1. What do you understand by the term "E-commerce" under the GST Act? Can you give an example of an e-commerce transaction?
E-commerce represents a modern business model where transactions occur electronically rather than through physical exchanges. The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) in its FDI Policy defines e-commerce as buying and selling of goods and services including digital products over digital and electronic networks.
- Business-to-Business (B2B) transactions like those on platforms such as TradeIndia and Indiamart
- Business-to-Consumer (B2C) transactions like those on Flipkart and Amazon
- Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C) transactions like those on eBay
- Consumer-to-Business (C2B) transactions
E-Commerce Models in India
1. Marketplace Model
- The customer places an order on the e-commerce platform
- The platform notifies the vendor about the order
- The vendor directly raises an invoice to the customer and transfers ownership of goods
- The platform primarily serves as an intermediary, facilitating the transaction
2. Inventory-Based Model
- The e-commerce company maintains its own inventory
- It directly interfaces with customers
- It manages logistics and all aspects of the business
- The platform acts as both seller and facilitator
Regulatory Framework in India
- FDI Regulations:
- 100% Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is permitted under the automatic route for the marketplace model
- FDI is not permitted in the inventory-based model of e-commerce
- Control Limitations:
- A marketplace entity cannot exercise ownership or control over the inventory of sellers on its platform
- As you noted, if more than 25% of a vendor's purchases are from the marketplace entity or its group companies, the inventory is deemed to be controlled by the marketplace entity, effectively converting it to an inventory-based model
- Additional Restrictions:
- Entities in which an e-commerce firm or its group companies have a stake cannot sell on their online platform
- Marketplaces cannot mandate sellers to sell exclusively on their platforms
- Marketplaces must maintain a level playing field for all vendors
- Registration Requirement: Section 24(x) of the CGST Act mandates that every e-commerce operator required to collect TCS must register under GST, regardless of their turnover threshold.
- Supplier Registration: Similarly, Section 24(ix) requires that all suppliers making supplies through e-commerce operators (who are required to collect TCS) must register under GST, irrespective of their turnover.
Tax Collection at Source (TCS) under GST
Key aspects of TCS under GST:
- Calculation Base: TCS is calculated on the "net value of taxable supplies," which means the aggregate value of taxable supplies of goods or services made by all registered suppliers through the e-commerce operator, reduced by the value of returned supplies.
- Payment Timeline: The amount collected by the e-commerce operator must be paid to the government within 10 days after the end of the month in which the amount was collected.
- Return Filing: E-commerce operators must file a monthly return in Form GSTR-8 by the 10th of the following month, providing details of supplies made through their platform and the TCS collected.
- Credit Mechanism: The TCS amount paid by the operator can be claimed as credit by the actual supplier in their GST returns, reducing their tax liability.
Swiggy and Zomato GST Controversy
- Zomato received notices totaling approximately Rs 803 crore.
- Swiggy received notices of around Rs 350 crore.
- The tax authority argued that delivery charges should be taxed at 18% as a service.
- The platforms contended they were merely collecting fees that get paid to gig workers who provide the actual delivery service.
- Since individual gig workers typically fall below the Rs 20 lakh GST threshold, they would be exempt from GST.