India has joined the bandwagon of indirect
tax reforms. The Empowered Committee of the State has announced in the first
discussion paper on 10.11.2009, that there will be a plan to levy a “Dual GST Scheme” in India, read
both the Center and the States will have the power to levy the GST taxes.
The scheme though originally was supposed
to be realized from 1st April 2016, several hurdles pushed the date further as
the ruling party did not have the majority in the Rajya Sabha back then. Most
of the states too expressed their grievances against the tax for one reason or the other.
Constitutional alteration - While the
Center has the power to impose the GST tax services till the production stage, the States have the onus to tax sale of
goods. While each of powers cannot be swapped
with one another as the States cannot
levy a tax on supply of services while the Centre cannot impose a tax on the sale of goods. The Constitution does
not put the power baton on any one of them (State or Center) exclusively, to
levy a GST tax. Furthermore, the Constitution falls short of empowering the
States to levy import taxes. Therefore, the Constitutional Amendments empower
the Centre to levy taxes on the sale of
goods and States and also to impose both service tax and import tax.
What is Goods and Services taxes? Goods and Service Tax or (GST) is a
comprehensive tax levied on the manufacture, sale, and the consumption of goods and services. The Center and the State
governments do away with all the indirect taxes.
GST is levied on goods and services under
which it is mandatory for each person to pay tax, GST filing 2018 on his output
and is imperative to pay the (ITC) or input tax credit on the tax paid on its
inputs and outputs.
Aims
and objectives of GST: The Goods & Service Tax ( GST Annual Returns
Due by Dec 31) aims to do away with the double taxation or the cascading effect
of taxes on both the production and distribution cost of goods and services.
Eradicating the cascading effects of the tax on tax which burdens the final
consumers will greatly improve the competitiveness of the ultimate goods and
services in the market and it is one of the benefits for GST. This competitiveness has a number of positive
repercussions and one of them is certainly a positive impact on the GDP growth
of the country.
It goes without saying that the Introduction
of a GST substituting the existing multiple tax structures of Centre and State
taxes is certainly welcomed with open arms by the consumers. GST will most
importantly eliminate the cascading effect on the sale of goods and services.
This will impact the cost of goods. The cost of goods shall also decrease
chiefly because the tax on tax effect
will be done away with, forever.
GST is transparent
and embodies current technology. As most of the activities related tothe GST updates is technology-driven. Activities such as
registration, application for refund, filing returns, and response to notice are
all completed on the GST Portal. This accelerates the entire process. The GST
regime is likely to bring a whole new era in the country and the common people
will certainly benefit from it in the long run.
No comments:
Post a Comment