Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1: Fill & Download for Free

GET FORM

Download the form

How to Edit and fill out Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1 Online

Read the following instructions to use CocoDoc to start editing and finalizing your Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1:

  • At first, find the “Get Form” button and press it.
  • Wait until Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1 is appeared.
  • Customize your document by using the toolbar on the top.
  • Download your completed form and share it as you needed.
Get Form

Download the form

An Easy-to-Use Editing Tool for Modifying Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1 on Your Way

Open Your Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1 Instantly

Get Form

Download the form

How to Edit Your PDF Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1 Online

Editing your form online is quite effortless. You don't need to download any software on your computer or phone to use this feature. CocoDoc offers an easy tool to edit your document directly through any web browser you use. The entire interface is well-organized.

Follow the step-by-step guide below to eidt your PDF files online:

  • Search CocoDoc official website on your device where you have your file.
  • Seek the ‘Edit PDF Online’ icon and press it.
  • Then you will browse this page. Just drag and drop the file, or choose the file through the ‘Choose File’ option.
  • Once the document is uploaded, you can edit it using the toolbar as you needed.
  • When the modification is finished, tap the ‘Download’ option to save the file.

How to Edit Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1 on Windows

Windows is the most widely-used operating system. However, Windows does not contain any default application that can directly edit template. In this case, you can download CocoDoc's desktop software for Windows, which can help you to work on documents quickly.

All you have to do is follow the instructions below:

  • Download CocoDoc software from your Windows Store.
  • Open the software and then select your PDF document.
  • You can also upload the PDF file from Dropbox.
  • After that, edit the document as you needed by using the varied tools on the top.
  • Once done, you can now save the completed PDF to your cloud storage. You can also check more details about how to edit PDFs.

How to Edit Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1 on Mac

macOS comes with a default feature - Preview, to open PDF files. Although Mac users can view PDF files and even mark text on it, it does not support editing. Through CocoDoc, you can edit your document on Mac easily.

Follow the effortless guidelines below to start editing:

  • To begin with, install CocoDoc desktop app on your Mac computer.
  • Then, select your PDF file through the app.
  • You can select the template from any cloud storage, such as Dropbox, Google Drive, or OneDrive.
  • Edit, fill and sign your file by utilizing some online tools.
  • Lastly, download the template to save it on your device.

How to Edit PDF Non Refundful Deposit Of $100 Per Person Due April 1, 2015 Final Payment September 1 on G Suite

G Suite is a widely-used Google's suite of intelligent apps, which is designed to make your workforce more productive and increase collaboration across departments. Integrating CocoDoc's PDF editing tool with G Suite can help to accomplish work easily.

Here are the instructions to do it:

  • Open Google WorkPlace Marketplace on your laptop.
  • Search for CocoDoc PDF Editor and get the add-on.
  • Select the template that you want to edit and find CocoDoc PDF Editor by selecting "Open with" in Drive.
  • Edit and sign your file using the toolbar.
  • Save the completed PDF file on your device.

PDF Editor FAQ

Is the dockless bike-sharing model a failure in China?

