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Excise
Duty is a tax on manufacture of goods but for
the sake of administrative convenience, it is
collected only on removable of goods from the
factory.
Excise duty may be levied in any
of the following
manner:- Ad-valorem Duty is levied
as a percentage of value of the commodity
manufactured. For example excise duty could be
10 per cent of the cost of goods. Most of the
excise duty is levied on ad-valorem
basis.
Slab
System Under this system, duty varies with the
change of the value from one slab to another.
Thus for the first 1,000 kg, excise duty is
Rs500, for next 1,000 kg it is Rs750 and for
production in excess, it is Rs1,000 for every
1,000 kg manufactured.
Specific Duty Under this system, a
specific rate of duty is fixed per unit rate or
per quantity item of the product manufactured,
for example Rs10 per unit
manufactured.
Compounded Duty Under this system, Duty
is levied on productive capacity irrespective of
the actual production. For example if a unit has
installed capacity to manufacture 10,000 ton,
excise duty is Rs.50,000, whatever be the number
of units produced.
Once
the liability to pay excise duty has been
established on manufacture of excisable goods,
it is necessary to quantify the amount of excise
duty payable. For this purpose, it is necessary
to find out, under which particular sub-group
heading of CETA do the goods in question
actually fall. Since the rates of duty for each
sub-group are given in CETA the categorization
of goods into sub-group headings is known as
classification of goods.
The
Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (CETA)
classifies all the goods under 20 sections and
96 chapters. Each of these sections is related
to a particular class of goods. Thus section 1
is on animal products, section 2 on vegetable
products, so on and so forth. Each section is
divided into chapters and each chapter is
sub-divided into groups and sub-groups of
excisable goods. This tariff schedule is based
on the internationally followed product coding
system "Harmonised System of Non-clementure"
(HSN)
Excise
Duty is payable at the rate specified in CETA
against the sub-group heading under which the
product falls. However, benefit of exemptions or
concessions may be claimed under various
notifications if the conditions specified in the
notification are satisfied. The
following is the broad grouping of goods under
CETA:-
|
Section |
Head |
Chapter |
|
I |
Animal
products |
2 to
5 |
|
II |
Vegetable products |
7 to
14 |
|
III |
Animal
and vegetable fats |
15 |
|
IV |
Prepared foodstuffs and
beverages |
16 to
24 |
|
V |
Mineral
products |
25 to
27 |
|
VI |
Chemical fertilisers |
28 to
38 |
|
VII |
Plastic
and rubber articles |
39 to
40 |
|
VIII |
Leather
and leather articles |
41 to
43 |
|
IX |
Wood
cork, straw |
44 to
46 |
|
X |
Pulp,
paper and paperboard |
47 to
49 |
|
XI |
Textiles and textile
products |
50 to
63 |
|
XII |
Footwear and umbrellas |
64 to
67 |
|
XIII |
Articles of stones, plaster, ceramics,
glass |
68 to
70 |
|
XIV |
Pearls,
precious metal |
71 |
|
XV |
Brass
metals and articles |
72 to
83 |
|
XVI |
Machinery, electrical
equipments |
84 to
85 |
|
XVII |
Vehicles, aircraft and
vessels |
86 to
89 |
|
XVIII |
Optical, photographic, medical &
surgical instruments |
90 to
92 |
|
XIX |
Arms
& ammunition |
93 |
|
XX |
Miscellaneous articles |
94 to
96 |
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