Back to Council Meetings
35th GST Council Meeting — 21 June 2019

35th GST Council Meeting — New FM's First & NAA Extension

Nirmala Sitharaman's first GST Council meeting as Finance Minister. Extended Anti-Profiteering Authority by 2 years, deferred new return system trial, and clarified cinema hall ITC rules.

21 Jun 2019
Date
New Delhi
Location
NAA Extended
Key Theme
1st as Chair
FM's Meeting

Key Decisions

Anti-Profiteering

National Anti-Profiteering Authority (NAA) extended by 2 years (until Nov 2021). 170+ cases pending resolution. Builders, FMCG companies found guilty of not passing rate cut benefits.

New FM's Agenda

Nirmala Sitharaman's FIRST meeting as GST Council chair (took over from Arun Jaitley who passed away Aug 2019). Focus on simplification and compliance burden reduction.

Returns

New simplified return system (ANX-1, ANX-2, RET-1) trial from October 2019 — large taxpayers first. Current GSTR-1/3B to continue until full transition.

Rate Changes

Solar power generating systems/devices: Uniform 5% rate (earlier parts taxed at different rates). Defence goods: Exempt for direct import by Ministry of Defence.

Cinema

ITC on food/beverages in cinema halls clarified — if supplied as part of composite supply (bundled with ticket), ITC available. If sold separately at food counter, normal restaurant rules apply (5% no ITC).

Compliance

Annual return GSTR-9 deadline extended to August 31, 2019 (from June 30). Reconciliation statement GSTR-9C also extended. First-time filing challenges acknowledged.

Sabka Vishwas

Central government announced 'Sabka Vishwas (Legacy Dispute Resolution) Scheme' in Budget 2019 — Council noted. Resolves pre-GST Service Tax/Excise disputes with 40-70% waiver.

Revenue

FY19 average monthly collection ₹97,100 Cr (below ₹1L Cr target). States express concern. Council assures compensation will continue without delay.

Rate Changes — 35th Meeting

Item/ServiceFromToImpact
Solar power generating systemsMixed (5-18%)Uniform 5%Clean energy push — removes classification disputes
Defence goods (MoD imports)5-18%Exempt₹3.18L Cr defence budget — import cost savings
Sanitary napkinsExemptExempt (reaffirmed)Confirmed zero-rated — women's health priority
Electric vehicles12%12% (retained)Cut to 5% deferred to next meeting (36th)
Keystone for bridges/roads18%12%Infrastructure development support
Stone/marble/granite blocks12%12% (uniform)Classification clarity — earlier disputes resolved