Photos and flyover video montages of these “bicycle graveyards” — which, to be honest, are beautiful in a terrifying and haunting way — are merely another share-worthy meme in a long line of Chinese memes, following the trail of “ghost cities”, the rise of an ominous-sounding “shadow banking” sector, “building roads and bridges (and high-speed rail) to nowhere” and my personal favorite, the “treadmill to hell”:Are the ghost cities in China just Western propaganda?Why does China have 64 million unoccupied homes?How did China use more cement in the past three years than the US in the entire 20th century?Is China over-investing in high-speed rail?Is China's credit bubble really a problem?Could China's shadow banking create a similar situation as the 2008 US financial crisis?The common thread with these memes is an overly simplified narrative that does not scratch much below the surface, consider the wider context, and often conforms to the pre-existing notion that economic development in China is generally unsustainable, to a large extent fake, and carried to its natural conclusion, will end in tears — accompanied with a healthy serving of schadenfreude piled on thick and heavy.It is very tempting to read about these meme-worthy mangled mountains of multi-chromatic mass-transit mobility machines — say that three times fast! — and conclude that this is yet another example of China’s propensity to waste, and another sign of the impending apocalypse. But if you take the time to scratch below the surface and dig one or two levels deeper, you’ll realize that truth and reality are a lot more nuanced and very different from the simple memes that dominate your various news and social media feeds.First of all, it’s an extremely young industry — a veritable toddler that a mere four years ago existed only in the minds of a couple of recent college graduates. It is a shame (or perhaps laziness) that some can scan a few photos, skim a few articles or even come across a mass of unused bicycles on a random Chinese city street, and think they have enough ammunition to draw a firm conclusion about how this toddler of a business model is a “failure”. When a drooling three-year old stumbles on the sidewalk or runs into a lamp post, do adults roll their eyes and come to the conclusion that “this kid will just never make it”? Of course not. So why are we doing that here?Even more significantly, by deciding at this early stage that you already know how the story ends, you close yourself off from diving deeper and considering alternate endings. And by doing that, you might just be missing out on a chance to gain a deeper and better understanding of the complex, rapidly evolving, and not black/white place that is China.You see, when I started to see these multi-colored bicycles rapidly clog the streets of Shenzhen and Shanghai and other cities in China, I made a conscious decision to dig deeper. And what I found was a story that was absolutely fascinating in the way that it touched on so many important themes about China’s rapidly changing economy — from the role of mobile payments as an enabling platform technology, to the “Game of Thrones”-like battle being played out by Alibaba, Tencent and up-and-comers like Meituan — which as I will delve into below, now owns Mobike, one of the two companies that dominate the space today.You can read a lot more about those specific ancillary themes here (What does the bike-sharing mania say about the Chinese economy?) but for now let’s turn our attention back to our drooling toddler, starting from the very beginning with a key protagonist in the story, the Bicycle.The Amazing BicycleAnyone who has ever owned a bike knows that they are not the easiest things to maintain. Like the brawny Leafcutter Ant[1], bicycles carry loads that are multiples of their own weight — perhaps one turn too many, in my case! — while having to travel at high speeds on paths of varying quality under all sorts of weather conditions. To keep these faithful machines in good working condition, its gears need to stay lubricated, its tires inflated, its brakes aligned, etc.This is my trusty made-in-Taiwan Giant FCR1 city bike. It’s a good-looking bike with something like twenty-one different gear-speed combinations, fast tires, really strong brakes and an aluminum-alloy frame that makes it super light but still sturdy.I store it in a bicycle rack in the basement of my building, protected from Mother Nature. I only ride occasionally, taking it out maybe once every few weeks when the weather is nice. Because I do not ride that often, I usually need to check that the tires are fully inflated before riding. Once, I forgot to pump up the tires and I ended up blowing out the front tire when I hit a pothole and had to replace the inner tube at typical NYC extortionary pricing.There is a lot of maintenance involved and I do not even ride it that often and despite the care and attention of its owner — i.e. someone who actually cares about the well-being of the bicycle — it still breaks down every so often.Now imagine a bike that is used multiple times per day, by riders that don’t care about its well-being, and typically sits outside exposed to the elements. As you are probably beginning to imagine, shared bikes get old rather quickly, especially when they are used heavily.The financial term for “getting old” is “depreciation” and this is an important point that we will come back to later. So let it stew for a bit while we jump into our time machine and make a quick stop in late 2014 in Beijing, when a handful of recent graduates from Peking University who loved cycling decided that they wanted to start a business together.The “Little Yellow Bike”At the 2014 World Economic Forum in Davos, Li Keqiang (China’s second-in-command) formally introduced the notion of “mass entrepreneurship” (大众创业万众创新[2]) — a concept that had already been broadcast informally for some time. Answering the call, five members of Peking University’s cycling club decided they wanted to focus on bicycle tourism and called their business “[math]ofo[/math]” due its resemblance to a cyclist hunched over on his/her bike, not to mention its easy pronunciation.The bicycle tourism idea didn’t pan out and neither did many subsequent follow-on ideas. By April 2015, according to the account given by then 24-year old principal co-founder Dai Wei (戴威)[3], ofo was down to its last 400 yuan (around $60)[4] and struggling to pay suppliers. Things were getting a bit desperate.That is when they stumbled upon the idea of shared bikes. Over the May 1st “Worker’s Holiday” (Chinese equivalent of Labor Day), Dai Wei thought long and hard about the pain points of owning a bicycle for college students. Having lost five bicycles in four years of college, he had firsthand experience with the pitfalls of bicycle ownership. They began to develop the idea of sharing and renting out bicycles on Peking University’s