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Constitutional Provisions, Part XII of the Constitution relates to "Finances ete. " At the very outset Art. 265 lays down that no tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law. That authority has to be found in the three lists in the Seventh Schedule, subject to the provisions of Part XI which deals with the relations between the Union and the States, particularly Chapter I relating to legislative relations and distribution of legislative powers, with special reference to Art. 246 Under that Article the legislature of'a State has exclusive powers to make laws with respect to the matters enumerated in List I] and Parliament and the Legislature of a State have powers to make laws with respect to the matters enumerated in List III (the Concurrent List), and notwithstanding those two lists, Parliament has the exclusive power to make laws with respect to any of the matters enumerated in List I (the Union List). Parliament also has power to make laws with respect to any of the matters enumerated in the State List with respect to any part of the territory of India which is not included in a State. By Art. 248 Parliament has been vested with exclusive power to make laws with respect to any matters not enumerated in the State list or the Concurrent list, including the power of making a law imposing a tax not mentioned in either of those lists. In short, though the States have been vested with exclusive powers of legislation with respect to the matters enumerated in List II, the authority of Parliament to legislate in respect of taxation in List | is equally exclusive. The scheme of distribution of powers of legislation, with particular reference to taxation, is that Parliament has the exclusive power to legislate imposing taxes on income other than agricultural income (Entry 82); duties of customs including export duties (Entry 83); duties of excise on tobacco and other goods manufactured or produced in India, except alcoholic liquors for human consumption and opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic drugs and narcotics, which by entry 51 of List II is vested in the State legislature (Entry 84). Similarly, the State legislatures have the power to impose taxes on agricultural income (Entry 46), taxes on lands and buildings (Entry 49) and duties of excise on alcoholic liquors and opium etc., manufactured or produced in the State and countervailing duties at the same or lower rates on similar goods manufactured or produced elsewhere in India (Entry 51). It would, thus appear that whereas all taxes on income other than agricultural income are within the exclusive power of the Union, taxed on agricultural income only are reserved for the States. All customs duties, including export duties, relating as they do to transactions of import into or export out of the country are within the powers of Parliament. The States are not concerned with those. They are only concerned with taxes on the entry of goods in local areas for consumption, use or sale therein, covered by entry 52 in the State List. Except for duties of exercise on alcoholic liquors and opium and other narcotic drugs, all duties of excise are leviable by Parliament. Hence, it ean be said that by and large, taxes on income, duties of customs and duties of excise are within the exclusive power of legislation by Parliament. Those exclusive powers of taxation, vested in Parliament, have to be correlated with the exclusive power of Parliament to legislate with respect to: trade and commerce with foreign countries; import and export duties across customs frontiers; definition of customs frontiers (Entry 41); inter-State trade and commerce (Entry 42). As the regulation of trade and commerce with foreign countries, as also inter- State, is the exclusive responsibility of the Union, Parliament has the power to legislate with respect to those matters, alongwith the power to legislate by way of imposition of duties of customs in respect of import and export of goods as also to impose duties of excise on the manufacture or production in any part of India in respect of goods other than alcoholic liquors and opium, etc. Further, the imposition of customs duties or excise duties may be either (1) with a view to raise revenue or (2) to regulate trade and commerce, both in land and foreign, or (3) both to regulate trade and commerce and to raise revenue. Disti FRev. Though various taxes have been separately included in List I or List Il and there is no overlapping in the matter of taxation between the two Lists and there is no tax provided in the Concurrent List except stamp duties (Item 44), the constitution embodies an elaborate scheme for the distribution of revenue between the Union and the States in Part XII, with respect to taxes imposed in List I. The scheme of the Constitution with respect to financial relations between the Union and the States, devised by the Constitution makers, is such as to ensure an equitable distribution of the revenue between the center and the States. All revenue received by the Government of India normally form part of the Consolidated Fund of India, and all revenues received by the Government of a State shall form part of the Consolidated Fund of the State. This general rule is subject to the provision of the Chapter I of Part XII in which occur Arts. 266 to 277. Though stamp duties and duties of excise on medicinal and toilet preparations which are covered by the Union List are to be levied by the Government of India, they have to be collected by the States within which such duties are leviable and are not to form part of the Consolidated Fund of India, but stands assigned to the State which has collected them (Art. 268). Similarly, duties and taxes levied