11th GST Council Meeting — Dual Control Breakthrough
Held on March 4, 2017, in New Delhi. This pivotal meeting resolved the long-standing dual control deadlock — agreeing that States would administer 90% of taxpayers below ₹1.5 crore and Centre would exclusively handle IGST on inter-state supplies.
11th
Meeting Number
4 Mar 2017
Date
New Delhi
Location
Arun Jaitley
Chairperson
Dual Control
Key Issue
≤₹1.5 Cr
Small Taxpayer
90%
State Share
10%
Centre Share
Key Decisions & Outcomes
Dual Control — Centre vs State Division
The most contentious issue of GST implementation was resolved: for taxpayers with turnover ≤₹1.5 crore, 90% would be administered by States and 10% by Centre. For taxpayers above ₹1.5 crore, a 50:50 split was agreed. This ended the months-long deadlock between Centre and States.
Revised Draft GST Law Approved
Approved revised drafts of the CGST and IGST model laws incorporating changes from the 10th meeting. Key revisions included simplified registration, rationalized penalties, and clearer transition provisions for existing taxpayers migrating from VAT/Excise/Service Tax.
IGST on Inter-State Supply
Confirmed that the Centre would exclusively administer IGST (Integrated GST) on all inter-state supplies. IGST settlement between origin and destination states would be handled centrally. This ensured a single-point collection for cross-border (inter-state) transactions.
Cross-Empowerment Framework
Both Centre and State officers would be empowered to act under CGST and respective SGST Acts. A taxpayer assessed by one authority would not face proceedings from the other — eliminating dual harassment concerns. Intelligence-based enforcement would remain with the respective authority.
Threshold ₹1.5 Crore Division Logic
The ₹1.5 crore threshold (₹75 lakh for special category states) was chosen because approximately 90% of taxpayers fall below this limit but contribute only 6-7% of revenue. States administer 90% of these (familiar local businesses), while Centre handles the remaining 10% (selected randomly for audit coverage).
Single Assessment Authority
No dual assessment for any taxpayer — either Centre or State would assess a given entity, never both. For registration, a common portal (GSTN) would auto-allocate taxpayers to Centre or State based on agreed ratio. Taxpayers would know their assigned authority from day one.
Frequently Asked Questions
What was the dual control issue in GST?
Why is ₹1.5 crore the threshold for dual control?
How does IGST administration differ from CGST/SGST?
What does cross-empowerment mean in GST?
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