GST Council

About:

    • Constitutional body under Article 279A by 101st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2016.
    • Composition (Article 279A(2)):
      • Chairperson- Union Finance Minister
      • Members- Union Minister of State in charge of Revenue or Finance and Minister in charge of Finance or Taxation or any other Minister nominated by each state government
    • It has its own secretariat.

Role:

    • To promote coordination at federal level.
    • It oversees the implementation of GST.
    • It is empowered to take decisions related to GST rates and rules.

Working:

AchievementsWeakness
 State as equal partners rather than fiscal neighbours. (Vijay Kelkar)
 Increased consensus building.
 GST reviewed multiple times to ensure effective implementation.
 Rationalization of GST by minimizing slabs and maximum rate at 28%.
 Alleged biasness of centre towards the states ruled by same party.
 Imposition of decisions on states rather than proper discussions and deliberations.
 Vague provisions in law about role, functions and powers of GST Council.
 Criticized by state as decisions taken by bureaucracy are imposed on states.

Relevance in promoting fiscal federalism:

    • Fosters consensus-based decision-making
    • Balancing state and central fiscal needs
    • Uniformity in taxation
    • Equal power to centre and states

 

Mohit Minerals vs Union of India, 2022

About:

Ø  Supreme Court ruled that GST Council recommendations are not binding.

Ø  Both the Union and State have equal powers to legislate on GST.

Ø  SC reinforces that States’ concerns must be heard, promoting a more cooperative federal structure.

 

Concerns:

Ø  Politicization at state level for not implementing GST Council’s decisions.

Ø  Possibility of State’s withdrawing from GST regime.

Ø  A legal challenge for implementation of GST.

Conflictual and combative federalism

    • It is characterized by increasing disagreements and confrontations between the central and state governments, often leading to tensions.
    • Some examples include:
    • The conflict between the West Bengal government and the central government regarding the deployment of central forces in state.
    • Tamil Nadu and some other states expressed reservations about National Education Policy 2020.
    • The friction between the state government of Maharashtra and the office of Governor, during formation of government in 2019.
    • States accuse the Centre of misusing agencies like the CBI, ED, and IT Department for political vendetta like CBI denied entry into West Bengal.

Inter-state river water dispute

Basics:

Causes for failure of dispute resolution:

    • Legal and Constitutional powers:
      • Centre has powers but has not intervened proactively.
      • Legal ambiguity related to water like groundwater and institutions dealing with it, relationship between ground water and surface water.
      • Ambiguity with respect to rights of state in terms of downstream or upstream state.
    • Institutional problems
      • Interventional of SC through Special leave petition results in States not constituting tribunals and directly going to SC.
      • It defeats the rationale of Article 262 and introduces legal technicality.
    • Political problems (Hydro-politics)
      • Disputes being politically motivated
      • When the party in state different from ruling party, matter becomes more political rather than technical.

Way forward:

    • A permanent tribunal with multi-member body and expertise, as recommended by Punchhi Commission.
    • Clear definition of terms to overcome structural and institutional problems.
    • Greater emphasis on dialogue, negotiation and consultation.
    • Bring Inter-state water disputes under interstate council (Article 263).
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