and collected by the Union in respect of Succession Duty, Estate Duty, Terminal Taxes on goods and passengers carried by Railway, sea or air, taxes on rail fares and freights, etc. as detailed in Art. 269 shall be assigned to the States and distributed amongst them in accordance with the principles of distribution as may be formulated by Parliamentary legislation, as laid down in clause (2) of Art. 269. Art. 270 provides that taxes on income, other than agricultural income shall be levied and collected by the Government of India and distributed between the Union and the States. The taxes and duties levied by the Union and collected by the Union or by the States as contemplated by Arts. 268, 269 and 270 and distributed amongst the States shall not form part of the Consolidated Fund of India. Further Excise duties which are levied and collected by the Government of India and which form part of the Consolidated Fund of India may also be distributed amongst the States, in accordance with the principles laid down by Parliament in accordance with the provisions of Art, 272. Express provision has been made by Article 273 in respect of grants-in-aid of the revenue of the States of Assam, Bihar, Orissa and West Bengal in lieu of assignment of any share of the net proceeds of export duty on jute and jute products. Further a safeguard has been laid down in Art. 274 that no bill or amendment which imposes or varies any tax or duty in which States are interested or which affects the principles of distribution of duties or taxes amongst the States as laid down in Arts, 268 - 273 shall be introduced or moved in either House of Parliament except on the recommendation of the President. Parliament has also been authorised to lay down that certain sums may be charged on the Consolidated Fund of India in each year by way of grants-in-aid of the revenues of such States as it may determined to be in need of assistance. This aid may be different for different States, according to their needs, with particular reference to schemes of development for the purposes indicated in Art. 275(1). Provision has also been made by Art. 280 for the appointment by the President of a Finance Commission to make recommendations to the President as to the distribution amongst the Union and the States of the net proceeds of taxes and duties as aforesaid, and as to the principles which should govern the grants-in- aid of the revenue of the States out of the Consolidated Fund of India. Part XII of the Constitution therefore has made elaborate provisions as to the revenues of the Union and of the States, and as to how the Union will share the proceeds of duties and taxes imposed by it and collected either by the Union or by the States. Sources of revenue which have been allocated to the Union are not meant entirely for the purposes of the Union but have to be distributed according to the principles laid down by Parliamentary legislation as contemplated by the Articles aforesaid. Thus all the taxes and duties levied by the Union and collected either by the Union or by the States do not form part of the Consolidated Fund of India but many of those taxes and duties are distributed amongst the States and form part of the Consolidated Fund of the States. Even those taxes and duties which constitute the Consolidated Fund of India may be used for the purposes of supplementing the revenues of the States in accordance with their needs. The question of the distribution of the aforesaid taxes and duties amongst the States and the principles governing them, as also the principles governing grants-in-aid of revenues of the States out of the Consolidated Fund of India, are matters which have to be decided by a high- powered Finance Commission, which is a responsible body designated to determine those matters in an objective way. The financial arrangement and adjustment suggested in Part XII of the Constitution has been designed by the Constitution-makers in such a way as to ensure an equitable distribution of the revenues between the Union and the States, even though those revenues may be derived from taxes and duties: imposed by the Union and collected by it or through the agency of the States. The powers of taxation assigned to the Union are based mostly on considerations of convenience of imposition and collection and not with a view to allocate them solely to the Union; that is to say, it was not intended that all taxes and duties imposed by the Union Parliament should be expended on the activities of the center and not on the activities of the States. Sources of revenue allocated to the States, like taxes on land and other kind of immovable property, have been allocated to the States alone. The Constitution makers realised the fact that those sources of revenue allocated to the States may not be sufficient for their purposes and that the Government of India would have to subsidise their welfare activities out of the revenues levied and collected by the Union Government. Realising the limitations on the financial resources of the States and the growing needs of the community in a welfare State, the Constitution has made, specific provisions empowering Parliament to set aside a portion of its revenues, whether forming part of the Consolidated Fund of India or not, for the benefit of the States, not in stated proportions but according to their needs. It is clear, therefore, that considerations which may apply to those Constitutions which recognise water-tight compartments between the revenues of the federating States and those of the federation do not apply to our Constitution which does not postulate any conflict of interest between the Union on the one hand and the States on the other. The resources of the Union Government are not meant exclusively