53rd GST Council Meeting

Context

  • The 53rd Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council met in Delhi under the Chairpersonship of the Union Minister for Finance and Corporate Affairs.

Key Recommendations of the GST Council Meeting

  • The council recommended taxes on items such as milk cans and solar cookers and announced some relief for students living in certain kinds of rented accommodation.

    53rd GST Council Meeting
    Pic Source: Business Today
  • It also reduced the GST on cartons from 18% to 12% to provide relief to apple farmers in Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir.
  • The Chief Ministers of Goa and Meghalaya, Deputy Chief Ministers of Bihar, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, and Odisha, and the Finance Ministers of States & UTs (with legislature) were also at the meeting.
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What is the GST Council?

  • The GST regime came into force after the Constitutional (122nd Amendment) Bill was passed by both Houses of Parliament in 2016.
  • More than 15 Indian states then ratified it in their state Assemblies, after which then-President Pranab Mukherjee gave his assent.
  • It came into effect in 2017 and was billed as an attempt to simplify the existing tax structure in India, where both the Centre and states levied multiple taxes, and to make it uniform.
  • The President set up the GST Council as a joint forum of the Centre and the states, under Article 279A (1) of the amended Constitution.
  • It said that members of the Council include the Union Finance Minister (chairperson), and the Union Minister of State (Finance) from the Centre.
  • Each state can nominate a minister in charge, of finance or taxation or any other minister, as a member.

Why was the GST Council set up?

  • According to Article 279, the council is meant to “make recommendations to the Union and the states on important issues related to GST, like the goods and services that may be subjected or exempted from GST, model GST Laws”.
  • It also decides on various rate slabs of GST, whether they need to be modified for certain product categories, and so on.
  • Article 246A of the Constitution stipulates that both Parliament and state legislatures have “simultaneous” power to legislate on GST — and recommendations of the Council “are the product of a collaborative dialogue involving the Union and States”.
  • (Article 246A (“Special provision with respect to goods and services tax”) says: “(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in articles 246 and 254, Parliament, and, subject to clause (2), the Legislature of every State, have power to make laws with respect to goods and services tax imposed by the Union or by such State.”)
  • The court said the GST Council has an “unequal voting structure where the states collectively have a two-third voting share and the Union has a one-third voting share”.
  • Some states, such as Kerala and Tamil Nadu, hailed the judgment, believing that states could now be more flexible in accepting the recommendations as suited to them.

Source: IE


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