campus and wanted to be ready for the students when they returned in the fall.At 8 am on the morning of September 7th, 2015, the six ofo employees stood in front of a row of yellow bicycles marking the first official day of operations of its shared bicycle service at Peking University. The team had somehow convinced 500 students to register for the initial launch.By the second day after launch, there were 300 rides ordered. After ten days, 1,500 rides were being ordered daily. By the end of October, ofo was providing over 4,000 rides per day to the university students. The team knew that they had finally hit upon a viable business idea. Like Facebook a decade earlier — which had begun at Harvard — ofo began expanding its business model to other college campuses.A Simple Narrative of the Spectacular Rise and Fall of Shared Bikes in ChinaIn China, good ideas do not stay hidden for long. Or even for a short time.By late 2016 — less than a year after initial conception — dozens of companies had been funded in the space and the industry had already entered the “land grab” phase[5]. With 60,000 bicycles, ofo was serving over half a million rides per day and was on the verge of expanding outside of college campuses into cities with plans to increase the number of bicycles one hundred fold. To do this, it had recently raised $130 million in funding and was in the process of raising another $450 million (in a round that closed in early 2017).The speed of adoption and the very visible impact on people’s lives in such a short time period was breathtaking. With so much going on, Chinese people proudly annointed bike-sharing as one of the “Four New Inventions” alongside mobile payments, high-speed rail and e-commerce.The problem was that everyone else was pursuing the same strategy. Another startup with a seasoned entrepreneurial team, Mobike, had launched in Beijing and was about to announce a $100 million funding round from well-known investors like Hillhouse, Qiming, Sequoia and Tencent.The race — pun intended — was on. Over the course of the next two years, on the back of billions of dollars in largely VC-backed equity, over 20 million bicycles would enter the streets and alleyways of large and small cities across the nation.Shared bicycles in Shenzhen, early 20172017 is when the problems of rapid scale began show up in the news reports, especially in Tier I cities where the front lines of the “land grab” war were taking place. At some point in Shanghai there were around 1.7 million shared bikes ,[6] which comes out to one shared bike for every 15 residents. Experts thought the optimal number was around 500,000 shared bicycles, or one for every 50 residents.A brutally competitive environment led to rumors and allegations of companies sabotaging competitors’ bicycles, and users abusing the system by parking bicycles inside their own private property, throwing bikes into the river and other anti-social behaviors. City residents complained of crowded, messy sidewalks where many of the bicycles did not even work properly. Local officials began taking measures to curb the amount of bikes on the street and soon thereafter, pictures of these massive “bicycle graveyards” began to show up.Source: MediumBike-sharing companies began to drop like flies, many merging their operations in an effort to stay afloat while others were shut down or acquired out of effective bankruptcy[7], sometimes refusing to refund deposits that had been paid by users when they signed up to their apps. Even ofo, the original dockless (or station-less) shared-bike company with all of its funding, ran into expansion issues and announced that it had to massively scale back its once-promising international operations and cut back on bicycle orders.With all this going on, were the naysayers right all along? Was dockless bike-sharing on its way to a quick demise and yet another example of “credit-fueled inefficient capital spending” in China? Were the photos and flyover videos of spectacular “bicycle graveyards” accurate metaphors for the prospects of the industry?Not so fast. Let’s step back for a moment and think about what we are looking at in these pictures in the context of the much bigger picture.Thinking about the Big Picture, SlowlyLet’s face it, China is a big place. You’ve heard it all before. 1.4 billion people! Miles and miles of seemingly endless high rises! The world’s largest consumer of steel, cement, coal and luxury goods! The list goes on.It is the level of scale that is hard to truly comprehend for the human brain.Let me explain what I mean by “truly comprehend”. We can easily tell the difference between two cookies and three cookies. We might even be able to tell the difference between fifteen and sixteen cookies. But unless you are Rain Man, there is almost nobody on the planet that can instantly process and count the 246 toothpicks that I just spilled on the ground[8].The brain’s physical limitation shows up in other areas of study, like anthropology with the concept of Dunbar’s number[9] i.e. the cognitive limit on the number of real relationships humans can have (around 150 to 200).And this all kind of makes sense. When we were figuring out how to survive on the African savanna, there was really no need for our brains to figure out how to count more than a few dozen of anything. “I see five apples, everyone in the family gets one apple tonight. I see two lions, I better run.” To comprehend numbers past a couple hundred, the human brain had to start abstracting (and fortunately for human civilization, it had the capability of doing exactly that).By now you’re probably thinking … how is any of this relevant?Quick! Take a look at this picture and within ten seconds, tell me how many bikes you think there are in that pile? Definitely more than a hundred. Probably more than a thousand. Five thousand? Twenty thousand? Half a million?The answer is around 10,000 bicycles — this was a picture taken on January 13, 2018 in the city of Xiamen as you may have noticed in The Atlantic article[10] referenced at the top in the question link.If you had more than ten seconds, many people might have been able to get close … perhaps by estimating the cubic volume of that pile and doing some basic arithmetic based the space taken up by a haphazardly placed bicycle … or perhaps by running a “how many jellybeans are in this jar?” style poll and averaging out the responses from a few dozen people to get a pretty good approximation.But in a snap judgment type situation (like skimming through a news article), the best the human brain can probably come up with is … “a lot”.And yes, 10,000 bikes is definitely “a lot” … in certain contexts. Is it “a lot” in comparison to the number of total shared bikes in Xiamen? Is the beautifully documented existence of this pile and even many others significant in the context of all of the shared bikes being utilized across the country? How long did it take to accumulate this pile of bike — a day, a month, the past year?If my (often drooling) toddler saw a pile of say 1 million bikes next to that pile of 10,000 bikes and was asked “how many?”, he’d probably answer, “a lot a lot?”