Ijm - 08!04!002 GST Article
Ijm - 08!04!002 GST Article
Ijm - 08!04!002 GST Article
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Dr. R B Krishna and Anand Kumar Jaiswal
1. INTRODUCTION
“No power on earth can stop an idea whose time has come”, the Finance Minister Shri
Manmohan Singh had quoted Victor Hugo while presenting the historic Union Budget on 24th
July 1991. One such ideal that was translated into action on 1st July 2017 was Goods and
Services Tax (GST).
India witnessed the single biggest tax reform in its history, when at the stroke of midnight
of 30th June 2017, the Government of India launched the Goods & Services Tax (GST) at the
Central Hall of Parliament.
Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi coined a new acronym for GST - ‘Good & Simple Tax’
while calling it a shining example of co-operative federalism. President Shri Pranab Mukherjee
termed GST a 'disruptive tax' and called upon the Central and States Governments to continue
to make improvements to GST law.
GST, stands for Goods and Services Tax, will be levied on the supply of goods or services
or both in India. GST will subsume a number of existing indirect taxes being levied by the
Centre and State Governments including Central Excise duty, Service Tax, VAT, Purchase Tax,
Central Sales Tax, Entry Tax, Local Body Taxes, Octroi, Luxury Tax, etc.
The taxable event in GST is supply of goods or services or both. Various taxable events like
manufacture, sale, rendering of service, purchase, entry into a territory of State etc. have been
done away with in favour of just one event i.e. supply.
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Mother of All Tax Reforms: India’s Goods and Services Tax 2017
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Mother of All Tax Reforms: India’s Goods and Services Tax 2017
g) Service Tax;
h) Cesses and surcharges insofar as they relate to supply of goods or services.
(v)State taxes that would be subsumed within the GST are:
a) State VAT;
c) Purchase Tax;
d) Luxury Tax;
g) Taxes on advertisements;
i) State cesses and surcharges insofar as they relate to supply of goods or services.
(vi) A “Dual GST” model has been adopted in view of the federal structure of our country.
Centre and States will simultaneously levy GST on every supply of goods or services or both
which, takes place within a State or Union Territory. Thus, there shall be two components of
GST: (i) Central tax (CGST) (Levied & collected under the authority of CGST Act, 2017 passed
by the Parliament) (ii) State tax (SGST) (Levied & collected under the authority of SGST Act,
2017 passed by respective States)
(vii) Goods and Services Tax Network (GSTN): It is Technology platform for GST. This
National Information Utility (NIU) will provide reliable, efficient and robust IT Backbone for
the smooth functioning of the Goods & Services Tax regime.
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Dr. R B Krishna and Anand Kumar Jaiswal
6. BENEFITS OF GST
It will bring benefits to all the stakeholders viz. industry, government and the citizens. GST
aims to make India a common national market with uniform tax rates and procedures and
removes the economic barriers, thereby paving the way for an integrated economy at the
national level. By subsuming most of the Central and State indirect taxes into a single tax and
by allowing a set-off of prior-stage taxes for the transactions across the entire value chain, GST
would mitigate the ill effects of cascading and thereby improve our competitiveness. This
spreads the tax incidence burden across value chain of the goods and Services and improve cash
flow and better management of working capital for the businesses. It is expected to lower the
cost of goods and services, boost the economy and make goods and services globally
competitive.
The harmonization of laws, procedures and rates of tax across India would make compliance
easier and simple. There would be common definitions, registration, refund process, common
forms/formats, common interface through GST portal, resulting in efficiencies and synergies
across the board. Also, the common tax base and common system of classification of goods or
services lend greater certainty to taxation system and collection.
Uniform GST rates will reduce the incentive for evasion by eliminating rate arbitrage
between neighboring States.
India’s GST is largely technology driven. The interface of the taxpayer with the tax
authorities will be through the common portal (GSTN). There will be simplified and automated
procedures for various processes such as registration, returns, refunds, tax payments, etc. All
processes, be it for applying for registration, filing of returns, payment of taxes, filing of refund
claims etc., would be done online through GSTN. The input tax credit will be verified online.
