News Business GST Council exempts cancer fighting drugs and medicines for rare diseases from GST tax I CHECK DETAILS

GST Council exempts cancer fighting drugs and medicines for rare diseases from GST tax I CHECK DETAILS

The panel, headed by the Union finance minister and comprising representatives of all states and UTs, also lowered the service tax levied on food and beverages consumed in cinema halls to 5 per cent.

Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman Image Source : PTI/PIXABAYUnion finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman

The all-powerful Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council on Tuesday decided to exempt cancer-fighting drugs and medicines for rare diseases from the levy.

The panel, headed by the Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman and comprising representatives of all states and UTs, also lowered the service tax levied on food and beverages consumed in cinema halls to 5 per cent and tweaked the definition of an SUV for attracting a cess over and above the GST rate.

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Now, the SUV definition will include only the length (4 meters and above), engine capacity (1,500 cc and more), and ground clearance (unladed clearance of 170 mm and more), she said.

On the tax levied on food and beverages served in cinema halls, the GST Council decided to levy 5 per cent GST, equivalent to the tax on restaurants, and not 18 per cent as is applicable on cinema halls.

28 per cent GST rate will now be levied on full value of gaming

She said the panel decided to levy a 28 per cent GST on the face value or payments made for playing online games, bets in casinos and on racing.

The tax rate was decided based on the recommendation of a group of ministers that looked at taxing casinos, horse racing and online gaming. The issue before the GoM (group of ministers) was whether to impose a 28 per cent GST on the face value of bets, or gross gaming revenue, or just on platform fees.

Sitharaman said the tax will be levied on the entire value. The tax on online gaming companies would be imposed without making any differentiation based on whether the games required skill or were based on chance.

To concerns of the gaming industry that tax on the entire value would kill the industry, she said, "we are not killing any industry" but gaming and gambling cannot be given a treatment lesser than essential industry.

"So the moral question was also discussed (at the Council meeting on Wednesday). It does not mean they be promoted more than essential industries," she said.

(With inputs from agency)

Also Read: 50th GST Council meet: What will be costlier, cheaper | Full list

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