. And frankly, for the numbers we are talking about, that response would about as accurate as any adult’s, including Rain Man himself.The point is, as much of an impression these photos make on your “fast” brain, until you start to process everything with your “slow” brain, you really can’t begin to answer this question of “failure” on the basis of looking at some photos and watching some videos.So let’s move away from “thinking fast” and making snap judgments. As former Nobel Prize in Economics winner Daniel Kahneman might say[11], let’s “slow down” and really think about this question with the rational part of our brain. This means diving into the actual numbers that are coming in from the field in real-time.From Rapid, Iterative Design Cycles to Bicycle GraveyardsLooking at those massive piles of mangled bicycles, many naturally assumed that most of those bicycles should never have been manufactured in the first place. These assumptions were certainly egged on in many cases (implicitly or explicitly) by the authors of these articles themselves. In other words, “bicycle graveyards” fit perfectly in the “China is wasteful and over-invests in capacity” theme.And while there was certainly some truth to this (i.e. the “land grab frenzy” I described above) it’s really a lot more complicated than this simple narrative. This is the point at which the idea of bicycle depreciation re-enters the story.As with any early-stage venture, as ofo began to scale in 2016, the company began to realize that you could not just use any old off-the-shelf bike as part of its shared bike fleet. First, because it was a dockless system, you had to install a GPS-enabled box that could lock and unlock the bike remotely. But more importantly, you had to design a bike that could withstand the rigors of being used (and frequently abused) by the general public. For instance, regular bike tires with an inner tube pop all of the time, so perhaps using solid rubber tires made more sense. Steel bikes rust easily when exposed to the elements, so maybe it made more sense to go with more expensive aluminum-alloy bikes.As detailed excellently in this podcast[12], the shared bike companies had to essentially re-design the bicycle from the ground up for this new use case. One implication of this is that the first couple generations of shared bicycles had design problems which led to a high percentage of them having to be discarded. In other words the depreciation rate was very high for the first couple iterations of bicycles as the entrepreneurs figured things out and learned from their mistakes.Source: Hackernoon: Evolution of Dockless Bike/Bikesharing Designs and Thoughts on the IndustryOn top of this, the bikes were actually being used in a big way. Low fees (1 RMB, 15 cents for a typical ride), widespread availability, and smartphone-enabled ease-of-use led to tens of millions of urban residents signing on and using the service in the first 18 months. Shared bikes were incorporated into the rapidly developing local delivery networks that were driven by China’s e-commerce boom.So what happens when you have millions of bicycles on city streets that are being used fairly heavily, a large portion of which were not designed for this type of usage? You end up with a lot of broken bicycles.The original goal was to design bicycles that could last four years. This means that if there were, say, 10 million active bicycles out there, the natural rate of depreciation would mean upwards of 208,000 bicycles per month having to be replaced. That is twenty piles like the one you see above created every single month based on normal usage. And since we know the real-world depreciation rate was much faster than 4 years, this further increases the rate at which discarded bicycles are generated.The point here is that the mere existence of massive “bicycle graveyards”, taken out of context, could mean multiple things, not necessarily just the “waste” thesis that many naturally assumed or were led to assume. Indeed, one of the major reasons why there were so many discarded bikes is because they were actually being used out there in the real world! And isn’t that the whole point?Even the over-building issue itself is likely a one-time, non-recurring effect of China’s “scale fast and fail fast” entrepreneurial mentality. It took a mere three years for the industry to go through Gartner’s “hype cycle”[13], and after about two years of “disillusionment”, the industry has effectively shrunk down to only a handful of players that are no longer focused on “growth at all costs” but figuring out how to compete with each other for market share in other ways (like improving the service).In other words, China’s shared-bike industry is settling into a less chaotic and more rational market equilibrium, which means the wastefulness of the frenzied “land grab” phase is unlikely to repeat itself again in the same way … at least in the bike-sharing industry (although in other new industries, this cycle is very likely to repeat itself).Capital Efficiency: Docked vs. DocklessOn April 4, 2018, Meituan, an O2O (online-to-offline) powerhouse that is part of the next generation of Chinese mega-unicorns, announced the acquisition of Mobike, ofo’s key competitor, for a total consideration of $2.5 billion. As the leading player in the local on-demand delivery sector (primarily for restaurants), the acquisition of Mobike was seen as a strategic acquisition ahead of its impending initial public offering.From Mobike’s perspective, this was a chance to bolster its balance sheet resources in the cutthroat battle for dominance in the shared bicycle industry, and partnering with a fellow Tencent equity investee made a lot of sense. A few months later, Meituan completed its initial public offering in Hong Kong, raising over $4 billion to replenish its war chest to continue its own brutally competitive fight with Alibaba, Didi and others.One of the side effects of Meituan’s acquisition of Mobike and the subsequent listing is that we now have some more insight into the numbers behind the bike-sharing industry. Up to this point, the public had to rely primarily on patchy, selective, sometimes-inflated[14] disclosure from private companies or leaked, often-stale information from previous fundraisings.For example, on page 23 of Meituan’s listing prospectus[15], we catch an audited glimpse into the operational performance of Mobike through the first four months of 2018:“48.1 million active bike users”“7.1 million active bikes”“1.0 billion rides completed in the four months ended April 30, 2018” which annualizes out to 3 billion rides per year, or 8.2 million rides per day. I will note that these