
This topic answers the “charging section” style questions:
In exams, you’ll often be asked to:
You should be able to:
In tax law language:
So, for GST:
Under GST, the taxable event is supply (not manufacture, not only sale). This is why GST applies to many types of transactions like sale, transfer, barter, exchange, license/lease, etc., when done in the course of business (concept).
Remember:
At a basic level, supply means making goods or services available to another person for a consideration (price) in the course of business (concept).
Examples (easy):
Note: The detailed legal definition includes more cases; you’ll learn “consideration”, “business”, and “schedule” items in later topics.
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In taxation (concept):
Write any three clear points (exam style).
Basic distinction (concept):
(Starter-level answer; detailed ITC effects are studied later.)
Goods and Services Tax (GST) is an indirect tax (or consumption tax) used in India on the supply of goods and services. It is a comprehensive, multistage, destination-based tax: comprehensive because it has subsumed almost all the indirect taxes except a few state taxes.
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This topic answers the “charging section” style questions:
In exams, you’ll often be asked to:
You should be able to:
In tax law language:
So, for GST:
Under GST, the taxable event is supply (not manufacture, not only sale). This is why GST applies to many types of transactions like sale, transfer, barter, exchange, license/lease, etc., when done in the course of business (concept).
Remember:
At a basic level, supply means making goods or services available to another person for a consideration (price) in the course of business (concept).
Examples (easy):
Note: The detailed legal definition includes more cases; you’ll learn “consideration”, “business”, and “schedule” items in later topics.
Students often confuse these terms. A starter distinction:
You don’t need deep ITC rules here—just keep the vocabulary clean for short answers.
A taxable person is a person who is registered or is required to be registered under GST and is liable to pay GST (subject to threshold and conditions) (concept).
Why this matters:
The simplest exam memory aid:
This decision depends on place of supply rules (next section).
GST is destination-based, so the law needs a rule to decide the destination/consumption location. That rule-set is called place of supply (concept).
Place of supply helps to:
Start
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v
Is there a SUPPLY? ---- No ---> GST not triggered (concept)
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Yes
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v
Identify PLACE OF SUPPLY (destination) (overview)
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v
Compare supplier state with place of supply
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+--> Same State/UT ---> Intra-state ---> CGST + SGST/UTGST
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+--> Different State/UT ---> Inter-state ---> IGST
Case 1 (Intra-state): Supplier in Karnataka sells goods to a buyer in Karnataka; place of supply is Karnataka → CGST + SGST apply (concept).
Case 2 (Inter-state): Supplier in Gujarat supplies services to a recipient in Maharashtra; place of supply is Maharashtra → IGST applies (concept).
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GST is charged when there is a supply of goods/services by a taxable person (concept). After identifying supply, we decide which tax applies using place of supply.
Conclusion: GST liability is determined by supply + taxable person + place of supply rules, which decide CGST/SGST vs IGST (concept).