Home Blog GST GST Simplified by CA Devesh Thakur – Day 3/30 days challenge

GST Simplified by CA Devesh Thakur – Day 3/30 days challenge

0
section 7 cgst act meaning of supply by cadeveshthakur 30 day gst challenge
section 7 cgst act meaning of supply by cadeveshthakur 30 day gst challenge
Day 3 – GST Challenge | Section 7 CGST Act | CA Devesh Thakur | eTaxSave
🎓 Free Tax Education by CA Devesh Thakur  |  Visit eTaxSave.com  |  All Blogs →
📅 Day 3 of 30  ·  GST Challenge

Section 7 CGST Act —
Meaning of Supply

✍️ CA Devesh Thakur 🌐 eTaxSave.com 📚 GST Series

A complete breakdown of Section 7 of the CGST Act — all forms of supply, consideration, self-supply, club-to-member rules, Schedule I/II/III, import of services, and when GST applies even without business intent.

⚡ GST is Charged on → SUPPLY (Sec 7, CGST Act)
📝 Day 3 — CA Devesh Thakur’s Handwritten Note

📌 Comment ‘TERMS’ on Instagram to get full notes.


🎬 Day 3 Video

Watch Day 3 GST Reel — CA Devesh Thakur

📲 Follow @cadeveshthakur.official for daily GST challenge updates!


What is Supply? — The Heart of GST

Under GST, Supply is the single most important concept — it is the taxable event that triggers GST liability. Section 7 of the CGST Act, 2017 defines supply comprehensively to cover all forms of commercial activity, removing the ambiguity that existed under the old indirect tax regime.

The core principle is simple: GST is charged on Supply. But what constitutes “supply” is wide-ranging, covering goods, services, and even deemed supplies. Let’s break it all down exactly as covered in the note.

📋

All Forms of Supply — Sec 7(1)(a)

Section 7(1)(a) covers all forms of supply of goods or services or both made for a consideration in the course or furtherance of business. This includes:

🔄

Sale & Transfer

The most common form — transfer of title or ownership of goods or rights in services for a price.

🤝

Exchange & Barter

Swapping goods/services for other goods/services — even without cash. Consideration need not be monetary.

🏠

Rental & Lease

Temporary transfer of the right to use goods or property in exchange for periodic payments.

📜

License & Disposal

Licensing intellectual property or disposing of assets — both are treated as supply under GST.

🔮

Future Supply — GST on “Agreed to be Made” Supplies

A critical and often overlooked aspect: GST applies not just to goods/services already delivered, but also to supplies “agreed to be made” in the future — these are called Future Supplies.

⏰ Key Rule: Advance Payment

  • Advance payments received before delivery also attract GST.
  • Even if the actual goods/services are delivered later, the tax point (time of supply) may arise at the point of advance payment.
  • This prevents tax avoidance by deferring invoicing while collecting money upfront.
  • Example: A contractor receives ₹5 lakh advance for a project — GST is applicable on that advance itself.
💰

Consideration — What Counts?

Consideration means anything received in return for a supply. It is broader than just money — it includes anything of value given back by the recipient. Importantly, consideration can be from any time — past, present, or future promises.

💵

Monetary

Cash, cheque, online transfer, UPI — any payment in money.

📦

Non-Monetary

Goods given in exchange, barter, services in return — all qualify.

📅

Past Promises

Something done earlier in anticipation of receiving something now.

🤲

Future Promises

A commitment to pay or provide something later is also consideration.

👤

By a Person — Sec 2(84)

Supply must be made “by a person”. Under Sec 2(84) of the CGST Act, “person” is defined very broadly to include:

📌 Who Qualifies as a “Person”?

  • Individual (natural person)
  • Hindu Undivided Family (HUF)
  • Company / Corporation
  • Firm / LLP / Partnership
  • Association of Persons (AOP) or Body of Individuals (BOI)
  • Local Authority, Government, Trust
  • Every artificial juridical person not falling in above categories
🔁

Self-Supply — Branch Transfers Between States

One of the unique features of GST: Self-Supply is taxable. When a business transfers goods or services between its own branches located in different states, it is treated as a supply — even though both branches belong to the same legal entity.