include two of the coldest, least bike-friendly months of the year, especially in the frigid Northeast.We already knew how much capital had been invested in Mobike to get them to that point, approximately $825 million during that frenzied “land grab” phase from August 2016 to June 2017.Doing some simple arithmetic, we can start to see some interesting operating metrics:Mobike “spent” about $117 of equity capital per active bike. I put “spent” in parenthesis because they also collected refundable deposits, revenue from paying customers, while also having to run operations, account for broken bikes etc.The average Mobike active user uses the service about 5 times per month.Each active bike is used on average 423 times per year (about 1.2 times per day).Now how do we judge whether these operational metrics signal any sort of capital efficiency? Looking at its financials for signs of operating profit is one way but Mobike’s financials are not broken out and in any case, a good case can be made for why at this stage in the market when the industry is still growing rapidly and there are still fierce competitors out there, it makes sense to prioritize market share growth over accounting profitability (in addition to other strategic considerations).But one way of benchmarking how Mobike’s capital efficiency is by comparing to alternative systems.So let’s take a look at Citibike, a well-known docked bike-sharing system in New York City that is now owned by Lyft:Total cumulative funding for Citibike has been around $200 million[16].Citibike’s total system capacity is around 12,000 bicycles and ridership (during the good weather months) is around 50,000 per day[17].There are around 150,000 active Citibike users. So the average Citibike user rides around 10 times per month and the average Citibike is used 1,500 times per year (roughly 4 times per day).Citibike invested approximately $16,700 of capital per bike. The main reason why this is so high is because of the need to build the docking station.Citibike is still unprofitable as the system operator.The averaged-out cost of a Citibike ride is around $1.82 — compared to 15 cents for a typical Chinese ride.Nice an orderly … but there’s a steep price to pay …Now some rough comparison numbers:Mobike took in around 4 times the invested capital of Citibike and is providing 165 times the number of daily rides.Over its lifetime (since May 2013), Citibike has cumulatively served around 70 million rides. Mobike serves this number every eight days.Individual Citibikes are used more intensively (four times per day vs. Mobike’s once per day) but for the same cost of putting out one docked Citibike on the street, you can deploy more than one hundred dockless ones.While this comparison is not necessarily indicative that Mobike is capital efficient (it is still losing money, after all), it is pretty convincing that at the very least, Mobike has been significantly more capital efficient than Citibike.The Drooling ToddlerFrom 2014 to 2015, I was living in Taiwan. We were renovating our place and I was enjoying some time off after working hard in the investment industry straight through since graduating from college. I distinctly remember using a docked bike-share service called U-Bike in Taipei and thought it was comparable to the first year of using Citibike service in Manhattan. I had generally satisfactory experiences with both.With the renovations completed, we moved back to States in the fall of 2015. This was around the time that Dai Wei and his ofo co-founders were first launching their bicycle sharing service on the campus of Peking University. I had boxed up all of my papers and personal effects into around forty banker boxes and remember sitting in my office trying to figure out how to deal with everything … should I keep it, scan it, file it, throw it away, etc.I am proud to report that I have finally finished organizing these boxes! It only took a little over three years! Sigh …Where am I going with this? Okay, I have to admit that this little vignette has zero relevance to the dockless, bike-sharing story in China, except to highlight one thing:In the time it took me to organize a few dozen banker boxes here in Lower Manhattan, an entirely new industry was created from scratch in China that today collectively serves billions of rides per year and has had a massive impact on urban development, mass transit patterns and the lives of hundreds of millions of Chinese people. It is an industry that is almost undoubtedly going to be permanently ingrained in the fabric of urban China — possibly with electric upgrades[18][19] by more or less the same players that have survived the frenzied competition environment of the last two years.At the 5-year college reunion:Glenn: So, what have you been up to?!Wei: Oh … I just … you know … nothing crazy … started a company … revolutionized urban transport in China … you?Glenn: Hmmm. Well … I did finally clear out some boxes.This is an industry that is literally younger than my toddler — who I am also happy to report, is finally starting to drool less. I am not even going to get into the carbon-saving potential or all of the knock-on effects of collecting trillions of heretofore inaccessible data points and how they can be used to inform future urban development, allocate resources and help optimize consumer habits.If after getting through all of this, you still think that the three-year old dockless, bike-sharing model in China is a failure … on the basis of some anecdotal, totally-removed-from-context-but-striking-in-an-admittedly-beautiful-yet-haunting-way photos and videos … the only thing I have left to say is that your standards for what qualifies as a “success” must be higher than two hippies riding a hot air balloon at a Grateful Dead concert.Footnotes[1] Leafcutter ant - Wikipedia[2] 大众创业、万众创新 - 维基百科,自由的百科全书[3] 戴威(ofo共享单车创始人)_百度百科[4] https://www.xuehua.us/2018/06/22/%E6%A1%88%E4%BE%8B-%E8%B6%85600%E4%B8%87%E8%BE%86%E5%B0%8F%E9%BB%84%E8%BD%A6%E8%83%8C%E5%90%8E%E7%9A%84%E5%88%9B%E4%B8%9A%E6%95%85%E4%BA%8B/[5] Glenn Luk's answer to What happened to the shared bicycle economy in China?[6] 上海共享单车40%以上的有故障,谁来管?--上观[7] Subscribe to read | Financial Times[8] Rain Man (4/11) Movie CLIP - 246 Toothpicks (1988) HD[9] Dunbar's number - Wikipedia[10] The Bike-Share Oversupply in China: Huge Piles of Abandoned and Broken Bicycles[11] Thinking, Fast and Slow: Daniel Kahneman: 9780374533557: Amazon.com: Books[12] Ep. 16: Bike-sharing in China, Part 2: Mobike and the Future of Personal Transportation - Pandaily[13] Glenn Luk's answer to What happened to the shared bicycle economy in China?[14] Mobike responds to claims of inflated numbers · TechNode[15] http://www3.hkexnews.hk/listedco/listconews/sehk/2018/0907/ltn20180907011.pdf[16] Citi Bike - Wikipedia[17] Citi Bike System Data | Citi Bike NYC[18] Are you a robot?[19] Mobike launches electric bike for dockless sharing

