Goods and service tax - class-X
Description: goods and service tax | |
Number of Questions: 20 | |
Created by: Rachana Sahu | |
Tags: commerce business studies indirect tax public expenditure and public revenue goods and services tax government and taxes economics internal trade |
The first committee to design GST model was headed by _____.
-
Vijay Kelkar
-
Asim Das Gupta
-
Dr. Chidambaram
-
None of the above
On February 28, 2006, GST appears in the Budget speech for the first time; Finance Minister P Chidambaram sets an ambitious April 1, 2010 as deadline for GST implementation. He said the Empowered Committee of finance ministers will prepare a road map for GST.
With the introduction of GST, imports will be ______.
-
more expensive
-
cheaper
-
neutral with no change
-
None of the above
With the introduction of GST, imports will be more expensive. The high tax rates on imports increased the total cost of imported products.
GST is applicable to all dealers with a turnover of over ______.
-
Rs. 10 lakh
-
Rs. 20 lakh
-
Rs. 40 lakh
-
Rs. 50 lakh
A business whose aggregate turnover in a financial year exceeds Rs 20 lakhs has to mandatorily register under Goods and Services Tax. This limit is set at Rs 10 lakhs for North Eastern and hilly states flagged as special category states.
GST is ______________.
-
a value added tax
-
tax on goods and services
-
tax on consumer goods and services
-
none of the above
Goods & Services Tax Law in India is a comprehensive, multi-stage, destination-based tax that is levied on every value addition. Goods and Service Tax (GST) is an indirect tax levied on the supply of goods and services. This law has replaced many indirect tax laws that previously existed in India. GST is one indirect tax for the entire country.
The advantages of GST to the Citizens are listed as:
-
Reduction in prices of goods and services due to elimination of cascading.
-
Uniform prices throughout the country.
-
Transparency in taxation system.
-
All of the above
- GST is a simplified transparent tax and has abolished a number of indirect taxes which was levied by the Centre and State Governments, including Central Excise duty, Service Tax, VAT, Purchase Tax, Central Sales Tax, Entry Tax, Local Body Taxes, Luxury Tax, etc.
- It focuses on removing the Cascading Effect, i.e. tax on tax.
- It has led to falling prices of many consumer goods as manufacturing cost of many good has reduced due to less burden of taxes.
- Items like a car, FMCG etc. are expected to become cheaper than before.
- As a simple rule of economics, with fall in prices of the items, there will be an increase in the demand or consumption of goods.
- This increase in demand will tend to increase the supply. Hence, will ultimately lead to the rise in production of goods.
- In the long run, it will be helpful for the common man, as increased production of goods will create more job opportunities.
- This will help in lowering the burden on the common man i.e. you will have to shed less money to buy the same products which were earlier costly.
The Service Tax which stood at 15% in the previous regime, has now been replaced with GST at 18%.
-
True
-
False
The service tax stood at 15% before the introduction of GST. Now it stands at 18% after the implementatio n of the new GST.
GST helps in _______.
-
increasing productivity
-
increasing Tax to GDP Ratio and revenue surplus
-
increasing Compliance
-
all of the above
GST helps in increasing productivity, compliance as well as Tax to GDP Ratio and revenue surplus of the country. It is designed in such as way so as to benefit one and all.
After the implementation of GST, many services of ______ have become costlier.
-
telecom
-
airline
-
banking
-
all of the above
After implementation of GST, telecom, airline and banking have become a lot more costlier. This is because of the increase in the service charges.
GST minimizes the the tax impact on inflation.
-
True
-
False
Identify the objective(s) of implementing GST.
-
Reducing economic distortions
-
Consumption based tax instead of Manufacturing
-
Subsume all indirect taxes at Centre and State Level under
-
All of the above
- One Country – One Tax
- Consumption based tax instead of Manufacturing
- Uniform GST Registration, payment and Input tax Credit
- To eliminate the cascading effect of Indirect taxes on single transaction
- Subsume all indirect taxes at Centre and State Level under
- Reduce tax evasion and corruption
- Increase productivity
- Increase Tax to GDP Ratio and revenue surplus
- Increase Compliance
- Reducing economic distortions
GST has the disadvantage(s) as follows:
-
Complete lack of adaptation mechanisms and trained staff.
-
Unclear estimate of the exact impact of GST.
-
No clear mechanisms to control tax evasion.
