Monday, 12 June 2017


Goods and Services Tax (India)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Goods and Services Tax (GST) is an indirect tax throughout India to replace taxes levied by the central and state governments. It was introduced as The Constitution (One Hundred and Twenty Second Amendment) Act 2017, following the passage of Constitution 122nd Amendment Bill. The GST is governed by GST Council and its Chairman is Union Finance Minister of India - Arun Jaitley.


GST is expected to be come and applicable from 1 July 2017.[1]

Contents [hide]

1History
2Effects
3Legislation
4GSTN
5References
6External links

History[edit]






Tax Regime in India


The reform process in indirect tax regime of India was started in 1986 by Vishwanath Pratap Singh by introduction of Modified Value Added Tax (MODVAT).[2]


Goods and services tax (GST) will subsume various indirect taxes including central excise duty, services tax, additional customs duty, surcharges, state-level value added tax and Octroi.[3][4] Other levies which are currently applicable on inter-state transportation of goods are also likely to be done away with in GST regime.[5][1]


The following taxes will be bound together by the GST:
Central Excise Duty
Service Tax
Commercial Tax
Value Added Tax (VAT)
Food Tax
Central Sales Tax (CST)
Octroi
Entertainment Tax
Entry Tax
Purchase Tax
Luxury Tax
Advertisement taxes
Taxes applicable on lotteries[6]


GST is levied on all transactions such as sale, transfer, purchase, barter, lease, or import of goods and/or services. India will adopt a dual GST model, meaning that taxation is administered by both the Union and State Governments. Transactions made within a single state will be levied with Central GST (CGST) by the Central Government and State GST (SGST) by the government of that state. For inter-state transactions and imported goods or services, an Integrated GST (IGST) is levied by the Central Government. GST is a consumption based tax, therefore, taxes are paid to the state which the goods or services are consumed not the state in which they were produced. IGST complicates tax collection for State Governments by disabling them to collect the tax owed to them directly from the Central Government. Under the previous system, a state would have to only deal with a single government in order to collect tax revenue.[6]
Effects[edit]

The tax rate under GST may be nominal or zero rated for the time its charged. It has been proposed to insulate the revenues of the States from the impact of GST, with the expectation that in due course, GST will be levied on petroleum and petroleum products. The central government has assured states of compensation for any revenue losses incurred by them from the date of introduction of GST for a period of five years.[7]
Legislation[edit]

The goods and services tax (GST) council chaired by finance minister Arun Jaitley has urged states to approve state GST laws by the end of May to smoothen the roll-out of the historic tax reform by its target date of 1 July.[8] As India is a federal republic, GST would be implemented concurrently by the central governments.[9] A 21-member select committee was formed to look into the proposed GST law.[10] Section 9 is the charging section for CGST (Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017), which gives power to central government to levy tax on intra state taxable supply. [11] There will be no GST on the sale and purchase of securities. That will continue to be governed by Securities Transaction Tax (STT).[12]
GSTN[edit]


Goods and Services Tax Network (GSTN) is a nonprofit organization formed to create a platform for all the concerned parties i.e. stakeholders, government, taxpayers to collaborate on a single portal. The portal will be accessible to the central government which will track down every transaction on its end while the taxpayers will be having a vast service to return file their taxes and maintain the details. The IT network will be developed by private firms which are being in tie up with the central government and will be having stakes accordingly. The known authorized capital of GSTN is ₹10 crore (US$1.6 million) in which Central Government holds 24.5 percent of shares while the state government holds 24.5 percent and rest with private banking firms.[13]

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