What is the rule in India about service tax?

Service Tax Rules:As per the Finance Act, 1994, the government of India creates a set of rules in order to assess and collect service tax in India. Listed below are the rules applicable to service tax in India:Rule 1: Short Title and Commencement:The rules created to assess service tax may called as Service Tax Rules, 1994.They came into effect from 1st July, 1994.Rule 2: Definitions:This category of rules includes the definitions of various terms such as “Act”, “assessment” “personal liable for paying service tax” etc. Act refers to the Finance Act, 2014, “assessment” refers to the self-assessment of service tax by the assessee, provisional assessment and reassessment, and "personal liable for paying service tax" refers to the recipient of service.It also includes definition of "quarter" "security services" "renting of immovable property" etc. Quarter refers to the period between 1st January to 31st March or 1st April to 30th June; or 1st July to 30th September; or 1st October to 31st December of a single financial year. “Renting of immovable property” refers to services provided by renting of immovable property and “security services” refers to services relating to the security and property.Rule: 3 Appointment of Officers:As per this rule, the Central Board of Excise and Customs can appoint central excise officers.Rule 4: Registration:Every service provider who is liable to pay service tax shall apply for registration by using the application Form ST - 1 within 30 days from the date on which service tax is charged. This is very essential.Rule 4 (A): Information about Taxable Services To Be Provided on Bill, Invoice Or ChallanEvery service provider offering taxable services will issue an invoice or a bill or a challan signed by him or by another person authorized by him which will contain the basic information such as name, address and registration number of the service provider; name and address of the service recipient; description and cost of taxable service provided and the amount of service tax to be paid.Rule 4 (B): Consignment Note:Any service provider that provides services related to transportation of goods should issue a consignment note.Rule 5: Records:Any records containing computerized data maintained and produced by an assessee according to different existing laws shall be accepted by Central Board of Excise and Custom.Rule 5 (A): Access to Registered Premises:As per this rule, any officer authorized by the commissioner shall have access to any premises in order to complete scrutiny and verification required to protect revenues.Rule (6): Payment of Service Tax:As per this rule, the service tax will be paid to the credit of the central government by the 6th of every month, if paid electronically and 5th of every month, if paid via other means.Rule 6 (A) Export of Services:It includes the situations under which any services shall considered as export of services. If the provider of service is located in the taxable territory and the recipient is located outside India, the service shall be considered as export of service.Rule 7: Returns:Every service provider shall submit a half yearly return in Form ST-3 or ST-3A together with a copy of the Form TR-6 filled in triplicate by 25th of the month following the half year.Rule 7 (A) Returns for taxable services provided by transport operators:Services/goods provided by transport operators shall also furnish a return within a period of six months from the 13th May of 2003, failing which will lead to penalty.Rule 7 (B) Revision of Return:As per this rule, an assessee can submit a revised return in Form ST-3 to modify or correct any mistakes within 90 days from the date of submission of return.Rule 7 (C): Amount to be paid for delay in furnishing returns:An amount of Rs.500 needs to be paid to the credit of the central government, if you fail to furnish your return within 15 days from the prescribed date of submission. If it gets delayed by more than 15 days, you need to pay Rs. 1000. If it extends beyond 30 days, you need to pay Rs. 1000 plus Rs.100 per month till the date you finally furnish your returns.Rule 8: Appeal to Commissioner of Central Excise:You can appeal to Commissioner of Central Excise in Form ST - 4 under section 85 of the Finance Act, 1994.Rule 9: Form of Appeals to Appellate Tribunal:You can appeal to the Appellate Tribunal under section 86 of the Finance Act, 1994 by using Form ST-5.Rule 10: Facilities and Procedure for Large Taxpayers:This section of rules include the provisions enjoyed by the large taxpayers. A large taxpayer shall submit returns for each of their registered premises. They may also be required to produce all financial records for verification and security when required.Service Tax Rates In India:There is an increase in the rate of service tax in India following the recent announcement made by the finance minister Arun Jaitley in budget 2015. The budget decides to increase the rate of service tax to 14% from its previous rate of 12, 36%. However, this revised rate of service tax will include Education Cess’ and ‘Secondary and Higher Education Cess’ in it. It is expected that this rise in service tax rate will increase the cost of restaurant bills and mobile bills for common people. The government of India took this move to levy tax smoothly on the services provided by both states and the centre. Beside, another provision is included in the Finance Bill, 2014 to levy a “Swachh Bharat Cess” at 2% on all or select taxable services in India.How to Pay Service Tax In India?You can pay service tax by using a G.A.R -7. This is a challan available in specified branches of particular banks. You need to fill the challan by putting all required information and submit it at your particular bank. However, you can also pay your service tax online by using the e-payment facility offered by the central Board of Excise and Custom. For E-payment, it is mandatory to have an internet banking account with any of the authorized banks.Previously service tax was charged on cash basis from all service providers. But, now only individual providers have pay tax on cash basis. Companies have to pay it on accrual basis. They need to deposit tax as soon as they offer services to recipients. Service tax can be paid on quarterly basis by individuals and partnership firms. But, companies, society and trusts need to pay service tax on monthly basis.How to File Service Tax Returns?Usually, a service tax assessee needs to file two type of returns - ST-3 Return and ST-3A Return. ST-3 Return is applicable for registered assessee. ST-3A Return is applicable for those who make provisional assessment under rule 6(4) of the Service Tax Rules, 1994. You need to file ST-3 Return twice in a financial year on half yearly basis. You can file your service tax returns by furnishing the details of each month for which the return is filed. You need to furnish these details separately with Form ST-3. While filing your service tax returns, you can take the help of instructions stated in the application form. Your application form needs to be accompanied by a GAR-7 challan.If you want to file your service tax returns online, first you need to register with ACES (Automation Central Excise and Service Tax) by visiting website of Central Board of Excise and Custom. Once, you register, the site will