Thursday, July 4, 2019

Expectation from Budget 2019


My expectation from Upcoming Budget 2019 that Indian Government should give more focus on Social scheme like Health, Education and Infrastructure sector to boost Indian Economy. 

  • As a business personal we have expectation from government to increase the tax slabs for Corporate and individual so that consumption will increase in the household. 
  • Increase in 80C deduction limits to promote Savings and Investment. 
  • To promote Startup Ecosystem in India government should give Incentive to startup companies or entrepreneurs and provide easy financing from Banks (Collateral free loan up to 50 Laks).

Friday, March 22, 2019

Journey of GST (Goods and Service Tax) in India

GST also known as the Goods and Services Tax is defined as the giant indirect tax structure designed to support and enhance the economic growth of a country. More than 150 countries have implemented GST so far. However, the idea of GST in India was mooted by Vajpayee government in 2000 and the constitutional amendment for the same was passed by the Loksabha on 6th May 2015 but is yet to be ratified by the Rajyasabha. However, there is a huge hue and cry against its implementation. It would be interesting to understand why this proposed GST regime may hamper the growth and development of the country.

Benefits of GST as under:
• It would introduce two-tiered One-Country-One-Tax regime.
• It would subsume all indirect taxes at the center and the state level.
• It would not only widen the tax regime by covering goods and services but also make it transparent.
• It would free the manufacturing sector from cascading effect of taxes, thus by improve the cost-competitiveness of goods and services.
• It would bring down the prices of goods and services and thus by, increase consumption.
• It would create business-friendly environment, thus by increase tax-GDP ratio.
• It would enhance the ease of doing business in India.

India has adopted dual GST instead of national GST. It has made the entire structure of GST fairly complicated in India. The centre will have to coordinate with 29 states and 7 union territories to implement such tax regime. Such regime is likely to create economic as well as political issues.

There are 3 taxes applicable under this system: CGST, SGST & IGST.
    CGST: Collected by the Central Government on an intra-state sale (Eg: transaction happening within Maharashtra)
    SGST: Collected by the State Government on an intra-state sale (Eg: transaction happening within Maharashtra)
    IGST: Collected by the Central Government for inter-state sale (Eg: Maharashtra to Tamil Nadu)

Non-GST Goods such as:
(i)                  Petroleum crude
(ii)                High-speed diesel
(iii)               Motor spirit (commonly known as petrol);
(iv)              Natural gas;
(v)                Aviation turbine fuel; and
(vi)              Alcoholic liquor for human consumption. in respect of following transactions only:
Resale /  Use in manufacturing or processing /  Use in the telecommunication network or in mining or in the generation or distribution of electricity or any other power.

Milestone
2006
February 28, 2006- Budget 2006-07 - FM proposes introduction of GST from 1 April 2010
2007
March 20, 2007 -Phasing out of CST began from April 2007 with the reduction in CST rate from 4% to 3% May, 2007 - Committee of State Finance Ministers constituted Joint Working Group in May, 2007
2008
December 17, 2008- EC finalised its views on broad GST structure - consensus on Dual GST (Central and State GST)
2009
November 10, 2009- First Discussion Paper on GST was released by EC
December 31, 2009 -The 13th Finance Commission released its Report on GST in December, 2009
2011
March 23, 2011- Constitution Amendment Bill to enable roll out of GST was tabled in Parliament
2013
November 18, 2013- EC rejected Central Government's proposal to include Petroleum products under GST
2014
December 19, 2014- Revised Constitution Amendment Bill tabled in Parliament
2015
May 7, 2015- Passage of Constitutional Amendment Bill on GST in Lok Sabha
Oct 23, 2015 - The Joint Committee constituted by Empowered release its business process reports on GST related to payment, registration, refund in public domain for comments
2016
June 14, 2016- Model draft law released in public domain
August 3, 2016- Passage of Constitutional Amendment Bill on GST in Rajya Sabha.
September 22, 2016 First Meeting of GST Council held.
November 3, 2016-GST rates decided. The four slabs has been set at 5%, 12%, 18% and 28%.
November 8, 2016 -GST portal was made live for migration of existing tax payers.
November 26, 2016- Revised Draft Model GST Law ,Draft IGST Law and Compensation Law released.
2017
January 16, 2017- Consensus on dual control
February 18, 2017 - Council cleared the draft laws for compensating the states.
March 4, 2017 – The GST Council cleared the crucial CGST and IGST Bills
March 16, 2017 - The GST Council cleared the crucial SGST and UTGST Bills
March 20, 2017 – Union Cabinet approves draft GST Bills
March 29, 2017- Lok Sabha clears four GST related bills.
April 6, 2017- Rajya Sabha okays CGST, IGST, Compensation & UTGST Bills.
May 18, 2017- GST Council finalizes tax rates on goods and services
May 18, 2017 – GST Council clears all nine rules
June 3, 2017- GST Council clears rules, states agree to July 1 rollout
June 11, 2017- GST Council reduces rates of 66 items.
June 18, 2017 - Council Approves Anti- Profiteering mechanism.
July 1, 2017- With GST , India takes a leap towards ‘one nation one tax’

