The 18 per cent GST on short-term staffing companies — usually an enter price for corporations — will create an anomaly after the current reduce in levies on a number of output items from 18 per cent and 12 per cent to five per cent, Indian Staffing Federation (ISF) President Lohit Bhatia mentioned on Thursday. Flagging the GST inversion, Bhatia urged that the speed be reduce to five per cent, including that ISF has raised the difficulty with the authorities.
In 2024-25, 72 lakh staff have been employed via tripartite contracts with flexi-staffing corporations and shopper corporations throughout sectors, the ISF mentioned in a brand new report. The flexi-staffing trade generated Rs 1.9 lakh crore in income and paid Rs 34,000 crore in GST, in line with the report.
“After GST 2.0, many product classes and industries have seen charges lowered from 18 per cent and 12 per cent to five per cent. We’re a giant enter as a result of we offer them with human capital. Earlier, they’d set off the enter towards the output. Now, their output has a lot decrease GST, however they nonetheless have 18 per cent GST on human capital,” Bhatia mentioned in a media briefing.
Whereas corporations can declare enter tax credit score (ITC) on third-party hiring bills, the speed inversion can pressure money flows and disincentivise corporations from utilizing flexi-staffing companies. “It will create an pointless anomaly, the place as a substitute of producing extra formal jobs, it may push employment again in the direction of casual or gig work, which is a really harmful precedent,” Bhatia mentioned, insisting that offering employment is a “advantage service”.
He mentioned the ISF has raised this subject with the Union Finance Ministry and a few state governments.
Staffing corporations rent staff and deploy them as flexi workers to fulfill shopper wants, sometimes for six to 12 months. They handle salaries and social advantages, whereas the employees are positioned with shopper corporations on fixed-term tripartite contracts.
Tripartite or flexi work is handled as formal employment and makes up 1.3 per cent (72 lakh) of whole employment in India, in contrast with 2.9 per cent in China and Japan and a couple of.7 per cent in France. The ISF initiatives this share would rise to 1.6 per cent by 2026-27.
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Practically 55 per cent of India’s flexi workforce is concentrated in Maharashtra, Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, and Telangana, the ISF report mentioned. Logistics, BFSI, and manufacturing are the highest three sectors for formal contract staffing, collectively accounting for about 38 per cent of the entire workforce, in line with the report.
Of the 57 crore individuals in India’s workforce, 83.5 per cent are in casual employment, 2.2 per cent in gig work, 0.2 per cent are apprentices, and solely 14 per cent in formal employment, the report mentioned.
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