send you an user ID and password by using which you can log in to the site of central Board of Excise and Custom and get access to FORM ST-1. Then, fill up the online form by putting all required information and make an e-payment by using your chosen bank. You can also revise your service tax returns in order to correct an error or omit something. If you fail to file your returns within 15 days, from the prescribed due date of returns, you need to pay a penalty fee of Rs. 500. But, the penalty fee increases, if service tax returns get delayed beyond that.Checkout Late fee and Due Date for Filing Service Tax ReturnService Tax Penalties:As per the provisions made under Sections 76, 77 and 78 of Finance Act, 1994, the central government may charge penalty, if you fail to meet the following conditions:If you fail to furnish the ST-3 Return within the due dates which are 25th October and 25th April of every year. In that case, you will be liable to pay penalty fee which may extend up to Rs. 2000 based on the period of delay.If a person fails to furnish information or appear before the Central Excise Officer when called for, he/she shall have to pay penalty up to Rs. 5000 or Rs. 200 per day after the due date, whichever is higher.If you are a service provider and fail to register your service, it will draw penalty as per the regulations mentioned in section 77 of the Finance Act, 1994 and the penalty fee may go up to Rs. 5,000. Because, registration serves as an identity of an assessee and it is mandatory to register your services.If an assessee fails to keep or maintain records of account and other documents required by service tax law, he/she shall be liable to pay penalty fee which may go up to Rs. 5,000.If a person fails to pay tax electronically, he/she shall to pay penalty which may extend up to Rs. 5,000.Penalty fee is also charged on non-payment or delayed payment of service tax.Penalty shall be charged up to Rs. 5000, if a person issues an incorrect invoice or fails to support his invoice with valid details.Penalty shall be charge if a person suppresses the value of taxable services or provides willful miss-statement about the service provided.Not only there are provisions for imposing penalty if you fail to meet the above mentioned criteria, there are also provisions for not imposing penalty in the service tax rules. As per section 80 of the Finance Act, 1994, if a person can provide sufficient cause to support his failure to pay service tax, he/she can be exempted from paying penalty fees. However, insufficient funds or lack time are not considered as adequate causes to waive penalty.What are the Exemptions Under Service Tax In India?Normally, service tax is paid on all services except for those included in the negative list of services. All service providers including central and state government service providers as well as private sector service providers are liable to pay service tax. However, there are a few exceptional scenarios wherein service providers can avoid paying service tax. Listed below the major exemptions:A small scale or individual service provider can enjoy service tax exemption, if its total turnover of taxable services does not go beyond Rs. 10 lakhs in a single a financial year.The recipients are exempted from paying service tax for the goods and services received from the service provider, if there is written proof indicating the value of the goods and materials and no credit of duty is paid on such goods and materials, and if the services have been rendered under the CENVAT Credit rules.Service tax is not applicable to the services provided to diplomatic missions and to the officers a diplomatic mission and their family members.Services such as port services, goods transport services and containerised transport services received by an exporter and used for export of goods are not taxable. In such cases, service tax paid by an exporter on the above mentioned situations is refunded to the exporter.Services provided to international organizations and the United Nations are not taxable.Service tax is not applicable to the services provided to a developer of Special Economic Zone or a unit of Special Economic Zone.Billing of Service Tax:Issue of Bill or Invoice by the service tax assessee has been made mandatory according to Rule 4A of STR, 1994. The bill or invoice must be issued within a period of 14 days from the taxable service completion date or payment receipt for the service, whichever takes place earlier.The bill or invoice must have the following things on it:Serial numberAddress and name of the service receiverRegistration number, address and name of the service provider must be there on the billTaxable service value, classification and description of the service being renderedService tax amount that is payable must be there on the invoicePayment of Service Tax:The payment of service tax can be done via G.A.R.7. This was previously called TR6 Challan. All the branches of designated banks will accept the service tax payments. The nearest service tax office or central excise office will provide you with a list of the designated banks and its branches where you can make the payment of tax. You can also pay service tax by using the e-payment facility.Due date for payment of Service Tax:Partnership firm, Proprietary, Individual – The payment of service tax must be made by the fifth day and the sixth day of the month following every quarter, in case the payment is done via e-payment facility.All other categories including trust, society and company - The payment of service tax must be made by the fifth day and the sixth day of the month, in case the payment is done via e-payment facility.FAQs:Who is liable to pay service tax in India?Any firm, company or individual who provides services which are not included in the list negative things is liable to pay service tax.What kind of tax is service tax?Service is a kind of indirect tax which the recipient of various services pay indirectly to the government via service providers.Can I pay my service tax online?Yes, you can pay your service tax online by visiting the website of Central Board of Excise and Custom. For that, you need to have an internet banking account.Do I need to pay penalty fees, if I don’t pay my service tax on time?Yes, penalty will imposed on you, if your fail to pay tax on time.What is G.A.R -7?This is a challan by using which you can pay service tax manually. The challan is available in particular authorized banks.Explore Service Tax Related Articles:News About Service TaxService Tax Growth Deaccelerates with DemonetizationService tax collections showed an even greater fall with a registered growth of 13% in November compared to 60% the previous month. The excise duty number captures data of manufacturers with an annual turnover of more than Rs 1.5 crores, while service tax accounts for small businesses with a revenue threshold of Rs10 lakh annually.A statement issued by the Finance Ministry said that there was a 13.9% decline from October in the total indirect tax collection for the month of November.The data shows that the demonetization drive has hit India’s economic growth with many financial institutions and economists lowering India’s GDP growth prediction for 2016-2017.Unavailability of notes have also hit Value-Added tax (VAT) collections of the States as overall consumption