Sources:- Different Websites / Journals / News Paper
#ApurvGourav #GST #India

Friday, February 8, 2019

21 Key Points of Union Budget 2019


1. No tax on individuals having income upto Rs.5 lac.

2. Standard deduction for salaried employees raised from Rs. 40,000 to Rs. 50,000.

3. Threshold limit for TDS on rent increased from Rs.180000 to Rs.240000.

4. No tax-ability on deemed basis under the head "house property" even if an assesse has two self-occupied houses.

5. Threshold limit for TDS on interest income increased from Rs.10000 to Rs.40000.

6. Section 54 benefit will be available in respect of 2 houses.

7. Direct tax collection has increased from 6.38 lac crore to 12 lac crores.

8. 99.54% income-tax returns accepted as having been filed without any scrutiny.

9. Farmers owning land up to 2 hectares to get Rs.6000 per annum under PM Kissan Yojna and 75000 crore per year to be spent on PM Kisan Yojna.

10. 60,000 crores are being allocated for MGNREGA in Budget Expenditure 2019-20. Additional amount would be provided if required.

11. Persons working in unorganized sector and having income upto Rs.15000 per month will get pension of Rs.3,000 per month under Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Maandhan Yojana.

12. GST registered SME will get 2% rebate on interest on loan upto 1 Cr.

13. Farmers severely affected by natural calamities will get 2% interest subvention and additional 3% interest subvention on timely repayment of loan.

14. Anti-black money measures have brought Rs.1.30 lac crore under tax net.

15. More than 7,000 beneficiaries of PM Mudra Yojana are women. 15.56 crore loans of 7.23 lakh crore disbursed under MUDRA Yojana.

16. A sum of Rs 2.6 lakh crore has been directed towards recapitalization of Public Sector Banks (PSBs).

17. Over Rs 35,000 crore has been allocated under the ‘One Rank One Pension’ scheme for Defence personnel.

18. Under National Disaster Relief Fund (NDRF), farmers affected by natural calamities will get 2% interest subvention. A prompt repayment incentive of 3% will be given for the entire loan reschedule period.

19. Allocation for Rashtriya Gokul Mission increased to Rs 750 crore. Rashtriya Kamdhenu Aayog has been established to genetically upgrade cow resources.

20.  Benefits under Section 80-IBA to be extended for one more year – to the housing projects approved till 31 March 2020.

21. A scheme of ‘Business loans up to Rs. 1 crore in 59 minutes’ will be implemented.

#ApurvGourav 

Thursday, January 10, 2019

Break Through - Baby Shark Story


The baby shark fish is wild, swims fast and attacks the shores. One person decided to check whether the baby shark can be controlled. He put a strong glass wall and tied up some meat on the opposite side of the shark. Seeing the meat, the shark swims fast to reach the meat. But it dashes with the glass wall and does not reach the meat. 


It again goes back, makes same effort but in vain. The next day more effort but again in vain. 

This continues for around 21 days and the baby shark does not know what to do.
On the 22nd day, the person removes the glass wall and observes the baby shark fish. The baby shark fish comes till the point where glass wall was built and returns back. Now there is no glass wall but baby shark fish does not realize !!!

Don't act like a Baby Shark. Size up and break through the confining glass walls in your mind.

Many of us, after experiencing setbacks and failures, emotionally give up and stop trying. Like the shark in the story, we believe that because we were unsuccessful in the past, we will always be unsuccessful. In other words, we continue to see a barrier in our heads, even when no ‘real’ barrier exists between where we are and where we want to go.
#ApurvGourav #Life #Lesson #Motivation