Saturday 24 September 2016

GST (goods and service tax)

 GST
As the name suggests, it is a tax levied when a consumer buys a good or service. It is meant to be a single, comprehensive tax that will subsume all the other smaller indirect taxes on consumption like service tax, excise duty etc. This is how it is done in most developed countries. It will be a comprehensive nationwide indirect tax on the manufacture, sale, and consumption of goods and services. The aim is to have one indirect tax for the whole nation, which will make India a unified common market. GST will be levied and collected at each stage of sale or purchase of goods or services based on the input tax credit method and would make not just manufacturing but also the interstate transportation of goods more efficient.

 How will GST work and what all will it subsume?

GST is a single tax on the supply of goods and services, right from the manufacturer to the consumer. Credits of input taxes paid at each stage will be available in the subsequent stage of value addition, which makes GST essentially a tax only on value addition at each stage. The final consumer will thus bear only the GST charged by the last dealer in the supply chain, with set-off benefits at all the previous stages.

At the central level, the following taxes will be subsumed: Central Excise Duty, Additional Excise Duty, Service Tax, Countervailing Duty (Additional Customs Duty), and Special Additional Duty of Customs.

At the State level, the following taxes will be subsumed: State Value Added Tax/Sales Tax, Entertainment Tax, Central Sales Tax, Octroi and Entry tax, Purchase Tax, Luxury tax, and Taxes on the lottery betting and gambling.
How will GST be beneficial?
The benefits of GST can be summarized as under:
For business and industry
     1.    Easy compliance
2. Uniformity of tax rates and structures
3. Removal of cascading
4. Improved competitiveness
5. Gain to manufacturers and exporters
For Central and State Governments
     1.    Simple and easy to administer
2. Better controls on leakage
3. Higher revenue efficiency
For the consumer
     1.    Single and transparent tax proportionate to the value of goods and services
2. Relief in overall tax burden
2.    What are the Earlier Opposition’s objections?
 The opposition party 'Congress' wants a provision capping the GST rate at 18 percent to be added to the Bill itself. It also wants to scrap the proposed 1 per cent additional levy (over and above the GST) for manufacturing states. This levy was demanded by manufacturing states who argued that they needed to be compensated for the investment they had made in improving their manufacturing capabilities. The Centre had agreed to this demand to encourage the states to support the GST Bill.
 The next demand by the Congress was to change the composition of the GST council—the body that decides the various nitty-grittys like rates of tax, period of levy of an additional tax, principles of supply, special provisions to certain states, etc. The proposed composition is for the Council to be two-thirds comprised from states and one-third from the Centre.
The Congress also wants the Centre’s share to be reduced to one-fourth. This demand, however, was rejected by even the Rajya Sabha Standing Committee.
·         By when will it be implemented?
·         Assuming the Constitution Amendment Bill does pass in the Monsoon Session, GST will still not be in force before April 1, 2017. And that is putting it optimistically. Apart from the legislative process mentioned above, the states, India Inc, and industries and service providers big and small, will also have to prepare themselves for a completely new nationwide tax regime.
·         How would GST be administered in India?
·         There will be two components of GST – Central GST (CGST) and State GST (SGST). Both Centre and States will simultaneously levy GST across the value chain. The tax will be levied on every supply of goods and services. Centre would levy and collect Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST), and States would levy and collect the State Goods and Services Tax (SGST) on all transactions within a State.
·          

·         The input tax credit of CGST would be available for discharging the CGST liability on the output at each stage. Similarly, the credit of SGST paid on inputs would be allowed for paying the SGST on output. No cross utilization of credit would be permitted.
      etc...... thanks
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Thursday 22 September 2016