Frequently Asked Questions

Why was the 35th meeting significant — Nirmala Sitharaman's first as chair?
The 35th meeting (June 21, 2019) was the FIRST GST Council meeting chaired by Nirmala Sitharaman, who became Finance Minister on May 31, 2019: CONTEXT: (1) Arun Jaitley had chaired all 34 previous meetings since GST Council formation in September 2016; (2) Jaitley was unwell (eventually passed away August 24, 2019); (3) Piyush Goyal had briefly held interim charge; (4) Sitharaman inherited a system facing: revenue shortfall, compliance fatigue, states demanding compensation, pending return simplification. WHAT SHE SIGNALED AT 35TH MEETING: (1) 'Simplification over disruption' — no major rate changes, focused on compliance ease; (2) Extended deadlines for annual returns (acknowledged filing difficulties); (3) Maintained consultative approach with states; (4) Continued Jaitley's consensus-building tradition. HER SUBSEQUENT IMPACT: Under Sitharaman (35th meeting to 55th+), the Council: (1) Completed e-invoicing rollout (₹100 Cr → ₹5 Cr threshold); (2) Navigated COVID-19 crisis (3 virtual meetings); (3) Resolved ₹2.69L Cr compensation shortfall; (4) Managed online gaming taxation controversy (28%); (5) Oversaw revenue growth from ₹97K Cr/month (2019) to ₹1.8L Cr/month (2025). Sitharaman is now the LONGEST-SERVING GST Council chair (7 years and counting).
What is the National Anti-Profiteering Authority (NAA) and why was it extended?
NAA is the watchdog ensuring businesses PASS ON GST rate cut benefits to consumers: WHY NAA EXISTS: When GST rates are reduced (e.g., 28% → 18% on a product), businesses MUST reduce MRP proportionally. Some businesses pocketed the tax savings without reducing prices — NAA catches and penalizes them. POWERS: (1) Investigate complaints of profiteering; (2) Order price reduction/refund to consumers; (3) Impose penalty (profit amount + 10%); (4) Cancel GST registration (extreme cases). WHY EXTENDED AT 35TH MEETING: (1) Originally set for 2 years (Nov 2017 — Nov 2019); (2) 170+ cases still pending investigation; (3) Major builders found guilty (DLF, Pyramid Infratech — didn't reduce flat prices post-rate cut); (4) FMCG companies under investigation (HUL, P&G for not reducing product prices); (5) States supported extension unanimously. KEY NAA CASES (2017-2021): (1) DLF Ltd: ₹7 Cr profiteering in Gurugram flats — ordered to refund; (2) Hindustan Unilever: ₹383 Cr allegation on Dove, Pears, Lux soaps — partially upheld; (3) McDonald's India: ₹7.49 Cr — didn't reduce meal prices post-28%→5% cut; (4) Pyramid Infratech: ₹4.25 Cr — flat buyers refunded. NAA was eventually replaced by CCI (Competition Commission of India) from December 2022, which now handles anti-profiteering alongside antitrust matters.
What was the simplified return system discussed at this meeting?
The 35th meeting discussed transitioning from GSTR-1/3B to a new system (ANX-1/ANX-2/RET-1): CURRENT SYSTEM (as of June 2019): (1) GSTR-1: Outward supply details (sales) — filed by 11th of next month; (2) GSTR-3B: Summary return with tax payment — filed by 20th of next month; (3) Problems: Two separate filings, no invoice matching, ITC claimed without verification, facilitates fake ITC fraud. PROPOSED NEW SYSTEM: (1) ANX-1 (Annexure of Outward Supplies): Replace GSTR-1. Real-time or near-real-time upload of invoices. Machine-readable format; (2) ANX-2 (Annexure of Inward Supplies): Auto-populated from sellers' ANX-1. Buyer ACCEPTS, REJECTS, or marks PENDING each invoice. Solves ITC matching problem; (3) RET-1 (Monthly Return): Replace GSTR-3B. Auto-calculated from ANX-1 and ANX-2. One consolidated filing. TIMELINE DISCUSSED AT 35TH MEETING: (1) July-Sep 2019: GSTN develops system; (2) October 2019: Trial for large taxpayers (₹5 Cr+ turnover); (3) January 2020: Trial for all taxpayers; (4) April 2020: Mandatory migration. WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED: System was repeatedly deferred. COVID killed it. By 2022, government quietly abandoned ANX/RET in favor of enhancing existing GSTR-1/3B with auto-populated GSTR-2B (which essentially achieves what ANX-2 was supposed to do — auto-populated inward supply with accept/reject).
How does anti-profiteering work in practice for consumers?
Anti-profiteering mechanism explained with real examples: HOW TO CALCULATE PROFITEERING: (1) Product MRP: ₹100 (inclusive of 28% GST); (2) Base price: ₹78.13 (100/1.28); (3) GST reduced to 18% → new price should be: ₹78.13 × 1.18 = ₹92.19; (4) If company keeps selling at ₹100 → profiteering of ₹7.81 per unit. HOW CONSUMERS CAN COMPLAIN: (1) File complaint at www.naa.gov.in (NAA portal); (2) Approach local Standing Committee (state-level); (3) Submit proof: old bill (showing higher rate) + new bill (showing same/similar price despite rate cut); (4) NAA/Standing Committee investigates. REAL CASES: (1) Cinema halls: When entertainment tax merged into GST at lower effective rate — many multiplexes didn't reduce ticket prices. Mumbai NAA ordered PVR to pass benefits; (2) Restaurants: When rate cut from 18% to 5% (Nov 2017) — many restaurants reduced prices but removed 'service charge' option, effectively no benefit. Investigated but harder to prove; (3) Real estate: BIGGEST profiteering sector — builders had pre-GST bookings at 12% VAT+4.5% ST (16.5% effective). When GST came at 12% (and later 5%), they didn't reduce flat prices proportionally. Over ₹500 Cr in profiteering orders against builders. CONSUMER TIP: Keep old invoices/bills. If a GST rate cut is announced and your product price doesn't decrease proportionally within 30 days — file a complaint.
What was the cinema ITC clarification about?
The 35th Council clarified a contentious issue: can cinema halls claim ITC on food/beverages? THE DISPUTE: (1) Multiplexes (PVR, INOX, Cinepolis) sell food inside theatres at high margins (₹100 for popcorn that costs ₹15 to make); (2) Question: Is food sold IN a cinema hall a 'restaurant service' (5% no ITC) or part of entertainment (18-28% with ITC)? (3) Cinema halls wanted to claim ITC on food supplies arguing it's part of their entertainment service. COUNCIL'S CLARIFICATION: SCENARIO 1 — Composite supply (food included in ticket price or bundled package): If a cinema offers 'combo' (ticket + popcorn + drink as single package), it's treated as composite supply. Principal supply = entertainment. GST on entire package = entertainment rate (18%/28% based on ticket price). FULL ITC available on food inputs. SCENARIO 2 — Separate supply (food sold at counter independently): If food is sold separately at the snack counter (customer buys ticket and food in separate transactions), it's restaurant service. GST on food = 5% WITHOUT ITC. Treated as independent supply. PRACTICAL IMPACT: (1) Multiplexes restructured offerings — introduced more 'combo packs' to claim ITC; (2) Revenue impact: A multiplex spending ₹2 Cr/year on food supplies saves ₹25-30L in ITC annually under composite supply treatment; (3) Consumer impact: Combo prices may be marginally better value than buying separately. NOTE: This became less relevant when gold-class/recliner ticket GST was later simplified, but the principle of composite vs mixed supply remains important across many industries.

Simplify GST Compliance for Your Business

Auto-generate GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, and annual returns from your invoicing data. Laabam.One handles compliance so you can focus on growth.

Start Free Trial