Taxation of Composite and works contract under GST ACT, 2017
1. The works contract (Including any transfer of property in
goods in the execution of contract) related to immovable property shall be treated as supply of service.
Works contract as well as sale of under construction apartment shall be
subjected to GST. Currently service tax charge on 40% of project value, thus
the effective service tax rate is 6%, similarly effective vat rate around 1%
charge on project value in different state. In GST work contract service shall
be taxable @ 18%.
2. The sale of under
constructed property shall be liable to GST @ 12 %.( including value of land).
Presently tax effective tax rate is 4.5% (15% of 30% value of project including
land).
3. On other hand full credit of
input tax is allowed comparing to current regime where input credit is not
allowed, therefore it seem beneficial to real estate industries.
4. Now, question arises in mind
what will be treatment of composite contract related to movable property, the
concept of composite supply and mix supply has been insert in GST Bill, 2017.
5. Once it is clear that work
contract will be tax in GST as service, the distinction between goods and
service is relevant only for Place of supply and Point of Taxation.
6.
The transaction of sale/ purchase of immovable property shall be
constitutionally outside the ambit of GST and shall be liable to stamp duty and
property tax under state law.
A transaction of works
contract, is now, sometimes, taxed twice; firstly as sale by the State
Government and secondly as service by the Central Government.
Works contracts can straddle
two taxable activities as per the current law. There is of course supply of
goods. Then, due to the very nature of the contract, there is supply of
services.
As
of now, the supply of goods is taxable in the form of Value Added Tax (VAT), while the services
element is taxable as service tax.
In
law, there have been differing views of the Supreme Court and the High Court’s
on the applicability of this theory. The final word of the Apex court in BSNL and Others Vs. Union of India (SC 2006) was that the aspects doctrine
pertains to legislative competence and not the application of taxation on the
same components of a transaction.
Recently
the judgment of Delhi High Court Judgment in case of Suresh Kumar Bansal Vs UOI
& others in 2016 has come
which struck down the levy of service tax on work contract where land is also
transfer, in lack of valuation provision and Supreme court of India in case of L&T, 2017 in which it was held that that composite
contract/ work contracts was not taxable prior to 01.06. 2007.
At present, State VAT laws have
specific provisions for taxing works contracts. To avoid taxing the services
element, these laws and associated rules provide for either separation of labor
and materials or percentage deductions in transaction value. Another method is
of prescription of a lower rate of tax in a composition/ lump-sum scheme for
works contracts. The service tax law has also provided for similar treatment to
avoid taxation of sale of goods as part of a works contract.
The overarching concept in a GST is one of supply which subsumes
the concepts of sale of goods, provision of services and manufacture. In GST Model, goods as well as services will
be taxed on a uniform rate. Therefore
the dispute whether a transaction is subjected to VAT or Service tax comes to
end.
After article 246 of the
Constitution, the following article shall be inserted, namely:—
“246A. (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.
(2) Parliament has exclusive
power to make laws with respect to goods and services tax where the supply of
goods, or of services, or both takes place in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce.
In article 366 of the
Constitution,—
(i) after clause (12), the
following clause shall be inserted, namely:—
‘(12A)
“goods and services tax” means any tax on supply of goods, or services or both
except taxes on the supply of the alcoholic liquor for human consumption;
All supply of goods or services
or both will attract CGST (to be levied by Centre) and SGST (to be levied by
State) unless kept out of purview of GST. GST will be applicable even when the
transaction involves supply of both (goods and services). In effect, woks
contracts will also attract GST. As GST will be applicable on supply ‘the
erstwhile taxable events such as manufacture‘, sale‘, provision of services
etc. will lose their relevance.
For taxing a transaction in
GST, two things are important one is supply and other is goods or service or
both
Section 7
Supply includes—
(a) all forms of supply of
goods and/or services such as sale, transfer, barter, exchange, license,
rental, lease or disposal made or agreed to be made for a consideration by a
person in the course or furtherance of business,
(b) Importation of services, for
a consideration whether or not in the course or furtherance of business, and
(c) An activity specified in
Schedule I, made or agreed to be made without a consideration and
(d) The activity is to be
treated as a supply of goods or a supply of services as referred in schedule
II.
(2) Notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-section (1),
(a) activities or transactions
specified in schedule III; or
(b) activities or transactions
undertaken by the Central Government, a State Government or any local authority
in which they are engaged as public authorities, shall be treated neither as a
supply of goods nor a supply of services.
(3) Subject to sub-section (1)
and sub-section (2), the Central or a State Government may, upon recommendation
of the Council, specify, by notification, the transactions that are to be
treated as—
(a) a supply of goods and not
as a supply of services; or
(b) a supply of services and
not as a supply of goods.
(a) a composite supply
comprising two or more supplies, one of which is a principal supply, shall be
treated as a supply of such principal supply;
(b) a mixed supply comprising two or more supplies shall be
treated as supply of that particular supply which attracts the highest rate of
tax.
Section 2(56)
“Goods” means every kind of
movable property other than money and securities but includes actionable claim,
growing crops, grass and things attached to or forming part of the land which
are agreed to be severed before supply or under a contract of supply;
Section 2(102)
“Services’’ means anything
other than goods, money
and securities but Includes activity relating to use of money/ conversion by
cash/ any other mode from one form, currency or denomination, to another form,
currency or denomination for which a separate consideration is charged.
GST Scheme in relation to
Composite contracts as follow;
Section 2(30)
“Composite supply” means a supply made by a taxable
person to a recipient consisting two or more supplies of goods or services, or
any combination thereof, which are naturally bundled and supplied in
conjunction with each other in the ordinary course of business, one of which is
a principal supply;
Section 2(90)
“Principal supply” means the supply of goods or services which constitutes the
predominant element of a composite supply and to which any other supply forming
part of that composite supply is ancillary.
