By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
thebusinessstories.comthebusinessstories.comthebusinessstories.com
  • Home
  • Business Stories
  • Inspiring Stories
  • Startup Stories
  • Startup
  • Economics
Reading: “Section 16(2)(c) Has Turned Honest Businesses into Collateral Damage of GST”
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
thebusinessstories.comthebusinessstories.com
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Business Stories
  • Inspiring Stories
  • Startup Stories
  • Startup
  • Economics
  • Home
  • Business Stories
  • Inspiring Stories
  • Startup Stories
  • Startup
  • Economics
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Advertise
© 2025 The Business Stories. All Rights Reserved.
thebusinessstories.com > Economics > Startup > “Section 16(2)(c) Has Turned Honest Businesses into Collateral Damage of GST”
Startup

“Section 16(2)(c) Has Turned Honest Businesses into Collateral Damage of GST”

Puneet Yadav
Last updated: February 20, 2026 11:26 am
Puneet Yadav 10 hours ago
Share
SHARE

By CS Adv. Abhishek Goyal

For most Indian businesses, Input Tax Credit is not a tax benefit—it is working capital.
Yet, under GST, Section 16(2)(c) has become the single biggest trigger for ITC denial disputes across India.

“GST was designed as a trust-based system. Section 16(2)(c), as it is being enforced today, operates on suspicion—not trust.”

The Core Problem: Buyer Punished for Seller’s Default

Section 16(2)(c) makes ITC conditional upon actual payment of tax to the Government by the supplier. On paper, this sounds logical. On the ground, it is commercially unworkable.

“A buyer can verify registration, invoice, and receipt of goods—but cannot sit inside the supplier’s GST cash ledger. The law expects the impossible.”

In litigation matters across India, businesses are facing:

  • ITC reversals years after transactions
  • Notices without any allegation of collusion or fraud
  • Demands even where tax was already paid to the supplier

Why This Provision Is Being Challenged in Courts

From a litigation standpoint, Section 16(2)(c) is being tested on three core legal principles:

1️⃣ Impossibility of Performance

A legal condition that cannot be complied with cannot be enforced.

“No statute can compel a person to do what is beyond his control. Courts have consistently frowned upon such legislative overreach.”

2️⃣ Misplaced Burden of Tax Recovery

GST law empowers authorities to recover tax from the defaulting supplier, yet enforcement is being redirected to the buyer.

“Recovery convenience cannot replace legal responsibility. The department cannot shift its recovery burden onto compliant taxpayers.”

3️⃣ Break in the Credit Chain

GST is a destination-based consumption tax. Breaking ITC for a genuine buyer defeats the architecture of GST itself.

Judicial Trend: Protection for Bona Fide Buyers

Across High Courts, a consistent judicial theme is emerging:

  • ITC cannot be denied mechanically
  • Bona fide buyers deserve protection
  • Fraud must be specifically alleged and proven
  • Mere supplier default is not enough

“Courts are drawing a clear line: GST enforcement cannot be revenue-centric at the cost of economic fairness.”

Economic Impact No One Is Talking About

Section 16(2)(c) has quietly created:

  • Working capital stress for MSMEs
  • Vendor paranoia across supply chains
  • Artificial inflation of compliance costs
  • Litigation-driven GST administration

“This provision has converted businesses into tax investigators. That was never the intent of GST.”

What Businesses Must Do—Until Clarity Emerges

While litigation continues, businesses must adopt defensive compliance, even though the law itself is under challenge:

  • Strong vendor due diligence
  • Regular GSTR-2B reconciliation
  • Contractual tax-default safeguards
  • Documentation to establish bona fide conduct

“Compliance today is not about prevention—it is about litigation preparedness.”

The Way Forward

For GST to regain credibility as a pro-business reform:

  • Section 16(2)(c) must be interpreted reasonably, not punitively
  • Bona fide buyers must not be punished without proof of collusion
  • Tax recovery must remain where it belongs—with the defaulter

“If GST is to support growth, it must stop criminalising commercial trust.”

Final Word

Section 16(2)(c) is no longer a technical clause—it is a litigation flashpoint shaping the future of ITC jurisprudence in India.

“The real test of GST is not how much tax it collects—but how fairly it treats honest businesses.”

You Might Also Like

The Inspiring Journey of Nutrivrix: Building Clean, Trusted Nutrition for High Performers

From Electronics Student to Trusted IT Entrepreneur

Lokesh Mauryan Is Building Cradlewell to Bring Hospital-Grade Newborn & Postnatal Care Home for Indian Families

From Healthcare to Horoscope: How Dr Shirish Kulkarni Built Shree Shraddha Astrology Into a Trusted Name in Maharashtra

Krrish Das: The Young Entrepreneur Redefining Digital Marketing Across Kuwait, India, and Beyond

TAGGED: Adv. Abhishek Goyal
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Previous Article From Fear to Financial Freedom: The Inspiring Journey of Ravikant Ghosh
Next Article Krrish Das: The Young Entrepreneur Redefining Digital Marketing Across Kuwait, India, and Beyond
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

about us

The Business Stories is your premier news network for the most compelling narratives in business, technology, and entrepreneurship. We deliver inspiring startup journeys, exclusive interviews with influential leaders, and the latest trends shaping the global economy. Stay informed with the stories that drive innovation and success across India and the world.

You Might Have Missed!

  • Startup Stories
  • Business Stories
  • Inspiring Stories
  • Startup
  • Startup Stories

Find Us on Socials

thebusinessstories.comthebusinessstories.com
© The Business Stories. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?