasadam of Tirumala would
be exempted from GST but the TTD will pay GST on all raw materials it purchases
for preparation of the laddus.
Earlier this year TTD Joint Executive Officer KS Srinivasa Raju,
in his representation for GST exemption said TTD provided free meals to tens of
thousands of devotees every day under its Nitya Annadanam scheme
and leases out its cottages and rest houses to the devout at nominal rent on
day-to-day basis. “If GST is slapped on the annadanam and also
accommodation, it will be a huge burden on the devotees. Till date the TTD has
not paid any sales tax and it has no dealer registration either,” he told the
Centre.
Unlike
exemptions granted by the state and Centre in the VAT, GST on all goods and
services is made mandatory even for charitable and religious institutions.
Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has declared its imposition as
non-negotiable. He also reiterated in a series of discussions with state
representatives including ministers, officials and MPs from the Telugu-speaking
states, that unlike in the case of VAT, state governments have no say in
implementation of GST and that they have no powers to exempt GST in their
jurisdiction.
“The Centre has made GST collection mandatory even on temple
revenues - sale of services like sevas, prasadam and
accommodation. Our appeal that the TTD should be exempted from GST has been
rejected by the Union Minister,” said Andhra Pradesh Finance Minister Yanamala
Ramakrishnudu who raised the first protest at last month’s meeting on GST at
Delhi.
He has written to Arun Jaitley to consider reducing the GST
rates on 10 goods and services including agarbattis (incense
sticks) and cashewnuts. Ironically, the Andhra Pradesh Endowment Minister
Manikyala Rao, a BJP nominee in the Chandrababu Naidu government is silent on
the issue. But VHP, RSS and other Archaka forums in AP are up in arms and blame
the Centre for ignorance of temple administration. “Probably NDA government is
unaware of the fact that the majority of temples in south are managed by the
endowment department and not private trusts as it is in North India,” said A
Atreya Babu, president of the Andhra Pradesh Archaka Samakhya.
The
situation is the same in Telangana where Bhadrachalam – the land of Lord Rama’s
stay in Dandakaranya - is a main temple attraction. The Yadadri temple town
near Hyderabad is now promoted by Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao
on par with Tirumala and very recently ticket system, queues and cottages were
organised. “The GST on temples is unjustified and a conspiracy of the Centre to
rob the state’s resources,” said Telangana Endowment Minister A Indrakaran
Reddy.
Reddy said temples were a state subject and the state government
subsidised maintenance of popular temples under the Dhoopa-Deepam program
for conduction of rituals. He plans to take up a protest against the Centre as
GST on temples hindered the development of temples in the state. “The
government should not stand between God and devotees,” he told FirstPost contending
that taxing services in temples was a violation of freedom of religious
expression.
Dr C Rangarajan, custodian of the temple of Lord Venkateswara at
Chilkur on the outskirts of Hyderabad, popular as ‘Visa temple’, questions as
to why the custodians of Hindu religion and temples like peethadhipathis
and trustees of religious institutions were not consulted before imposing GST
on temple revenues. “We should take the protest campaign on social media as
well and involve the Members of Parliament (MPs) from south India,” he said.
TTD on service tax
TTD had
challenged the provisions of the Finance Act, 1994 in February 2014 in the
Supreme Court stating that service tax is violation of Constitution Articles 26
(freedom to manage religious affairs), 27 (freedom as to payment of taxes for
promotion of any particular religion), and 14 (right to equality).
TTD had
earlier challenged the imposition of service tax on the accommodation service
provided by it, but the Andhra Pradesh High Court dismissed the writ petition
in 2012. Later the TTD had changed the title of guest houses into ‘rest houses’
and escaped payment of service tax. The TTD operated nearly 7,000 rooms
including 5000 at Tirumala.
In the case of laddu prasadam VAT, the court
had approached Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (CESTAT)
which held that the prasadam is the blessings of a deity which
has a great religious significance and hence it cannot be made eligible for
taxation.
The mandarins at TTD are already worked up over rising costs and
deficit accounting in spite of increasing revenues from sale of tonsured hair
and other accounts. While the TTD spent a whopping Rs 350 crore towards
procurement of ingredients for preparing the famous laddu, the
income earned by way of its sales is a paltry Rs 165 crore. They are worried
that the drain of Rs 185 crore on the exchequer is likely to widen during the
ensuing financial year with no let-up in the soaring prices of essentials and
now the GST.
Slashing of interest rates from 5.5 percent to 4.25 percent by
the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on fixed deposits of Rs 10 crore and above
during November 2016 severely impacted the prospects of the income of the TTD,
which has staggering deposits worth about Rs 10,500 crore with various
nationalised banks. Its gold accounts have also nosedived with the recent gold
policy of the Modi government and TTD was more or less pressurised to deposit
its gold (daily 2 kgs of gold collected in its hundis) in the
scheme.
Pilgrims
now anticipate a minimum 20-30 percent hike in the cost of their trips.
Endowment officials say that the pilgrim rush to other religious centers at
Vijayawada, Simhachalam and Srisailam in Andhra Pradesh and Bhadrachalam and
Yadadri would go down drastically with the GST regime. “For Andhra Pradesh and
Telangana, religious tourism is a major revenue earner and the GST will foil
it. 80 percent of Andhra Pradesh’s tourist revenue is from Tirupati only and
such GST on temple revenues will have cascading impact on temple tourism,” said
Venkatachari, a retired Endownent Department official of Andhra Pradesh.
Source : FirstpostLearn more on GST with GST EXPLAINED. Follow us on FB here
GST impact: Tirupati temple faces Rs 100 cr tax burden
Reviewed by Author
on
June 20, 2017
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