Example: Indian
Airlines provides passenger transportation service. They also supply food on
board to passengers. Supply of transportation services would be the principal
supply and the service as a whole would qualify as composite supply.
Section
2(74)
“Mixed supply”
means two or more individual supplies of goods or services, or any combination
thereof, made in conjunction with each other by a taxable person for a single
price where such supply does not constitute a composite supply
Examples: Supply
of soap bars where soap boxes are given free of cost; supply of wheat for which
a bottle of honey is given free of cost.
In
the above example of honey being supplied with wheat, both wheat and honey will
be taxed at the rate of tax applicable for honey (being commodity taxed at
higher rate).
Job Work under GST– read sec 2(68) with schedule II
2(68) “job work” means any treatment or process undertaken by a
person on goods belonging to another registered person and the expression “job
worker” shall be construed accordingly;
Schedule II
ACTIVITIES TO BE TREATED AS
SUPPLY OF GOODS OR SUPPLY OF SERVICES
3. Treatment or process
Any treatment or process which
is applied to another person’s goods is a supply of services.
Note: Job work always be taxable as a service even if it is a
composite contract as specified in schedule II.
The provision of declared
service continue without any modification, in GST law also, for removing any
ambiguity of taxation of work contract, the work contract and sale of under constructed
property shall be subjected to tax as service under GST. Schedule II define the
matters to be treated as supply of goods or service and Sec 2(119) defines the
work contract.
Schedule II
MATTERS TO BE TREATED AS SUPPLY OF GOODS OR SERVICES
5. The following shall be treated as “supply of service”
(a)……………….
(b) Construction of a complex, building, civil structure or a part
thereof, including a complex or building intended for sale to a buyer, wholly
or partly, except where the entire consideration has been
received after issuance of completion certificate, where required, by the competent authority or before its first occupation, whichever is earlier.
Explanation.- For the purposes of this clause-
(1) the expression “competent
authority” means the Government or any authority authorized to issue completion
certificate under any law for the time being in force and in case of
non-requirement of such certificate from such authority, from any of the
following, namely:–
(i) an architect registered with the Council of Architecture
constituted under the Architects Act, 1972; or
(ii) a chartered engineer registered with the Institution of
Engineers (India); or
(iii) a licensed surveyor of the respective local body of the city
or town or village or development or planning authority;
(2) the expression “construction” includes additions, alterations,
replacements or remodeling of any existing civil structure;
6. Composite supply
The following composite supplies shall be treated as a supply of
services, namely:—
(a) works contract as defined
in clause (119) of section 2; and
(b)
supply, by way of or as part of any service or in any other manner whatsoever,
of goods, being food or any other article for human consumption or any drink
(other than alcoholic liquor for human consumption), where such supply or
service is for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration.
Schedule III
ACTIVITIES OR TRANSACTIONS WHICH SHALL BE TREATED NEITHER AS A
SUPPLY OF GOODS NOR A SUPPLY OF SERVICES
5.
Sale of land and, subject to clause (b) of
paragraph 5 of Schedule II, sale of building.
Section 2 ((119) “works contract” means a contract for
building, construction, fabrication, completion, erection, installation,
fitting out, improvement, modification, repair, maintenance, renovation,
alteration or commissioning of any immovable property wherein transfer of property in goods
(whether as goods or in some other form) is involved in the execution of such
contract;
The work contract as well as sale of under construction property
shall be taxable as Supply of
service, which also include the value of goods
which is transfer in execution of work contract. Schedule II specifies that works contracts
will be treated as supply of services and accordingly, provisions of time of
supply and place of supply of services shall apply to works contract
transactions.
Contract for Work Vs Contract
of Sale
It
shall be notable that if we constructed immovable property on its own and later
on sale to other person then it is a contract for sale of immovable property and not work contract
and shall be out of GST ambit, constitutionally sale and purchase of property, subject to clause (b) of para 5 of schedule II, shall
be matter of state and liable to stamp duty and property tax.
Now it is very clear from the Schedule III paragraph 5, that sale of constructed property shall not be liable for GST.
Negative List of Credit;
Sec 17(4) notwithstanding
anything contained in sub-section (1) of section 16 and subsection (1), (2),
(3) and (4) of section 18, input tax credit shall not be available in respect
of the following:
(a) …………………
(b)………………
(c)
Works contract services when supplied for construction of immovable property, other than plant and machinery, except where it is an input service
for further supply of works contract service;
(d)
goods or services received by a taxable person for construction of an immovable
property on his own account, other than plant and machinery, even when used in course or furtherance of
business;
Explanation 1.- For the purpose of this clause, the
word “construction” includes re- construction, renovation, additions or
alterations or repairs, to the extent of capitalization, to the said immovable
property.
Explanation 2.- ‘Plant and Machinery’ means apparatus,
equipment, machinery, pipelines, telecommunication tower fixed to earth by
foundation or structural support that are used for making outward supply and
includes such foundation and structural supports but excludes land, building or
any other civil structures.
Note: Construction of building
on his own account include the case where building has
construct by builder for own purpose.i.e not intended for sale.
Note: Credit has been block at end point, this is also logical as
NO GST applicable on sale of immovable property, therefore no ITC allowed.
Conclusion:
By
treating work contract as service provide the complete solution of continues
dispute arise in past between goods or service. Once it is clear that
work contract will be tax in GST as service, the distinction between goods and
service is relevant only for Place of supply and Point of Taxation.







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