for the benefit of the Union activities; they are also meant for subsidising the activities of the States in accordance with their respective needs, irrespective of the amounts collected by or through them. In other words, the Union and the States together form one organic whole for the purposes of utilisation of the resources of the territories of India as a whole. @ thehindu.com < Explained | How the status of Jammu and Kashmir is being changed August 05, 2019 04:56 pm | Updated August 06, 2019 10:08 am IST The Union Home Minister introduced two statutory resolutions, one, to recommend that the President issue a notification rendering Article 370 inoperative, and two, to accept the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Bill K. VENKATARAMANAN awaharlal Nehru with Sheikh Abdullah Jammu and Kashmir enjoyed special status under Article 370 of the Constitution of India. This Article describes it as a temporary provision and that it will cease to be operative if the President issues a public notification to that effect. However, prior to that, a recommendation is necessary from the Constituent Assembly of Jammu and Kashmir. As a result of Article 370, Jammu and Kashmir had its own Constitution, and all laws passed by Parliament will not be applicable to the State, unless the State government gives its concurrence. The President is empowered to decide what provisions of the Constitution of India would be applicable to the State and what are the exceptions, but with the State government’s concurrence. The Constitution (Application to Jammu and Kashmir) Order, 1954, lists the Articles and provisions that apply to J&K. Further, the President also listed a set of exceptions under Article 35A of the Constitution (this Article does not figure in the text of the Constitution of India, but figures only in the J&K’s Constitution). While the 1954 presidential order constituted a founding legal document for Jammu and Kashmir, Article 35A protected the exclusive laws — such as the bar on outsiders buying property and women marrying non-Kashmiris losing their property tights - of the State. These special measures can be altered only on the recommendation of the Sadar-i-Riyasat of Jammu and Kashmir, acting on the advice of the Council of Ministers, or by the “Constituent Assembly” of that State. As of now, there is no “Constituent Assembly”. This is how the Modi government changed Kashmir's special status overnight: 1, President Ram Nath Kovind issued a presidential order under Article 370 (1) of the Pheer HP Victus enone eer Gaming Laptop 370,199 This is how the Modi government changed Kashmir's special status overnight: 1. President Ram Nath Kovind issued a presidential order under Article 370 (1) of the Constitution. This clause enables the President to specify the matters which are applicable to Jammu and Kashmir. As it can be issued only with the Jammu and Kashmir government’s concurrence, the notification uses the words “with the concurrence of the Government of the State of Jammu and Kashmir”. This presumably means the Governor, who is now administering the State under President’s Rule, has given his concurrence on behalf of the State government. 2. The Order supersedes the 1954 Order. This effectively means that all the provisions that formed the basis of a separate “Constitution” for Jammu and Kashmir stand abrogated. The Order declares that all the provisions of the Constitution of India, shall apply to Jammu and Kashmir too. 3. However, some special measures were still needed for the scrapping of Article 370 altogether. Therefore, a few clauses were added to Article 367 of the Constitution. @ thehindu.com < 3. However, some special measures were still needed for the scrapping of Article 370 altogether. Therefore, a few clauses were added to Article 367 of the Constitution. Article 367 contains “Interpretations”. They contain guidance on how to read or interpret some provisions. The new clauses say, when applicable to Jammu and Kashmir, all references to the “‘Sadar-i-Riyasat’, acting on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers, will be construed as teferences to the Governor of Jammu and Kashmir. All references to the State government shall mean “the Governor’. And most importantly, the reference to the “Constituent Assembly” in a proviso to Article 370 (3) has been amended to read “Legislative Assembly of the State”. This is the proviso that says the President can declare that Article 370 is no more operative only on the recommendation of the Constituent Assembly. As there is no Constituent Assembly in existence now, there is no body to “recommend” the demise of Article 370. Therefore, the State Assembly has to play that tole. HP Victus Gaming Laptop 370,199 The issuance of the Presidential Order has set the stage for the abrogation of Article 370. Here, the government has made use of the fact that Jammu and Kashmir is under President's Rule. Under the Proclamation issued under Article 356 of the Constitution, by which the President takes over the administration of a State, Parliament usually performs the legislative functions of the State Assembly. For instance, when a State is under Central rule, the budget allocations for that State are voted in Parliament in the absence of the Assembly. The Union Home Minister introduced two statutory resolutions, one, to recommend that the President issue a notification rendering Article 370 inoperative, and two, to accept the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Bill. The passage of the former resolution will enable the President to declare that Article 370 has ceased to operate. The Bill envisages converting Jammu and Kashmir into a Union Territory with a legislature, and carve out Ladakh region as another Union Territory, but