Electronic matching of input tax credit across India will make the process more transparent and
accountable. This will encourage a culture of compliance. This will also greatly reduce the
human interface between the taxpayer and the tax administration, leading to speedy decisions.
The effect of GST is going to be far deeper than the tax itself, because it will lead to
digitization of businesses of India. Anybody who has a business with a turnover of more than
Rs. 20 lakh will have to digitalise their business and that is going to bring in tremendous
efficiency in the way business as work in India. Further it is going to lead to big logistical gains
since businesses can dismantle the warehouses which they maintained in each state to avoid
paying non-creditable central sales tax and state entry taxes on inter-state movement. It will
increase the efficiency in logistics Industry. Reduction in unnecessary logistics costs will
increase profits for businesses involved in supply of goods through transportation. Further
movement of trucks and lorries across state borders would be smooth since all check posts
would be dismantled.
With detailed electronic information on common portal about the business transaction and
businesses specially the SME and self-employed business can now approach Bank for credit
facility on the basis of verifiable business transactions.
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Mother of All Tax Reforms: India’s Goods and Services Tax 2017
8. CHALLENGES IN GST
Successfully handling the technological failure and resolving of teething problems of
implementation of GST in the initial years would determine the success of such mammoth tax
reform.
Frequent and regular compliances calendar will make small businesses in the manufacturing
sector to bear most of the brunt of GST implementation. Under the existing excise laws, only
manufacturing business with a turnover more than Rs. 1.50 crores have to pay excise duty.
However, under GST the turnover limit has been reduced to Rs 20 lakh thus increasing the tax
burden for many manufacturing SMEs. However earlier such manufacturer was registered with
Sales tax authorities of the respective State.
Small businesses do not normally employ professionals and prefer to pay taxes and file
returns on their own to save costs. In GST regime since it is a completely new tax system, they
will require professional assistance which will increase cost.
Most businesses use accounting software or ERPs for filing tax returns which have excise,
VAT, and service tax already incorporated in them. The change to GST will require them to
change their ERPs and that would lead to increased costs of purchasing new software and
training employees.
Petroleum products are being kept outside the scope of GST as of now. States will levy their
own taxes on this sector. Tax credit for inputs will therefore not be available to related industries
like the plastic industry which are heavily dependent on petroleum products. Petrol and diesel
are required to run factory machinery and unavailability of input tax credit on petroleum
products will most probably push up the final price of all manufactured goods.
9. CONCLUSION
GST is a destination-based indirect tax and multi-stage tax collection mechanism. GST is a win-
win situation for the whole country. GST aims to make India a common market with common
tax rates and procedures and eliminates the economic barrier paving the way for an integrated
nationwide economy. This tax regime will become mother of all future tax reform since it
changes the way tax is levied, collected and administered.
The use of new age information technology will change the way taxes are paid and
accounted. In the true sense, it is mother of all future tax reforms not only in India but also
across the world. With change of interface of tax from officers of tax department to online
common portal, the tax administration system will become more transparent, clean and reliable.
It is hoped that the Indian direct tax systems will definitely catch up with information
technologically advanced new Indirect tax systems in the coming years.
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Dr. R B Krishna and Anand Kumar Jaiswal
REFERENCES
[1] The Central Goods and Services Tax, 2017
[2] The Integrated Goods and Services Tax, 2017
[3] https://pvsassociates.com/gst/
[4] http://www.cbec.gov.in/htdocs-cbec/gst/index#
[5] https://www.gst.gov.in/
[6] http://www.gstn.org/about-us/
[7] http://www.idtc.icai.org/knowledgesharing.php
[8] http://www.gstcouncil.gov.in/about-us
[9] http://www.cbec.gov.in/resources//htdocs-cbec/gst/eflier-IGST-23062017.pdf
[10] http://www.cbec.gov.in/htdocs-cbec/gst/benefits-of-GST-onlineversion-07june2017.pdf
[11] Gurveen Kaur, GST in India – A significant Tax Amendment. International Journal of
Management, 8 (3), 2017, pp. 53–62.
[12] Vineet Singh and Abhinna Srivastava. Direct Tax Revenue: A Case Study of Central V/S
State Government. International Journal of Management, 6(12), 2015, pp. 83-88.
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