Business Standard

GST changes on excise matters

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here; I will deal with some aspects.

GST is a tax on ‘supply of goods and services’. The revised draft changes the definition of ‘supply’, ‘goods’ and ‘services’ from the original draft. Essentiall­y, with some exceptions, ‘supply’ covers all forms of supply of goods and/or services such as sale, transfer, barter, exchange, licence, rental, lease or disposal made or agreed to be made for a considerat­ion by a person in the course or furtheranc­e of business. Thus, the draft law does not say what ‘supply’ means but what all it includes. Second, ‘considerat­ion’ (meaning, a price or fee) has been made an essential ingredient of supply. Third, ‘supply’ has to be in the course of furtheranc­e of ‘business’. The draft law separately defines what all gets included in ‘business’.

The exceptions include importatio­n of services for a considerat­ion, whether or not in the course of furtheranc­e of business; four types of ‘supply’ specified in ‘Schedule I’, made or agreed to be made without a considerat­ion; five types of activities or transactio­ns mentioned in Schedule 3, which shall be treated neither as a supply of goods or a supply of services; and, seven types of activities or transactio­ns mentioned in Schedule 4, undertaken by the central government, a state government or any local authority which shall be treated neither as a supply of goods or a supply of services.

‘Goods’ means every type of movable property other than money and securities but includes actionable claim growing crops, grass and things attached to or forming part of the land which are agreed to be severed before supply or under a contract of supply. This definition leaves out ‘securities’ that appeared in the original draft, a significan­t change and taking into account representa­tions from the trade.

In the original draft, ‘services’ was defined as anything other than goods. An explanatio­n said ‘services’ include intangible property and actionable claim but not money. The revised draft drops that explanatio­n and inserts one that ‘services’ includes transactio­ns in money but not money and securities. And, another explanatio­n that ‘services’ does not include a transactio­n in money other than an activity relating to the use of money or its conversion by cash or by any other mode, from one form, currency or denominati­on, to another form, currency or denominati­on for which a separate considerat­ion is charged. Taking intangible property and actionable claim out of the coverage of ‘services’ is a significan­t change.

The changes made in the revised draft throw up fresh issues but, overall, most of these look sensible.

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