New Delhi, December 25: Punjab Finance Minister Manpreet Singh Badal Tuesday alleged that the slashing of GST rates on a host of items was a "patchwork" for the "ill-prepared" introduction of the tax. He demanded that petrol and electricity be also brought under the ambit of the Goods and Services Tax (GST). The GST council at its 31st meeting on Wednesday slashed tax rates for 23 commonly-used items. The rates have been reduced from 18 per cent to 12 and 5 per cent respectively.

"Reducing the taxes is just a patchwork for the ill-prepared introduction of GST as there was no conceptual clarity in the first place. This meeting was just a patchwork. "India is the 161st country to introduce a GST-like arrangement, our concern is if we had to copy, it should have been done with clear concepts," Congress leader Badal told reporters here. At GST Council Meet, Big Rejig in Tax Rates: From Movie Tickets to Computers and TVs – Check Full List of Items Turning Cheaper.

Congress president Rahul Gandhi has always called the GST a "Gabbar Singh Tax". The GST was hastily implemented without any preparation, he said. "The concepts were not clear, stakeholders were not consulted and there was no technological preparedness. We have been demanding that filing of GST returns be simplified, and petroleum and electricity be brought under its ambit," the Punjab finance minister said. Film Tickets to Get Cheaper From January 1, GST Rate Reduced From 28% to 18%.

"If GST is about having 'one nation, one tax', such a big sector of the economy cannot be exempted," he said. Badal said the BJP slashed the GST rates "out of panic" and that if elected to power, the Congress will implement a new simplified version of the GST, as its current version is "flawed".

He also said that decisions should be taken for the long-term good of the country and not out of political considerations. While the government has claimed that the fresh rate rationalisation is an attempt to streamline GST and make it more people-friendly, the Congress and other opposition parties have objected to rate cut citing revenue consideration.