Say business suffering due to 12 to 18 per cent tax on articles
Kuldeep Chauhan
Tribune News Service
Shimla, February 13
Thousands of artisans, including weavers and traditional handicraft makers, are opposing the high rate of GST on their products which is imposed by the Ministry of Textiles. The GST had made these products out of reach from the common man, they said.
The GST, ranging from 12 per cent on wool to 18 per cent on metallic crafts, had dented their sales and made handmade products expensive for the public, artisans told The Tribune.
The artisans in the unorganised sector, who come from remote areas of the state, are getting a platform during exhibitions in cities by government-run corporations. But the consumers have to pay higher for their products due to a high rate of GST, which, in turn, impacts the sale of products adversely.
“It takes four days of regular work to make a ‘dungra’, a handmade brass weapon and a musical instrument used by locals, but we have to pay a GST of 18 per cent to the government, which is not justified,” said Beli Ram, an artisan from the Kupvi area of Chopal.
“These handmade products are also used traditionally in temples of local Gods and Goddesses and individually by ‘Panshi’ and ‘Shathi’ Rajputs of the Shimla and Simaur districts as a mark of their chivalry in the traditional sport of ‘Thotha’, while dungra is used for dancing the field,” he said.
“The cost of ‘dungra’ is Rs 5,000, but we have to pay GST which makes it unprofitable for us,” he said.
Weavers who eke out their living from handlooms and handicrafts narrated the same story. “If we sell woolen products of more than Rs 1,000 value, we have to pay a GST of 12 per cent, which is wrong. The government charges less GST on machine-made stuff,” said Kewlu Ram, a weaver from Gahar, Kullu.
Officials of state-run handloom, handicraft and wool federations blamed the Ministry of Textile for the high GST. “We have written to the ministry about the high rate of GST, but to no avail,” said a senior manager who is the in charge of sales exhibitions in the state.
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