Economics theory & their writers name

Theory Writer Name

theory of clubs james buchanan
imposibility therom kenneth arrow
political of decision making model anthony downs
optimum provison of local public goods  charles tiebout
swarn like cluster schumpeter
organic composation of capital karl mark
sustainable development brundtland report
vicious circle of poverty ragner nurkse
low level of equilibrium trap nelson
inverted v shaped income distribution hypothesis simon kuznets
endogenous growth theory robert solow
unlimited supply of labour arthur lewis
example of dimond and water adam smith
the screening hypoothesis  paul w. miier and paul a. volcker
job market signalling m. spencer
the problem of moaral hazard in case of  J.k. arrow
medical insurance
the market of lemons george A.Akerlof
liquidity trap j.m. keynes
demostration effect james duesenberry
permanent income hypothesis milton friedman
wealth effect A.C. pigou
concept of X-efficiency H.leibenstein in 1966
golden age  mrs. joan robinson
goleden rule of accumulation  edmund phelfs
steady state growth  robert solow
financial dualism theory h.myint
portfolio approch to demand money j.m. keynes
the capicty creating aspect of investment  r.m. solow
in the growth model theory
role of non economic factor in explaing growth r.m. solow
backward and forward linkages unbalanced growth 
turnpike theorem  von neumann model
organic composation of capital marxian model
a.k. producation funcation endogenous growth model
law level equilibrium trap nelson R
critical minimum effect leibenstein H.
big push Rodan R
unbalanced growth  Hirchman A
voluntary exchange approch wicksell-lindahll
the theory of local public goods  charles tiebout
time pattern of public expenditure growth peacock-wiseman
principle of least aggregate sacrifice A.C. pigou
principle of absolute advantage  adam smith
effect of factor of endowment change on trade samuelson
theory of reciprocal demand j.s mills
factor price equalisation  Rybczynski
highbrid index number Yule
association of attributes Gulton
rank correlation  marshall -edgeworth
regression  spearman
wages goods model p.r. brahmananda
circuler flow of economic life  Joseph-schumpeter
stability of demand funcation for money milton friedman
demand inflaton theory Bent henson
interest elasticity of transactions demand for cash james tobin
real balance effect don patinkin
absolute income hypothesis, genral theory j.m. keynes 
rational expectation hypothesis robert lucas
relative income hypothesis james duesenberry
the new keynesian model
N.Gregory mankiew....   ........etc

TIPS ON HOW TO COMPLETE CLOZE TESTS

TIPS ON HOW TO COMPLETE CLOZE TESTS
• First, slowly read all the text without filling any of the gaps. Read it two or three times until you have a clear understanding of what the text is about.
• Then only complete the gaps you are absolutely sure of.
• Next try and find out what the missing words in the remaining gaps are. See which part of speech may fit in each gap (article?, pronoun?, noun?, adverb?, adjective?, preposition?, conjunction?, verb?) and pay special attention to the grammar around the words in each gap.
Many of the gaps may include the following:
- preposition following a noun, adjective or verb. (Example: good at languages)
- prepositional phrase. (Example: in spite of )
- adverb. ( Example: He moved to Londontwo years ago )
- connector. (Example: First, he arrives; then he sits down; finally, he leaves.)
- conjunction. (Example: Although he is five, he can speak five languages.
- auxiliary verb . (Example: He has won 2 matches)
- an article or some other kind of determiner. (Example: I have no time)
- a relative . (Example: Bob, who I met two years ago, is my best friend)
- a pronoun , either subject or object. (Example : it is difficult to know)
- is there a comparative or superlative involved? (Example: she's taller than me)
• Some sentences may seem to be complete and contain gaps that appear to be unnecessary. If you find gaps like this, you will probably need the following:
- an adverb. (Example: He is always late)
- a modal verb . (Example: They can swim very well)
- a word to change the emphasis of the sentence: She's good enough to be queen
- The problems are too difficult

• A few gaps may demand a vocabulary item consistent with the topic of the text; or a word which is part of an idiomatic expression (example: Good heavens!); or a word which collocates with another one (example: do a job); or a word which is part of a phrasal verb (example: I was held up by traffic). 

