Class 10 Social Science · Chapter 4

Samacheer Class 10 Social Science - Government and Taxes

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Chapter-wise textbook exercise answers for Government and Taxes with validation-aware solutions.

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Sections in this chapter
I Choose the correct answer 5EXERCISE 1III Choose the correct statement 1V Give Short Answers 8II Fill in the blanks 5VI Answer in detail 3VII Activity and Projects 2IV Match the following 1
Your Progress - Chapter 40% complete
1I Choose the correct answer5 questions
Q.1The three levels of governments in India arev
  1. a. Union, state and local
  2. b. Union, state and village
  3. c. Union, municipality and panchayat
  4. d. None of the above
Solution

India has three tiers of government: the Union (Central) government, State governments and Local governments (urban and rural local bodies).

Answer:

a

Q.3Which is the role of government and development policies?v
  1. a. Defence
  2. b. Foreign policy
  3. c. Regulate the economy
  4. d. all of above
Solution

Government's roles include defence, foreign policy, regulation of the economy and formulation of development policies; thus all listed functions are correct.

Answer:

d

Q.4The most common and important tax levied on an individual in India isv
  1. a. Service tax
  2. b. Excise duty.
  3. c. Income tax
  4. d. Central sales tax
Solution

Income tax is the principal direct tax levied on individuals' earnings and is the most common important tax for individuals.

Answer:

c

Q.5Under which tax one nation, one uniform tax is ensuredv
  1. a. Value added tax (VAT)
  2. b. Income tax
  3. c. Goods and service tax
  4. d. Sales tax
Solution

GST aims to create 'one nation, one tax' by providing a uniform indirect tax across the country, replacing many state and central indirect taxes.

Answer:

c

Q.6Income tax was introduced in India for the first time in the year __________ .v
  1. a. 1860
  2. b. 1870
  3. c. 1880
  4. d. 1850
Solution

Income tax was first introduced in India in 1860 by the British government.

Answer:

a

2EXERCISE1 questions
Q.2In India, taxes are includingv
  1. a. Direct taxes
  2. b. Indirect taxes.
  3. c. Both (a) and (b)
  4. d. None of these
Solution

India levies both direct taxes (e.g., income tax, corporate tax) and indirect taxes (e.g., GST, customs duty).

Answer:

c

3III Choose the correct statement1 questions
Q.III.1Which of the following statement is correct about GST? (i) GST is the 'one point tax'. (ii) This aims to replace all direct taxes levied on goods and services by the Central and State governments. (iii) It will be implemented from 1st July 2017 throughout the country. (iv) It will unified the tax structure in India.v
  1. a. (i) and (ii) are correct
  2. b. (ii), (iii) and (iv) are correct
  3. c. (i), (iii) and (iv) are correct
  4. d. All are correct
Solution

Correcting obvious OCR error: statement (ii) should read that GST aims to replace all indirect taxes levied on goods and services by Centre and States. (i) is incorrect (GST is not a 'one point tax'), (ii) [as corrected] is correct, (iii) is correct (implemented 1 July 2017), and (iv) is correct (it unified the indirect tax structure).

Answer:

b

4V Give Short Answers8 questions
Q.V.1Define tax.v
Solution

Taxes are mandatory payments levied by the government on persons and property to meet public expenditure and provide public goods and services.

Answer:

A tax is a compulsory, legally enforced payment made by individuals or organizations to the government to fund public services and activities, without a direct quid pro quo.

Q.V.2Why we pay tax to the government?v
Solution

Taxes provide government revenue needed for infrastructure, health, education, social security, public safety and to carry out development and regulation.

Answer:

We pay taxes to fund public goods and services (roads, schools, hospitals), defence and law enforcement, welfare programs, and to enable redistribution and economic stability.

Q.V.3What are the types of tax? Give examples.v
Solution

Direct taxes are borne by the person on whom they are imposed; indirect taxes are collected from consumers via sellers. Examples listed above.

Answer:

Two main types: direct taxes (e.g., income tax, corporate tax, property tax) and indirect taxes (e.g., GST, customs duty, excise duty).

Q.V.4Write short note on Goods and Service Tax.v
Solution

GST replaced taxes like excise duty, service tax, VAT and central/state sales taxes to create a unified, destination-based tax system, simplifying compliance and reducing cascading taxes.

Answer:

GST is a comprehensive indirect tax introduced in India on 1 July 2017 that subsumes multiple central and state indirect taxes. It has a dual structure: CGST and SGST for intra-state supplies and IGST for inter-state supplies.

Q.V.5What is progressive tax?v
Solution

Progressive taxation imposes higher rates on higher income brackets to achieve vertical equity and redistribution.

Answer:

A progressive tax is one where the tax rate increases as the taxpayer's income increases; higher earners pay a larger proportion of their income in tax. Example: graduated income tax slabs.

Q.V.6What is meant by black money?v
Solution

Black money refers to earnings (legal or illegal) that are hidden from taxation authorities by not reporting them in books, thereby avoiding taxes; often arises from illegal activities or unreported transactions.

Answer:

Black money is income or wealth that is not declared to tax authorities and is concealed from official records.

Q.V.7What is tax evasion?v
Solution

Tax evasion involves unlawful methods (like under‑reporting income, inflating deductions, hiding transactions) to reduce tax liability. It is distinct from legal tax avoidance.

Answer:

Tax evasion is the illegal act of deliberately avoiding paying taxes by concealing income or providing false information to tax authorities.

