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Finally, GST Constitutional Amendment Bill passed in Rajya Sabha

thesolar65

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NEW DELHI: The Rajya Sabha+ on Wednesday passed the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Constitutional Amendment Bill which the Lok Sabha had already approved last year. The exact rate of the tax will only be decided in the weeks or months ahead.

Currently, voting is underway in the Rajya Sabha on each clause of the bill. That process will take a while to be concluded. The House was adjourned till 11 pm. The Deputy Speaker PJ Kurien urged the members and the press to get some food and return by 11 pm.

The main objective of the GST is to eliminate excessive taxation. GST is a uniform indirect tax levied on goods and services across a country. Many developed nations tax the manufacture, sale and consumption of goods using a single, comprehensive tax+ .

"The GST bill will empower the states, will increase revenue of states as well as Centre. It'll ensure that there is 'no tax on tax'," finance minister Arun Jaitley said on Wednesday in the Lok Sabha.

It was the Congress-led UPA government that was the first one to table an iteration of the bill, which it did on 2011. It couldn't pass the bill then due to opposition disagreement. Then the BJP-led NDA tabled another version of the bill in 2014. That couldn't pass because this time, it faced disagreement on some of the provisions of the bill from its opposition, mainly the Congress party.

For this 2016 version of the bill, Union finance minister Jaitley held several rounds of consultations with opposition parties and state governments. His attempt was to bring everyone on board, because, notionally, most parties are in favour a single tax regime.

While the Congress party+ on Wednesday support the GST Constitutional Amendment Bill, it made it perfectly clear it will only approve a later GST 'rate' bill if that's decided by both Houses of Parliament, and not just the Lok Sabha. As well, the standard rate of GST should not exceed 18%, the Congress said today in the Rajya Sabha.

Earlier today, Jaitley thanked the Congress. "There has been major consensus building that has taken place. I am extremely thankful to all opposition parties especially Ghulam Nabi Azad (of the Congress," Jaitley said.
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A BIG JAI HIND FELLOW COUNTRYMEN . one can hope it will meet the Golden date of April 2017 . Kudos to allSeham Renganathan
The Congres said it was grateful that the BJP acknowledged it was the Congress that first announced the GST.

"I'm glad FM acknowledged that it was UPA govt that first officially announced the intention to bring GST," the former finance minister P Chidambaram of the Congress said in the Rajya Sabha."Hope the finance minister will pass GST bill not on strength of numbers but in strength of his arguments," he added.
 
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Pros of GST:

•Bost to GDP by 1 to 1.5%

•India would emerge as single uniformmarket. Uniformity in tax rates/process across India. Easy movement of goods across stateborders

•Tax base to expand

•Centre and states to simultaneously levytax on goods &services

•Exports will become competitive

•Automated, unhindered flow of tax credit for businesses

•Statutory Forms will be eliminated(C-Form, F-Form etc.)

•Interstate transactions would be taxneutral vis-à-vis Local

• Composite contracts (Goods + Service)would become simpler Ex: Hotels, works contract

•Local manufacturing would become cost competitive vis-à-vis imports

Cons of GST:

•Service businesses operating pan-Indianeed to take state-wise registration leading to increased compliance

•Any supply (Ex: stock transfer, job-work)would be taxable (although fully creditable) leading to cash flows gettingblocked

•Businesses operating in multiple statesneed to re-align their branch network / warehouse / logistics strategy

•Input credit is subject to matching ofinvoices

•A number of exemptions would be removed

•Requirement to determine ‘Point ofSupply’

•No ITC for purchases from Compoundingdealers

For further reading:

http://tallygst.blogspot.in/2016/01/gst-india-what-is-gst-gst-stands-for.html?m=1
 
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The main loser is ofcourse the Government as their tax collection will be down .

Not exactly, they will save from the hefty grants they had to give to poorly performing states. GST will add to those states revenue.
 
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Truly historical and can revolutionize a lot of sectors..mainly manufacturers..

But got a risk of finding the loopholes is plenty.

The main loser is ofcourse the Government as their tax collection will be down .

Means state Government ,Right?
But they decided for a GST council and agreed for five years full compensation .
 
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Does this mean Flipkart and Amazon will ship products more than 5000 rupees to Uttar Pradesh?
 
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Pros of GST:

•Bost to GDP by 1 to 1.5%

•India would emerge as single uniformmarket. Uniformity in tax rates/process across India. Easy movement of goods across stateborders

•Tax base to expand

•Centre and states to simultaneously levytax on goods &services

•Exports will become competitive

•Automated, unhindered flow of tax credit for businesses

•Statutory Forms will be eliminated(C-Form, F-Form etc.)

•Interstate transactions would be taxneutral vis-à-vis Local

• Composite contracts (Goods + Service)would become simpler Ex: Hotels, works contract

•Local manufacturing would become cost competitive vis-à-vis imports

Cons of GST:

•Service businesses operating pan-Indianeed to take state-wise registration leading to increased compliance

•Any supply (Ex: stock transfer, job-work)would be taxable (although fully creditable) leading to cash flows gettingblocked

•Businesses operating in multiple statesneed to re-align their branch network / warehouse / logistics strategy

•Input credit is subject to matching ofinvoices

•A number of exemptions would be removed

•Requirement to determine ‘Point ofSupply’

•No ITC for purchases from Compoundingdealers

For further reading:

http://tallygst.blogspot.in/2016/01/gst-india-what-is-gst-gst-stands-for.html?m=1

Thank you for this knowledgeful post .
I have seen in some articles that oil and some other luxurious items would be exempted from the GST .
And ultimately it seems it helps consumer based states .
 
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