Monday 5 September 2016

Important Days

Important Days

Important Days in January
Jan 1
Army Medical Corps Establishment Day
Jan 8
African National Congress Foundation Day
Jan 10
World Laughter Day
Jan 9
Pravasi Bharatiya Divas
Jan 11
Death anniversary of Lal Bahadur Shastri
Jan 12
National youth Day (Birth Day of Swami Vivekanand)
Jan 15
Army Day
Jan 23
Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose's birth anniversary
Jan 25
International Customs Duty Day, India Tourism Day, Indian Voter Day
Jan 26
Republic Day
Jan 28
Birth anniversary of Lala Lajpat Rai
Jan 30
(Martyr's day) Mahatma Gandhi's Martyrdom Day;World Leprosy Eradication Day
Jan 31
World Leprosy Eradication Day
Inportant Days in February
Feb 2
 World Wetlands Day
Feb 4
National Day of Srilanka
Feb 5
Kashmir Day (Organised by Pakistan)
Feb 13
Sarojini Naidu's Birth Anniversary
Feb 14
St. Valentine's Day
Feb 24
Central Exise Day
Feb 28
National Science Day
Important Days in March
Mar 3
National Defence Day
Mar 4
National Security Day
Mar 8
International Women's Day
Mar 9
CISF Raising Day
Mar 12
Mauritius Day;Central Industrial Security Force Day
Mar 15
World Consumer Day
Mar 16
National Vaccination Day
Mar 21
World Forestry Day
Mar 22
World Day of Water
Mar 23
World Meterological Day
Mar 24
World TB Day
Mar 26
Bangaladesh Liberation Day
Important Days in April
April 1
Orissa Day
April 5
National Meritime Day
April 7
World Health Day
April 11
National Safe Motherhood Day
April 13
Jallianwallah Bagh Massacre Day (1919)
April 14
B.R. Ambedkar Remembrance Day
April 17
World Haemophilia Day
April 18
World Heritage Day
April 21
National Civil Service Day
April 22
World Earth Day
April 23
World Books Day
April 24
Panchayat Raj Day
April 26
World Intellectual Property Day
Important Days in May
May 1
International Labour Day, Maharashtra Day
May 3
International Press Freedom day; International Energy Day
May 4
Coal Miners Day
May 7
Worlds AIDS Orphans day
May 8
International Red Cross Day (It is celebrated to commemorate the birth anniversary of the founder of the Red Cross Organization Jean Henry Dunant)
May 11
National Technology Day
May 15
International Family Day
May 17
World Telecom Day
May 18
International Museums Day
May 22
International Bio Diversity Day
May 24
Commonwealth Day
May 25
Worlds Thyroid Day
May 29
International Day of UN Peace Keepers
May 30
Hindi Journalism Day
May 31
World No Tobacco Day
Important Days in June
June 1
World Milk Day (FAO)
June 5
World Environment Day
June 8
World Oceans Day
June 12
World Day Against Child Labour / Child Labour Prohibition Day
June 14
World Blood Donor Day
June 15
World Elder Abuse Awareness Day
June 17
World Day to Combat Desertification
June 20
World Refugee Day
June 21
International Day of Yoga
June 23
United Nations Public Service Day
June 26
International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking
June 29
National Statistics Day
Important Days in July
July 1
Doctor's Day
July 2
World UFO Day
July 4
American Independence Day
July 7
International Day of Cooperatives
July 11
World Population Day
July 17
World Day for International Justice
July 18
Mandela Day
July 26
Kargil Victory Day
July 27
Central Reserve Police Force Foundation Day
July 28
World Hepatitis Day
Important Days in August
Aug 6
Hiroshima Day
Aug 9
Quit India Movement Day
Aug 12
International youth Day
Aug 14
Pakistan's Independence Day
Aug 15
India's Independence Day
Aug 19
World Photography Day
Aug 20
Sadbhavana Diwas
Aug 29
National Sports Day of India (Dhyanchand's Birth Day)
Aug 30
Small Industry Day
Important Days in September
Sept 5
Teacher's Day (Dr. Radhakrishnan's Birth Day)
Sept 7
Forgiveness Day
Sept 8
International Literacy Day
Sept 14
Hindi day,World First Aid Day
Sept 16
World Ozone Day
Sept 21
International Day of Peace, World Alzheimer's day
Sept 25
Social Justice Day
Sept 27
World Tourism Day
Important Days in October
Oct 1
International Day for the Elderly(UN)
Oct 2
Gandhi Jayanti, International Day of Non-Violence
Oct 3
World Nature Day, World Habitat Day
Oct 4
World Animal Day
Oct 5
World Teacher's Day
Oct 6
World Wildlife Day, World Food Security Day
Oct 8
Indian Air-force day
Oct 9
World Postal Day
Oct 10
World Mental Health day;National Post Day
Oct 11
International Girl Child Day
Oct 12
World Sight day
Oct 13
World Calamity Control Day(UN)
Oct 14
World Standard Day
Oct 15
World White cane day(guiding the blind)
Oct 16
World Food Day
Oct 17
International poverty
Oct 20
National Solidarity Day (China attacked India on that day)
Oct 24
United Nations Day
Oct 30
World Thrift Day
Oct 31
Rastriya Ekta Diwas (Sardar Patel), National Integration Day (In memory of Indira Gandhi)
Important Days in November
Nov 7
Infant Protection day;World Cancer Awareness Day
Nov 9
Legal Service Day
Nov 10
Transport Day
Nov 14
Children's day/ World Diabetics day
Nov 17
Guru Nanak Dev's Birth Anniversary
Nov 26
Law Day
Nov 30
Flag Day
Important Days in December
Dec 1
World AIDS Day
Dec 3
World Disability Day
Dec 4
Navy Day
Dec 7
Armed Force Flag Day
Dec 10
Human Rights day
Dec 11
UNICEF Day
Dec 14
National Energy Conservation Day
Dec 19
Goa's Liberation day
Dec 23
Kisan Divas (Farmer's Day)

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