Taxation – Direct & Indirect Taxes

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🟠 Topic 59: Taxation – Direct & Indirect Taxes


📖 Explanation (1000+ Words)


📌 Introduction

Taxation is one of the primary tools for mobilising government revenue to fund public services, promote economic development, and influence market behaviour. The tax system in India is divided into Direct Taxes (where the liability falls directly on the taxpayer) and Indirect Taxes (where the liability is passed on to the end consumer).


🔹 Constitutional Provisions Related to Taxation

Article Provision
Article 265 No tax can be levied or collected except by authority of law
Article 246 Division of taxation powers between Centre and States
Seventh Schedule Lists taxation powers in Union, State, and Concurrent Lists
Finance Commission (Art 280) Recommends distribution of tax revenues between Centre and States

🔹 What is Direct Tax?

📖 Definition

A direct tax is a tax directly imposed on individuals and organizations, where the incidence and impact fall on the same person (the taxpayer).


Examples of Direct Taxes

Tax Type Description
Income Tax Levied on individual and corporate income
Corporate Tax Tax on profits of companies
Wealth Tax (abolished) Previously levied on individuals’ net wealth
Capital Gains Tax Tax on profits from sale of capital assets
Dividend Distribution Tax (abolished) Tax on dividends distributed by companies (now taxed in hands of shareholders)

Characteristics of Direct Tax

✔️ Progressive in nature — Higher income attracts higher tax rates.
✔️ Cannot be shifted to others.
✔️ Directly collected by government from taxpayers.
✔️ Helps reduce income inequality through progressive rates.


🔹 What is Indirect Tax?

📖 Definition

An indirect tax is levied on goods and services, where the incidence and impact fall on different persons — the tax is collected from the producer but passed on to consumers.


Examples of Indirect Taxes

Tax Type Description
Goods and Services Tax (GST) Comprehensive indirect tax replacing multiple taxes
Customs Duty Tax on import and export of goods
Excise Duty (merged with GST) Previously levied on manufacturing
Service Tax (replaced by GST) Previously applied to services

Characteristics of Indirect Tax

✔️ Can be shifted to consumers.
✔️ Regressive in nature — Same rate applies irrespective of income level.
✔️ Collected by intermediaries (shops, companies) and deposited with the government.
✔️ Provides continuous revenue stream as consumption happens daily.


🔹 Key Differences Between Direct & Indirect Taxes

Parameter Direct Tax Indirect Tax
Incidence On taxpayer directly Passed on to consumers
Progressive/Regressive Progressive Regressive
Example Income Tax GST
Evasion Higher scope Lower scope (collected at source)
Administration IT Department (CBDT) GST Council & CBIC

🔹 Importance of Taxation


1️⃣ Revenue Mobilisation

  • Taxes fund infrastructure, health, education, defence.
  • Tax-to-GDP ratio is a critical indicator of fiscal health.

2️⃣ Redistribution of Wealth

  • Progressive taxation reduces income inequality.
  • Funds welfare programs for vulnerable sections.

3️⃣ Economic Regulation

  • Sin taxes (tobacco, alcohol) discourage harmful consumption.
  • Customs duties promote or restrict certain imports.

4️⃣ Economic Stability

  • Fiscal policy uses taxation as a tool to manage inflation or recession.

🔹 GST – India’s Landmark Indirect Tax Reform

📖 Overview

Launched in 2017, Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a destination-based tax, replacing multiple indirect taxes levied by Centre and States.

Tax Replaced Example
Central Excise On manufacturing
Service Tax On services
VAT State-level sales tax
Octroi Entry tax at state borders

Features of GST

✔️ One Nation, One Tax.
✔️ Comprehensive input tax credit system.
✔️ 4-tier rate structure: 5%, 12%, 18%, 28%.
✔️ GST Council ensures Centre-State coordination.


Benefits of GST

✔️ Simplified tax compliance.
✔️ Boosts ease of doing business.
✔️ Reduces cascading effect (tax on tax).
✔️ Increases tax base via improved compliance.


GST Council – Composition

Member Role
Union Finance Minister Chairperson
State Finance Ministers Members

✔️ Decisions require 3/4th majority (Centre 1/3rd vote, States 2/3rd vote).


Challenges in GST Implementation

Initial compliance issues (GSTN portal glitches).
Frequent rate revisions causing uncertainty.
❌ Dependence on compensation cess for states.
Exclusion of key sectors (petroleum, alcohol).


Tax Base & Tax Buoyancy

Term Meaning
Tax Base Total entities and activities subject to taxation
Tax Buoyancy Growth in tax revenue relative to GDP growth

Direct Tax Reforms – Key Initiatives

Initiative Focus
Faceless Assessment Eliminates direct interface between taxpayer and officer
Vivad se Vishwas Settlement scheme for pending disputes
Corporate Tax Cut (2019) Reduced corporate tax rate to 22% for domestic firms
New Tax Regime (2020) Optional simplified slab system with lower rates, fewer exemptions

🔹 Case Study – Direct Tax Reforms & Compliance

  • Corporate Tax Reduction (2019) lowered rates to 22% for regular firms and 15% for new manufacturing firms.
  • Resulted in: ✔️ Higher investments. ✔️ Improved tax compliance. ✔️ Boost to Make in India.

🔹 Tax-to-GDP Ratio

Year Direct Tax-to-GDP Indirect Tax-to-GDP Total Tax-to-GDP
2022-23 ~6% ~5% ~11%

🔔 India’s tax-to-GDP ratio is lower than global peers (OECD average ~34%).


📚 Practice MCQ


1️⃣ Consider the following statements regarding Direct and Indirect Taxes:

  1. Direct taxes are regressive in nature.
  2. GST is an indirect tax.
  3. Direct taxes can be shifted from one person to another.

Which of the above statements are correct?

Options:
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 only
(c) 1, 2, and 3
(d) 2 and 3 only

Tap here for Answer
Answer: (b) 2 only
Explanation: Direct taxes are progressive and cannot be shifted.

2️⃣ Which body administers Income Tax in India?

Options:
(a) CBIC
(b) GST Council
(c) CBDT
(d) Finance Commission

Tap here for Answer
Answer: (c) CBDT
Explanation: Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) administers income tax.

3️⃣ Which of the following taxes were merged into GST?

  1. Excise Duty
  2. Service Tax
  3. Customs Duty

Options:
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1, 2, and 3
(d) 1 only

Tap here for Answer
Answer: (a) 1 and 2 only
Explanation: Customs duty is outside GST, but excise and service tax were subsumed.

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