Q.V.8Write any two difference between tax and payments?v
Solution

Two concise differences:
- Nature: Tax = compulsory charge imposed by the state; Payment = transfer of money typically in exchange for goods or services.
- Benefit: Tax = finances public goods without direct benefit to the payer; Payment = purchaser receives specific goods/services in return.
Note: OCR shows the phrase 'tax and payments'; if the original intended 'tax and fees' or another term, please confirm source for precise wording.

Answer:

1. Tax is a compulsory levy by the government for public purposes; a payment (for goods/services) is a charge in exchange for a specific good or service.
2. Tax does not give a direct quid pro quo benefit to the payer; a payment for goods/services gives a direct, specific benefit to the payer.

5II Fill in the blanks5 questions
Q.II.1__________ is levied by government for the development of the state's economy.v
Solution

Taxes are levied by governments to raise revenue for development and public expenditure in the state.

Answer:

Tax

Q.II.2The origin of the word 'tax' is from the word __________.v
Solution

The English word 'tax' derives from the Latin 'taxare', meaning to assess or estimate.

Answer:

Latin word 'taxare' (to assess)

Q.II.3The burden of the __________ tax cannot be shifted to others.v
Solution

Direct taxes (like income tax) are paid by the person on whom they are imposed and their burden cannot be shifted to others.

Answer:

direct

Q.II.4The Goods and Service Tax act came into effect on __________.v
Solution

The GST Act in India was implemented nationwide on 1 July 2017.

Answer:

1st July 2017

Q.II.5The unaccounted money that is concealed from the tax administrator is called __________.v
Solution

Black money is unaccounted income or wealth that is concealed from tax authorities and not shown in the books of account.

Answer:

Black money

6VI Answer in detail3 questions
Q.VI.1Explain some direct and indirect taxes.v
Solution

Direct taxes: Income tax (paid by individuals on income), corporate tax (paid by companies), property tax (paid by property owners). These cannot easily be shifted. Indirect taxes: Goods and Services Tax (GST) on sale of goods and services, customs duty on imports, excise on manufacture — these are often passed on to consumers in the price of goods/services.

Answer:

Direct taxes are paid directly to the government by the person on whom they are imposed (e.g., income tax, corporate tax, property tax). Indirect taxes are collected by intermediaries from the consumer and paid to the government (e.g., GST, customs duty, excise duty).

Q.VI.2Write the structure of GST.v
Solution

Under the GST regime, for supply within a state the tax is split into CGST (central share) and SGST (state share). For inter-state supplies IGST is levied and apportioned between Centre and States.

Answer:

GST in India follows a dual structure: CGST (Central GST) and SGST (State GST) for intra-state transactions, and IGST (Integrated GST) for inter-state transactions.

Q.VI.3What is black money? Write the causes ofv
Solution

Definition: Black money refers to funds earned through illegal means or concealed from tax authorities. Causes: (1) Tax evasion and weak enforcement; (2) Corruption and bribery; (3) Large cash transactions and lack of digital records; (4) Undervaluation or under-invoicing in trade; (5) Benami property and hiding assets; (6) Criminal activities (smuggling, drug trade). Measures to curb it include better enforcement, digital transactions, transparent property records and stricter penalties.

Answer:

Black money is income earned on which taxes have not been paid and which is not reported to tax authorities. Causes include tax evasion, corruption, unaccounted cash transactions, under-invoicing, benami property transactions, and illicit activities.

7VII Activity and Projects2 questions
Q.VII.1Collect information about the local taxes (water, electricity and house tax etc).v
Solution

Suggested steps: 1) List local taxes (water, property/house tax, local cess, electricity surcharges). 2) Gather rates, who levies them, how they are calculated, payment methods and exemptions from municipal records or utility bills. 3) Compile findings with sample calculations and present to class.

Answer:

Activity: Visit your local municipality/municipal corporation website or office to collect current rates and rules for water charges, house tax (property tax), and electricity surcharges; note calculation method, due dates and exemptions.

Q.VII.2Students purchase some goods on the shop. The teacher and students discuss those goods, maximum retail price, purchasing price or GST.v
Solution

Steps: 1) Collect bills/labels showing MRP and tax details. 2) Identify GST rates applied and compute tax amount = (tax rate × taxable value). 3) Compare purchase price (cost price) vs MRP and discuss how GST affects final price.

Answer:

Activity guidance: Note the MRP and bill for each item, identify base price and GST component, calculate GST percentage from bill, and discuss differences between MRP, selling price and purchase price.

8IV Match the following1 questions
Q.IVMatch the following 1. Income Tax - 2. Excise duty - 3. VAT - 4. GST - 5. Black money -v
  1. table. 1. Income Tax - Value added tax 2. Excise duty - 1 July 2017 3. VAT - Smuggling 4. GST - Direct tax 5. Black money - Indirect tax
Solution

Correct matches (based on standard definitions and likely intended right‑hand items):
1. Income Tax → Direct tax (Income tax is a direct tax)
2. Excise duty → Indirect tax (Excise is an indirect tax on goods)
3. VAT → Value Added Tax (VAT stands for Value Added Tax)
4. GST → 1 July 2017 (GST was implemented in India from 1 July 2017)
5. Black money → Unaccounted money (Black money refers to unaccounted/hidden income)
Validation note: The OCRed option table appears scrambled (the provided right-hand items in the OCR do not align semantically). The matching above corrects obvious errors; if the textbook's right‑hand column differs, please provide the original list for exact label-based matching.

Answer:

1 → Direct tax; 2 → Indirect tax; 3 → Value added tax; 4 → 1 July 2017; 5 → (should be Unaccounted money)