has declined. The West Bengal Finance Minister, Amit Misra has recently said that small-scale manufacturers, tourism and the hotel industry have seen a steep decline in their revenues due to cash crunch, destabilizing West Bengal state finances.10th December 2016No Service Tax on Online Railway Bookings until December 31The price of train tickets in India will decrease for some time as the government has said that no service tax will be charged on online railway bookings until December 31, 2016. This step has been taken to encourage people to indulge in cashless transactions. At present, Rs.20 is charged on Sleeper class tickets and Rs.40 is charged on AC class tickets as service tax.22nd November 2016GST Council Hits Rough Patch on Service Tax IssuesService tax has run into rough waters again after a consensus that was reached between the centre and the states about administering 1.1 Million service tax assesses broke down during the first GST council meeting on Friday. The problems arose due to different interpretations of service tax and the division of authority between centre and the states. While in an earlier meeting, dual control between centre and the states for service tax assessment method was agreed upon, a few states have, since then, raised concerns on the methods.The prime contention was that the centre continues imposing tax for services till the time states have been trained but the states say that they have been imposing tax on services such as entertainment and restaurants and would want to continue doing so.1st October 2016Service Tax Collection in Mumbai Goes Up By 23% in First QuarterThe Mumbai zone department has reported a 23% rise in the service tax collection in the first quarter, crossing the target of this period by 4%.According to the Service Tax Department, service tax collection went up by 22.9% to Rs.17,583 crore in the quarter ending June. Last year’s collection reached Rs.14,307 crore during the same period. The zone’s collection target was Rs.16,969 crore, which was surpassed by 3.6%.The revenue collection target for the Mumbai zone for this financial year is Rs.76,300 crore. The previous year saw a revenue collection of Rs.68,714 crore by the zone.5th August 2016Finance Minister Jaitley Bats for the GST BillTouted to be the biggest tax reform since the Indian independence, the GST (Goods and Services Tax) Bill is being given that much needed push in the parliament for an early passage. The Finance Minister is leaving no stones unturned in ensuring it gets the nod from both houses during the monsoon session.He has asked the Rajya Sabha to pass the GST Bill so that states can get their share of service tax. Stressing on this fact, he is of the opinion that the sooner it it enacted, states stand a quicker chance to get their share. The bill contains provisions for states to get a share of 42% from the service tax collections until 2020.29th July 2016Service Tax Collection Up by 23% in Mumbai Zone During Quarter 1In a recent news release by the Service Tax Department, the consolidated service tax collection during the first quarter stood strong at a whopping Rs.17,583 crore, a rise of 22.9% from Rs.14,307 crore during the same quarter last year.During the current fiscal, the Mumbai zone has been assigned a target of Rs.76,300 crore on the basis of collections during the last fiscal which clocked 68,714 crore. It must be noted that the target set by the Union Budget for service tax collection for the current fiscal is Rs.2.16 lakh crore. So far, the government has managed to collect Rs.53,757 crores, a staggering growth of 20.8% over last fiscal’s collection of Rs.44,503 crore during the same period.20th July 2016SEBI Seeks Service Tax Exemption From July 2012 OnwardsThe Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) recently got an exemption from service tax from this fiscal year onwards. However, not content with that, SEBI has asked the government to exempt its service tax liabilities with retrospective effect from July 2012.While the government had contended that SEBI’s services fall within the ambit of service tax, SEBI had been arguing otherwise. Finally, after rounds of discussion, SEBI was exempt from service tax from this financial year.SEBI is the regulator for capital markets including entities such as companies, stock brokers and mutual funds.15th July 2016Telangana plans to replace the term "Licence Fee"In an attempt to save up on tax deducted by the central government, the Telangana government has taken help of finance professionals and come up with the idea of replacing the term “Licence Fee” with some other term. Currently, as per new rule of the central government, any licence fee levied by the state government is liable to attract a 15% service tax that goes to the union government.Considering this as detrimental to the growth of Telangana, the state aims to change the term Licence Fee to any other suitable term to save up on service tax which will be around 500 crore rupees if service tax is to be paid on all licences. Various licences are issued by state governments in India. These include hotel licences, bar licences, licences for clubs etc.7th July 2016Air-Conditioned Buses in Bengaluru Feel The HeatWith service tax levied on air-conditioned carriage buses, commuters in Bengaluru who frequently use them as a mode of transport are now feeling the heat, with the already expensive bus fares rising by 6 per cent. The The Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC) and the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) have both launched an all out attack the service tax levied on bus fares. Due to the Union Budget buying over all state-owned transport corporations that come under this service tax bracket, the new regime has implemented a service tax of 15 per cent on 40 per cent of all revenues that are collected from air-conditioned bus services. While non-air conditioned buses are exempt, the tax burden on air-conditioned buses has been shifted to the commuters. Commuters that have been hardest hit by the rise in service tax are usually travellers who commute to and from the Bengaluru International Airport as well as the IT sector of the city. KSRTC MD Rajendar Kataria has however written to the ministry of finance asking them to reconsider their proposal.27th June 2016Sebi seeks Exemption from Service Tax Liability With effect from 2012Sebi (The Securities and Exchange Board of India) has written to the government seeking an exemption from the tax liability with retrospective effect from 2012. Sebi is the regulatory authority that controls the entire range of capital markets including thousands of companies, mutual funds, brokers and other entities.in the budget of 2016-17, the government announced that Sebi will be exempted from service tax effective from April 1, 2016. However, U K Sinha, the Chairman of Sebi was dissatisfied with the announcement as the regulatory authority has always maintained that the services provided by it did not attract any service tax. The Chairman has written to the Revenue Secretary, Finance Minister and Economic Affairs Secretary, asking for an exemption from 1st July, 2012.15th June 2016

View Our Customer Reviews

I'm very pleased with CocoDoc. Uploads and conversions are easy, fast and efficient, as well user-friendly when saving files where I want them.

Justin Miller