⚠️ Why Self-Supply Matters

  • Under GST, each state registration is treated as a distinct/separate person.
  • Transfer between branches in different states = Inter-state Supply = IGST applicable.
  • There is no requirement of “supply between two persons” — self-supply suffices.
  • Example: A Delhi branch sending stock to its Mumbai branch must raise an invoice and charge IGST.
🏛️

Club to Member — Sec 7(1)(aa)

Inserted by amendment, Section 7(1)(aa) specifically brings Clubs, Associations, and Trusts within the GST net for supplies made to their own members.

🔑 Key Point — Deemed Separate Persons

  • A club or association and its members are treated as Deemed Separate Persons.
  • Any supply by the club/association to its members = Taxable Supply.
  • Consideration requirement applies — Yes.
  • Classic Example: A gym club charging membership fees from its members — this is taxable supply under Sec 7(1)(aa).
  • This overrules the earlier doctrine of “mutuality” where clubs argued no supply exists between themselves and members.
📊

Section-wise Supply Table — Quick Reference

SectionBasis / TypeConsideration Required?Example
Sec 7(1)(a)Normal Supplies — all forms (sale, exchange, transfer, lease, barter etc.)YesSale of goods to customer
Sec 7(1)(aa)Club to Members — club/trust/association supplying to membersYesGym membership fees
Sec 7(1)(b)Import of Services — services received from outside IndiaYesNetflix US subscription
Sec 7(1)(c)Deemed Supplies — activities specified in Schedule INoGift to employee > ₹50,000
🏢

ITC or FOB — In the Course or Furtherance of Business

For most supplies under Sec 7(1)(a), the supply must be made “in the course or furtherance of business” — abbreviated in the note as ITC or FOB (In The Course OR Furtherance Of Business). This is a qualifying condition.

📌 What Does This Mean?

  • The supply must be connected to a business activity.
  • A one-off personal transaction generally does not qualify as supply.
  • Exception — Import of Services: Even if imported services are for personal use or not for business, they still qualify as supply. No need to prove business purpose for imported services.
🌐

Import of Services — Sec 7(1)(b)

Import of services for consideration is always treated as supply — even if it is for personal use or not for business purposes. This is a special rule that departs from the normal “in furtherance of business” requirement.

🎬

Personal Use Example

Netflix US subscription paid to a foreign entity — even though it’s for personal entertainment, it is still a taxable import of services.

📝

No Business Purpose Needed

Unlike domestic supply, the importer does not need to prove that the imported service was used for furtherance of business.

🔖

Consideration is Must

However, consideration is still required for Sec 7(1)(b). Free imports of services are not covered here.

🗂️

Schedule I, II & III — The Three Pillars

Three Schedules to the CGST Act fine-tune what is and isn’t supply, and how certain activities are classified. These are critical for the exam and practice.

Schedule I — Sec 7(1)(c)

Deemed Supply (No Consideration Needed)

  • Permanent transfer of Business Assets
  • Gift to employees exceeding ₹50,000 in a year
  • Branch transfers between states (distinct persons)
  • Supply between related persons / principal-agent in course of business
Schedule II

Deemed Service (Even if Goods Involved)

Some activities/supplies are classified as “Deemed Service” even if they involve goods.

Classic Example: Works Contract — involves both goods and services (e.g., construction), but is treated entirely as a service under GST.

Schedule III

NOT Supply — Negative List

Activities listed here are not treated as supply at all — no GST applies.

Key Example: Services by an Employee to Employer — salary is not a supply; no GST on employment services.

Also includes: sale of land, actionable claims (except lottery/gambling), funeral/burial services, etc.

🔜

Coming Up Next in the Challenge

Sec 7/8 — Inter India (Place of Supply)  &  Sec 9 — Territory of India incl. Territorial Waters
These sections determine where a supply takes place — essential for deciding whether CGST+SGST or IGST applies. Follow the full challenge →

NO COMMENTS

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Exit mobile version