Goods and Services Tax (GST) is an Indirect tax applicable throughout
India which replaced multiple cascading taxes levied by the central and state governments.
It was introduced as The Constitution (One Hundred and First Amendment) Act
2017, following the passage of Constitution 122nd Amendment Bill. The GST
is governed by a GST Council and its Chairman is the Finance Minister of
India.
Under GST, goods and services are taxed at the following
rates, 0%, 5%, 12%, 18% and 28%. There is a special rate of 0.25% on rough
precious and semi-precious stones and 3% on gold. In addition a cess of
15% or other rates on top of 28% GST applies on few items like aerated drinks,
luxury cars and tobacco products.
This
is the India's biggest tax reform in 70 years of independence, the Goods and
Services Tax (GST) was finally launched on the midnight of 30 June 2017, though
the process of forming the legislation took 17 years (since 2000 when it was
first proposed). The launch was marked by a historic midnight (30 June - 1 July
2017) session of both the houses of parliament convened at the Central Hall of
the Parliament.
Many critics pointed out that the GST would increase
costs of daily goods and affect many Indians adversely, especially the middle,
lower middle and poorer classes. GST was initially proposed to replace a slew
of indirect taxes with a unified tax and was therefore set to dramatically
reshape the country's 2 trillion dollar economy. However, it has been met with
sharp criticism from various fronts due to the increased costs and troubles
that it will cause to common citizens.
However if we compare the rate of GST in India is between
double to four times that levied in other countries like Singapore.
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