Here is a complete, exam-oriented study notes package on the Goods and Services Tax (GST) designed specifically for SSC, Railway, State PCS, and UPSC aspirants.
Complete Guide on GST (Goods and Services Tax) for Competitive Exams
1. Introduction: What is GST?
The Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a comprehensive, multi-stage, indirect tax levied on the supply of goods and services. It replaced multiple indirect taxes levied by the Central and State Governments, bringing the philosophy of “One Nation, One Tax, One Market” into reality.
For competitive exams, you must remember that GST is a destination-based tax (or consumption tax). This means the tax revenue goes to the state where the goods or services are consumed, not where they are manufactured.
2. Historical Background & Important Committees
- Vijay Kelkar Task Force (2003): The idea of a national GST was first proposed by the Kelkar Task Force on indirect taxes.
- First State to Ratify: Assam was the first state to ratify the GST Bill.
- Rollout Date: GST was implemented in India on July 1, 2017. (July 1 is now celebrated as GST Day).
- Model Adopted: India adopted a Dual GST model, which is inspired by the country of Canada.
3. Important Constitutional Amendments and Articles
This is the most heavily tested area in Polity for SSC and State PCS exams.
- Constitutional Amendment Bill: 122nd Amendment Bill
- Constitutional Amendment Act: 101st Amendment Act, 2016
Key Articles Added to the Constitution:
- Article 246A: Gives concurrent powers to both the Parliament and State Legislatures to make laws regarding GST.
- Article 269A: Deals with the levy and collection of GST on inter-state trade (IGST). The tax is collected by the Centre but divided between the Centre and States.
- Article 279A: Provides for the creation of the GST Council by the President.
4. The GST Council (Article 279A)
The GST Council is the supreme decision-making body that decides the tax rates, exemptions, and rules regarding GST.
- Chairman: Union Finance Minister (Currently Smt. Nirmala Sitharaman).
- Other Members: Union Minister of State for Finance and the Finance Ministers of all States and UTs with legislatures.
- Quorum: 50% of the total members must be present to hold a meeting.
Voting Power (Very Important for UPSC/PCS):
- Central Government: 1/3rd of the total votes.
- State Governments combined: 2/3rd of the total votes.
- Decision Making: Any decision requires a 3/4th majority (75% of weighted votes) to pass.
5. Types of GST
India follows a dual structure to respect the federal nature of our constitution:
- CGST (Central GST): Collected by the Central Government on intra-state (within the same state) sales.
- SGST (State GST): Collected by the State Government on intra-state sales.
- IGST (Integrated GST): Collected by the Central Government on inter-state (between two states) sales and imports.
- UTGST (Union Territory GST): Collected in UTs without a legislature (e.g., Lakshadweep, Andaman) instead of SGST.
6. Taxes Subsumed vs. Items Kept Outside GST
Taxes Merged (Subsumed) into GST:
- Central Taxes: Central Excise Duty, Service Tax, Additional Customs Duty.
- State Taxes: State VAT, Luxury Tax, Entry Tax, Entertainment Tax (except those levied by local bodies).
Items OUTSIDE the Purview of GST (Important for exams):
- Alcohol for human consumption (State Excise Duty still applies).
- Five Petroleum Products: Crude oil, Diesel, Petrol, Natural Gas, and ATF (Aviation Turbine Fuel). Note: The GST Council can bring them under GST later.
- Electricity (Electricity Duty by states applies).
7. Quick Facts for Revision (Bullet Points)
- GST Slabs: The standard tax slabs are 0%, 5%, 12%, 18%, and 28%. Gold is taxed at a special rate of 3%, and rough diamonds at 0.25%.
- GSTIN: The GST Identification Number is a 15-digit alphanumeric PAN-based code.
- National Anti-Profiteering Authority (NAA): Set up to ensure that the benefits of tax reduction are passed on to the consumers. (Now its functions are handled by the Competition Commission of India – CCI).
- E-way Bill: Required for the movement of goods worth more than ₹50,000 from one place to another.
8. Exam Traps & Confusing Points (Beware!)
- Trap 1: Bill vs. Act: Examiners often ask for the GST Amendment Bill number. Students mistakenly mark 101. Remember: Bill is 122nd, Act is 101st.
- Trap 2: GST Council Voting Power: Students assume the Centre and States have 50-50 voting power. Fact: Centre has 33.3% (1/3rd) and States have 66.7% (2/3rd).
- Trap 3: Alcohol: Alcohol for human consumption is constitutionally out of GST. Even the GST Council cannot bring it in without a constitutional amendment. But petroleum products can be brought in if the Council decides.
- Trap 4: Origin vs Destination: GST is NOT an origin-based tax. It is a destination/consumption-based tax.
9. Previous Year Exam Relevance
- UPSC Prelims: Questions frequently focus on the GST Council’s voting structure, Article 279A, and items excluded from GST.
- SSC CGL/CHSL & Railway NTPC: Direct questions on “Which amendment act introduced GST?”, “Who is the chairman of the GST Council?”, and the GST rollout date.
- State PCS: Questions on the Kelkar Committee, first state to ratify GST, and matching the Articles (246A, 269A, 279A).
10. Self-Assessment MCQs
Q1. By which Constitutional Amendment Act was GST introduced in India?
A) 100th Amendment Act
B) 101st Amendment Act
C) 122nd Amendment Act
D) 103rd Amendment Act
Answer: B
Explanation: GST was introduced by the 101st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2016. (122nd was the Bill number).
Q2. Under which Article of the Indian Constitution is the GST Council constituted?
A) Article 246A
B) Article 269A
C) Article 279A
D) Article 280
Answer: C
Explanation: Article 279A empowers the President to constitute the GST Council. Article 280 is for the Finance Commission.
Q3. Which of the following items is completely kept OUTSIDE the purview of GST by the Constitution?
A) Tobacco
B) Alcohol for human consumption
C) Gold
D) Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF)
Answer: B
Explanation: Alcohol for human consumption is constitutionally excluded from GST. ATF is temporarily out, but the GST Council can include it in the future. Tobacco is under GST but attracts an extra cess.
Q4. What is the weightage of the Central Government’s vote in the GST Council?
A) 1/2 (50%)
B) 1/3 (33.33%)
C) 2/3 (66.66%)
D) 1/4 (25%)
Answer: B
Explanation: The Central Government has 1/3rd voting weightage, while all states combined have 2/3rd weightage. Decisions require a 3/4th (75%) majority.
Q5. The Dual GST model adopted in India is based on the model of which country?
A) UK
B) USA
C) France
D) Canada
Answer: D
Explanation: India adopted the Canadian dual GST model (Centre and States both levying tax concurrently). Note: France was the first country in the world to implement GST in 1954.
11. Short Revision Summary
- What: Indirect, Destination-based tax.
- When: 1st July 2017.
- Committee: Kelkar Task Force.
- Amendment: 101st Act (122nd Bill).
- Key Articles: 246A, 269A, 279A (GST Council).
- GST Council Head: Union Finance Minister.
- Voting: Centre (1/3rd), States (2/3rd), Pass mark (75%).
- Excluded Items: Alcohol (permanently), Petroleum (temporarily), Electricity.