without a legislature, HP Views a Gaming Laptop 270,199 GST Council: Constitution, Functions Quorum, Decision-making GST council is a governing body to regulate and direct each and every step for the Implementation of goods and service tax in the nation with decisions over tax rates and further implementation measures, GST council assimilates suggestions and regulation into one form and improvises the changes formally through notifications and circulars with its departments and finance ministry GST Council Constitution According to Article 279A, itis on the part of the president to give the order to constitute the council of GST within the 60 days from the 12th September 2016 which is already notified by the Government Following are the designated personnel, who will form the GST Council together: The Union Finance Minister who will be the CHAIRMAN of the council; The Union Minister of State in charge of Revenue or Finance who will be the MEMBER of council; + ONE MEMBER from each state who Is Minister in charge of Finance or Taxation or any other Minister and anyone of them will be VICE CHAIRMAN of the GST Council who will be mutually elected by them. Note: The Secretary of Revenue Department wil work as EX-Officio Secretary to the GST Council, The Chairperson of Central Board of Excise and Customs willbe the permanent invitee in all the proceedings of the GST Council who wil not have the voting rights. Quorum and Decision-Making + For a valid meeting of the members of GST Council, at least 50 percent of the total number of the member should be present at the meeting + Every Decision made during the meeting should be supported by at least 75 percent majority of the weighted votes of the members who are present and voting at the meeting. In “article 279A" a principle is there which divides the total weighted vote cast between Central Government and State Government © The vote of Central Goverment shail have the weighted of one-third of the total votes © The votes of State Government shall have the weighted of two third of the total votes, cast in the meeting ‘+ Any act, decision or proceedings shail not be declared as invalid on the basis of any remaining deficiency at the time of establishment of GST Council ie. if there is any vacancy remained in the Council it there is any defect in the constitution of Council it there is any defect in the appointment of a person as a member of the Council © ifthere is any procedural non-compliance. Functions of the GST Council The GST council will be supposed to make the recommendation to the Union and State on the following matters:- (On subsuming of various taxes, cess, and surcharge in GST. Details of services and goods that will be subjected to GST or which will be exempted from GsT. (On Threshold limit below which, services and goods will be exempted from GST. (On GST rates Including floor rate with bands of GST and any special rate for time being to arrange resources to face any natural calamity. Making special provisions for the following states: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Jammu and Kashmir, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tripura, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand. ‘On model law on GST, Principal of levy of GST and the principals which will govern the place of Supply. Consolidated Fund, Contingency Fund, and Public Account. ‘The Annual Financial Statement or the Statement of the Estimated Receipts and Expenditure of the Government of India in respect of each financial year is popularly known as the Budget. Till 2016, the Budget was presented to Lok Sabha in two parts, 1 ely, the Railway Budget pertaining to Railway Finance and the General Budget which gave an overall picture of the financial position of the Government of India, excluding the Railways. Since the year 2017-18, with the merger of the Railway Budget with the General Budget, a single document titled ‘Union Budget’ is presented by the Minister of Finance The Budget shows the receipts and payments of government under three parts in which government accounts are kept i) Consolidated Fund, ii) Contingency Fund, and iii) Public Account. Consolidated Fund of India All revenues received by the government, loans raised by it, and also its receipts from recoveries of loans granted by it form the Consolidated Fund, All expenditure of the government is incurred from the Consolidated Fund and no amount can be withdrawn from the fund without authorisation from the Parliament. Contingency Fund Occasions may arise when the government may have to meet urgent unfor een expenditure pending authorisation from the Parliament. The Contingency Fund is placed at the disposal of the President to incur such expenditure. Parliamentary approval for such expenditure and for withdrawal of an equivalent amount from the Consolidated Fund is subsequently obtained and the amount spent from Contingency Fund is recouped to the fund. The corpus of the fund authorised by the Parliament, at present, is Rs. 50 crore. Public Account Besides the normal receipts and expenditure of the government which relate to the Consolidated Fund, certain other transactions enter government accounts, in respect of which the government acts more as a banker; for example, transactions relating to Provident Funds, small savings collections, other deposits ete. The money thus received are kept in the Public Account and the connected disbursements are also made therefrom. Generally speaking, Public Account funds do not belong to the government and have to be back some time or the other to the persons and authorities who deposited them. Parliamentary authorisation for payments from the Public Account is, therefore, not required.

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