-
All of the above
- Some Economist say that GST in India would impact negatively on the real estate market. It would add up to 8 percent to the cost of new homes and reduce demand by about 12 percent.
- Some Experts says that CGST(Central GST), SGST(State GST) are nothing but new names for Central Excise/Service Tax, VAT and CST. Hence, there is no major reduction in the number of tax layers.
- Some retail products currently have only four percent tax on them. After GST, garments and clothes could become more expensive.
- The aviation industry would be affected. Service taxes on airfares currently range from six to nine percent. With GST, this rate will surpass fifteen percent and effectively double the tax rate.
- Adoption and migration to the new GST system would involve teething troubles and learning for the entire ecosystem.
The ________ is the key decision-making body that will take all important decisions regarding the GST.
-
Union Government
-
GST council
-
State Government
-
None of the above
The GST council is the key decision-making body that will take all important decisions regarding the GST. The GST Council dictates tax rate, tax exemption, the due date of forms, tax laws, and tax deadlines, keeping in mind special rates and provisions for some states. The predominant responsibility of the GST Council is to ensure to have one uniform tax rate for goods and services across the nation.
The advantages of GST accruing to the Central/State Government are listed as:
-
A unified common national market to boost Foreign Investment and Make in India campaign.
-
Improving the overall investment climate in the country which will benefit the development of states.
-
Uniform SGST and IGST rates to reduce the incentive for tax evasion.
-
All of the above
- Simple and easy to administer
- Better control on leakage
- Higher revenue efficiency
The advantages of GST accruing to the Trade/ industry are listed as:
-
Reduction in multiplicity of taxes.
-
Mitigation of cascading/double taxation.
-
More efficient neutralization of taxes especially for exports.
-
All of the above
- Transparent compliance: A robust and comprehensive IT system would be the foundation of the GST regime in India. Therefore, all tax payer services such as registrations, returns, payments, etc. would be available to the taxpayers online, which would make compliance easy and transparent.
- Uniform tax rates and structures: GST will ensure that indirect tax rates and structures are common across the country, thereby increasing certainty and ease of doing business. In other words, GST would make doing business in the country tax neutral, irrespective of the choice of place of doing business.
- Minimal cascading: A system of seamless tax-credits throughout the value-chain, and across boundaries of States, would ensure that there is minimal cascading of taxes. This would reduce hidden costs of doing business.
- Benefits to manufacturers and exporters: The subsuming of major Central and State taxes in GST, complete and comprehensive set-off of input goods and services and phasing out of Central Sales Tax (CST) would reduce the cost of locally manufactured goods and services. The GST would decrease the cost of locally manufactured goods because of the following reasons.
- Most of the central and state taxes would go away
- Central Sales Tax would not be charged
- Complete and comprehensive set-off of the input goods and services.
- This will increase the competitiveness of Indian goods and services in the international market and give boost to Indian exports. The uniformity in tax rates and procedures across the country will also go a long way in reducing the compliance cost.
- Reduce Hassle and Expense: The GST not only replaces various taxes but also It would be easier for the businessmen. Currently, a Businessman has to various taxes, file return and reply for the scrutiny. The businessman has to visit many tax offices. The GST would end all these hassles.
The Chairperson of GST Council is _____.
-
the Union Finance Minister
-
the Union Minister of State
-
Minister nominated by a State
-
all of the above
The GST Council dictates __________.
-
tax rate
-
tax exemption
-
tax laws
-
all of the above
The GST council is the key decision-making body that will take all important decisions regarding the GST. The GST Council dictates tax rate, tax exemption, the due date of forms, tax laws, and tax deadlines, keeping in mind special rates and provisions for some states.
MODVAT was introduced in the Union Budget of:
-
1986-87
-
1996-97
-
2006-07
-
None of the above
MODVAT was introduced in the Union Budget of 1986-87. MODVAT stands for Modified Value Added Tax.
Which among the following is an indirect tax?
-
Income tax
-
Wealth tax
-
Custom duty
-
Gift tax
Custom duty is the example of an indirect tax and others income tax, wealth tax and gift tax are example of direct tax.
Among the following types of taxes, find the one which is Indirect.
-
Gift Tax
-
Corporate Income Tax
-
GST
-
Wealth Tax
In India tax evasion is high at:
-
20 %
-
15%
-
30%
-
18%