tax Flashcards
custom duty
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Main features of customs duty
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Merits of Customs Duty
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Disadvantages of Customs Duty
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Types of Customs Duties –
Basic customs duty, additional customs duty for excise duty, additional customs duty for sales tax, safeguard duty, protective duty, countervailing duty, anti-dumping duty, and export duty.
Basic Customs Duty
Basic Customs Duty is levied under section 12 of the
Customs Act. The rates at which duties of customs shall be levied are specified in
the First and Second Schedules to the Customs Tariff Act, 1975.
additional customs duty for excise duty
This duty is popularly known as
a countervailing duty because it is levied to counterbalance the excise duty in India for
such imported items. Under Section 3(1) of the Customs Tariff Act, an additional
duty on goods imported into the country is levied. The rate of this duty is equal to the
excise duty on like articles produced or manufactured in India.
Additional Customs Duty for sales tax
Special Additional Duty is levied
under section 3(5) of the Customs Tariff Act accordingly, any article which is
imported into India shall in addition, be liable to a special additional duty, which
shall be levied at a rate of 4% having regard to the maximum sales tax, local tax or
any other charges for the time being leviable on a like article on its sale or purchase
in India.
Safeguard
Central Government is empowered to impose safeguard duty in
specified imported goods if central Government is satisfied that the goods are being
imported in large quantities an under such conditions that they are causing or
threatening to cause serious injury to domestic industry. Such duty is permissible
under WTO agreement. The only condition under WTO is that it should not
discriminate between imports from different countries having Most Favoured Nation
(MFN) status.
. Protective duties
– Section 6 of the Customs Tariff Act empowers the Central
Government to levy a protective duty based on a recommendation made by the Tariff
Commission.
Countervailing duty
– If a country pays any subsidy (directly or indirectly) to the
exporters for exporting goods to India, Central Government can imposed
Countervailing duty upto the amount of subsidy cannot be ascertained, provisional
duty can be collected and after final determination, difference may be refunded. Such
imposition should be by way of a notification
Anti-Dumping duty
– Dumping means export of an article from any country or
territory to India at less than its normal value i.e. when the prices at which the goods
are exported to India are less than the comparable price for the like product when
destined for consumption in the domestic market of the exporting country. Anti
dumping duty is imposed for offsetting the adverse effects of increased imports,
subsidized imports or dumped imports.
Export duty
– At present, 15% Export Duty is levied only on hides, skins and
leather, and duty of 10% is levied on snake skins, hides, skins and leathers, and fur
lamb skins (No export duty is levied on hides, skins and leather of finished leather of
goat, sheep and bovine animals and their young ones). There is no export duty on any
other product.
Prohibition on Import and Export
denotes prohibition on the import and export of specified goods.
Reasons for prohibiting imports and exports –
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