What is GST ?
WHAT
IS GST?
The GST is a Value added Tax (VAT) is proposed to be a comprehensive indirect tax levy on
manufacture, sale and consumption of goods as well as services at the national level. It will replace all
indirect taxes levied on goods and services by the Indian Central and state governments.
The
following are the salient features of the proposed pan-India Goods and Services
Tax regime that was approved by the Lok Sabha by way of an amendment to the
Constitution:
1. GST, or Goods and
Services Tax, will subsume central indirect taxes like excise duty,
countervailing duty and service tax, as also state levies like value added tax,
octroi and entry tax, luxury tax.
2. The final consumer
will bear only the GST charged by the last dealer in the supply chain, with
set-off benefits at all the previous stages.
3. As a measure of support
for the states, petroleum products, alcohol for human consumption and tobacco
have been kept out of the purview of the GST.
4. It will have two
components - Central GST levied by the Centre and State GST levied by the
states.
5. However, only the
Centre may levy and collect GST on supplies in the course of inter-state trade
or commerce. The tax collected would be divided between the Centre and the
states in a manner to be provided by parliament, on the recommendations of the
GST Council.
7. The GST Council is to
consist of the union finance minister as chairman, the union minister of state
of finance and the finance minister of each state.
8. The bill proposes an
additional tax not exceeding 1% on inter-state trade in goods, to be levied and
collected by the Centre to compensate the states for two years, or as
recommended by the GST Council, for losses resulting from implementing the GST.
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