Incentives to Attracts
GST Rules Maha Advance Ruling Authority
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Incentive is not Trade Discount
The
Maharashtra bench of the GST-Appellate Authority for Advance Rulings (AAAR) has
held that the incentive earned by the reseller, from a US entity, is not in the
nature of a ‘trade discount’. In other words, the reseller will have to bear a goods
and services tax (GST) of 18% on such an incentive, which was based on attaining
quarterly targets on eligible Intel products.
The
US entity was selling goods through its distributors. The appellant — MEK Peripherals,
a private company — purchased goods from these distributors for onward sale to retailers.
It submitted to the AAAR that there is no bar under GST laws or under common law
that the trade discount should flow from the immediate vendor only, as it can also
flow directly from the original manufacturer (US entity).
The
AAAR bench upheld the earlier ruling of the authority for advance rulings and on
various grounds it held the incentive was not a trade discount. “The primary reason
was that for incentives to qualify as a trade discount, an agreement between the
seller (distributor) and the purchasing party (MEK Peripherals, the reseller) is
a prerequisite. Here, the agreement was between the US manufacturer and the reseller,”
explained chartered accountant Sunil Gabhawalla.
The
appellant also submitted that if it was not treated as a trade discount but a supply
of services, it should qualify as an export of services. This was not upheld, as
in view of the AAAR the place of supply — of the marketing services as a reseller
— was in India.
Gabhawalla added that the conclusion of the AAAR on
the place of supply could indeed be challenged. Having said so, the facts of this
case are not common as, typically, the incentive to the reseller flows from an Indian
distributor. In which case, the reseller typically treads a cautious path and levies
GST on the distributor, who in turn claims credit of the said tax.