Passage of GST Bill paves the way for ‘One Nation, One Tax’ system
The uproar leading to the controversial
GST (Goods & Services Tax) Bill in the Upper House has finally died
down, with the latter being passed amidst support from all the political
parties, barring AIADMK during the monsoon session of the Parliament.
The Rajya Sabha passed the constitutional amendment by two-thirds
majority. The Constitution (122nd Amendment) Bill, 2014 was approved
with 203 votes in favour and none against, after a seven-hour debate.
The major hurdle got cleared after Congress agreed to the passage of the
Bill.
The Bill will now be returned to the Lok Sabha for its approval.
GST & it’s After-Effects –
In a recently published Frequently-asked
questions, the Government explains GST as one indirect tax for the
whole nation, which will make India one unified common market. GST is a
single tax on the supply of goods and services, right from the
manufacturer to the consumer. The new GST will do away with the double
taxation that hitherto existed and the final consumer will thus bear
only the GST charged by the last dealer in the supply chain (the
consumer till now has to pay tax on tax already paid by the
manufacturer). This will thus eventually try to bring down the end price
to a considerable amount. In other words, the GST seeks to untangle all
the other taxes (sales tax, excise, VAT) and subsume all in one single
tax. Many hail it as a tremendous reform and the biggest since
liberalization in 1991....Read More
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