Choco in chikki to attract 18% GST
MUMBAI: It’s the perfect season for munching on the
jaggery-based Indian confectionery — the good wholesome
chikki. The flavours available suit every palate, from
the simple sesame (til) chikki, the widely popular
peanut chikki or the rich dry fruit chikki. But, if
cocoa powder is added to make a chocolate-peanut chikki,
well it gets a whole new avatar in the realm of GST —
with a higher tax of 18%.
Recently, the
GST-Authority for Advance Rulings (GST-AAR), in the case
Sirimiri Nutrition Food Products a Bengaluru-based
chikki manufacturer agreed that several of their
chikkies, including the new varieties of dry fruit
chikki and spirulina chikki will be subject to 5% GST.
These varieties of chikkies were categorisedunder
Chapter heading 17 as ‘sugar confectionery not
containing cocoa’.
However, when it came to
‘chocolate-peanut chikki’, the Karnataka bench of the
GSTAAR pointed out that this product contains cocoa
powder and is covered under Chapter 18, which covers
chocolate and other food preparations containing cocoa.
The tax in this case is a higher 18%.
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Harpreet Singh, indirect tax partner at KPMG-India,
said: “Cooked or semi-cooked packet food items comprise
a variety of ingredients to suit varying consumer
tastes, these may have different processes of
manufacture, interchangeable names, multipleend-uses,
etc. These aspects make GST classification complex,
prone to varied interpretations and consequently result
in litigation.”
TOIhas in the past covered many such instances. The
Gujarat AAR in the case of Amul, had held that flavoured
milk (milk with sugar and added flavours) would attract
12% GST. But, in another case, the Gujarat AAR held that
‘lassi’ , a fermented milk drink, would be exempt from
GST. Or while a fruit-pulp or fruit-juice based tetra
pack could entail a GST of just 12%, if it's fizzywatch
out the basic GST rate would be 28% topped with a
compensation cess.
“There are many such instances. A reduced number of GST
slabs or one rate on all food products, irrespective of.
differences such as in ingredients, method of
consumption, etc, would minimise GST disputes,” adds
Singh
Source::: THE TIMES OF INDIA,
dated 22/07/2023.
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