Based on the details provided, it appears that Mr. A supplied goods to a GST-registered intermediary, who subsequently exported those goods. In such a case, whether Mr. A can apply for a refund of the Integrated GST (IGST) paid on these exports depends on several factors:
1. Who is the Exporter?
GST Refund on Export of Goods: According to the provisions of the IGST Act, only the actual exporter (the person whose GSTIN is mentioned on the Shipping Bill) can claim a refund of IGST on exports.
If Mr. A is not the actual exporter, meaning the intermediary (merchant exporter) holds the GSTIN mentioned on the Shipping Bill, he is not eligible to claim the refund. Even though Mr. A supplied the goods, since the intermediary exported the goods, they (the intermediary) are considered the exporter for GST purposes.
2. Is Mr. A the Exporter under a Merchant Exporter Arrangement?
Merchant Exporter Scenario: If the goods were exported through a merchant exporter arrangement and Mr. A’s GSTIN is mentioned in the Shipping Bill, Mr. A could be eligible to claim a refund. This is because the exporter, in this case, would be considered as Mr. A since the goods are legally considered to have been exported by him.
However, this condition assumes that:
The goods were exported within the 90-day period from the date of sale by Mr. A to the intermediary.
The EGM (Export General Manifest) data is correctly reflected with Mr. A's GSTIN.
3. Eligibility under Concessional Rate of GST:
If Mr. A sold the goods at a concessional GST rate (e.g., 0.1%) and the intermediary exported them, he may be eligible to claim a refund under the Inverted Duty Structure (IDS), provided all conditions for IDS refund are met.
4. Correct Reporting in GST Returns:
If Mr. A mistakenly reported these sales under B2B (domestic supplies) instead of under the zero-rated export category (Table 6A in GSTR-1), he should amend the GSTR-1 as per the steps mentioned earlier. However, even after correction, the exporter in this case remains the one whose GSTIN appears on the shipping bill.
5. Key Points for Refund Eligibility:
The GSTIN on the Shipping Bill: This determines who the actual exporter is.
The merchant exporter must export the goods within the stipulated 90-day period.
If Mr. A is the exporter (his GSTIN is on the shipping bill), he may apply for the refund after correcting GSTR-1 and ensuring consistency across GSTR-3B and GSTR-1.
If the intermediary is the exporter (their GSTIN is on the shipping bill), the refund should be claimed by them, not Mr. A.
Conclusion:
If Mr. A is the actual exporter (his GSTIN is on the Shipping Bill), he can apply for the refund after rectifying the GSTR-1 as discussed.
If the intermediary is the actual exporter, Mr. A is not eligible to claim a refund. The intermediary would need to file for the refund of IGST on the export.
It would be prudent for Mr. A to verify the details on the Shipping Bill and ensure that the correct exporter is listed before proceeding with any refund application.