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Dual rated dual GST
The long-awaited meeting of the Empowered Committee of State Finance Ministers (EC) was recently held in Delhi and, as was perhaps expected, the EC has come out with a recommendation on what can legitimately be called a “Dual Rated Dual GST System”. There were expectations in certain quarters that the dual GST would be a single rated one at the Federal and the State level for both goods and services. This has not been possible and the EC has now come out with a dual rate model for goods. There has been no mention of whether there will be a dual rate for services as well but the understanding and expectation is that services will be taxed at just the one rate, at the Federal and State levels respectively. This article discusses the dual rate dual GST model for goods in some detail.

Runu Ghosh sentenced 3 years imprisonment in DA case
Former deputy director general of Telecom department Runu Ghosh was today sentenced to three years rigourous imprisonment by a court here for amassing disproportionate assets to the tune of Rs 20.94 lakhs.

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Hero Elec plans JV with Canadian firm for lithium batteries
Hero Group subsidiary Hero Electric will soon set up a joint venture with Canada-based battery maker Electrovaya for manufacturing lithium ion batteries for electric vehicles.
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Growth-inflation to determine RBI's future action, says Gopinath

Concerned over food inflation spreading to other sectors through adverse expectations, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor Shyamala Gopinath has said the near-term policy challenges will depend on the evolving growth-inflation outcome that supports shifting the focus of the policy to managing recovery and containing inflation. - Banks" retail loan base shrinks - RBI hints at tightening money supply to curb inflation - OSCB gets banking licence from Reserve Bank - Leather units" order books improve - NSE brokers to approach Sebi, govt on extended trading hours - Positive returns on the cards, but no sharp surge “RBI has already started the first phase of ‘exit’ in its October 2009 policy statement, though primarily in terms of signaling the stance rather than affecting liquidity conditions or interest rates. The evolving growth-inflation conditions will dictate the future course of action by RBI,” Gopinath said in Bangalore on Monday. Headline inflation for November shot up to 4.8 per cent, mainly driven by food prices, as compared to 1.3 per cent in the previous month. Food inflation was 19.8 per cent in November. During the second quarter review of the annual policy, the central bank revised its inflation forecast to 6.5 per cent with an upward bias, above its comfort level of 5 per cent. “Given the dominance of the food price inflation in shaping the overall course of the inflation path, the policy challenge is to address supply constraints. Since supply shocks take time to taper off, there is risk that high inflation in essential commodities could affect inflation expectations over time and give rise to generalised inflation,” RBI said. On the growth front, though there are positive indicators like strong performance of the infrastructure sector and industrial recovery, the central bank has expressed concern over the deceleration of private consumption and investment demand, besides a deficient south-west monsoon. Continuous fall in non-food credit growth and negative growth in consumer durables and credit cards, suggesting possible continuation of deceleration in private consumption, were the downside risk for economic growth, RBI said. Though bank credit growth fell to 11 per cent as on December 4, from 26.3 per cent an year ago, RBI says credit may pick up in the remaining period of the financial year. “With the economy posting strong growth in the second quarter of the year, credit demand could be expected to pick up, which has already started in the recent fortnights,” Gopinath said. RBI also said there was a growing perception that India might experience surges in capital inflows again because of easy global liquidity conditions and superior growth prospects. “Once the recovery gains further strength and sustainability in India, return to the fiscal consolidation path will be critical to contain the constraints to the high growth path. With revival in demand for credit from the private sector, the significance of fiscal consolidation will become more apparent,” she said.


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