Business Standard

GST collection­s surpass ~1 trillion in April

- DILASHA SETH & INDIVJAL DHASMANA

The goods and services tax (GST) revenue collection crossed ~1 trillion in April, the highest in a month since the new indirect tax was rolled out in July last year. As many as 69.5 per cent of assessees filed summary input-output returns in April, against 64.61 per cent in the previous month. The mop-up at ~1.03 trillion far exceeded the ~898.8 billion average monthly collection­s for the first eight months after the GST was introduced, prompting Finance Minister Arun Jaitley to say that it mirrored enhanced economic activity.

“GST collection­s in April exceeding ~1 trillion are a landmark achievemen­t and a confirmati­on of increased economic activity as brought out by other reports,” he tweeted.

However, the finance ministry clarified that the April collection could not be taken as a trend. “It is usually noticed that in the last month of a financial year, people try to pay arrears of some of the previous months. Therefore, this month’s revenue cannot be taken as trend for the future,” it said.

Experts were, however, optimistic that GST collection­s had stabilised. “Crossing ~1 trillion is a significan­t milestone in the GST journey and it is now expected that revenue will stabilise in that range, considerin­g the series of antievasio­n measures taken or proposed,” said M S Mani, partner, Deloitte India.

The figure released by the finance ministry is for payment received for the entire month of April. Earlier, it used to provide figures for payments made till 20th of the month. The highest monthly figure in 2017-18 was for September (paid till October 20) at ~951 billion.

“GST COLLECTION­S WOULD CONTINUE TO SHOW A POSITIVE TREND. INCREASED TAX COLLECTION­S WILL HELP THE NATION TO EXPAND ITS ECONOMIC HORIZONS AND TAKE IT TO LOFTIER HEIGHTS”

ARUN JAITLEY Finance minister, in a tweet

If the government­s at the Centre and in states indeed collect ~1 trillion, they will be able to garner ~12 trillion in 2018-19, slightly higher than the Union Budget projection­s and incorporat­ing 14 per cent year-on-year growth in state revenue collection­s. The finance minister had last year also taken 14 per cent growth for states revenues to fix a target, based on the formula for compensati­ng states.

The Union Budget has projected GST revenues to be ~7.4 trillion for 2018-19. If compensati­on cess, projected at ~900 billion is taken away, it would amount to ~6.5 trillion. The state GST (SGST) stood at ~2.91

trillion in the first eight months of 2017-18. On a pro rata basis, this amounts to ~4.4 trillion for 12 months. Incorporat­ing 14 per cent growth, the states’ GST revenue should be ~5 trillion and the total revenue should be ~11.5 trillion.

However, there will be some overlap of the integrated GST (IGST) because the figures given for states for the first eight months of 2017-18 also included IGST distributi­on for the month of July, the first month of the GST rollout. “The buoyancy in tax revenue of the GST reflects the upswing in the economy and better compliance,” the finance ministry said.

The central GST (CGST) collected in April stood at

~186.52 billion; SGST ~257.04 billion; IGST ~505.48 billion, including 212.46 billion collected on imports; and cess of ~85.54 billion.

The total revenue earned by the Centre and the state government­s after settlement in the month of April stood at ~324.93 billion for the CGST and ~402.57 billion for the SGST. “Though there will be some impact of the year-end push and adjustment­s, it is clear that compliance is steadily improving. With the introducti­on of the e-way bill system now, one can expect collection for April (to be paid in May) also to exceed ~1 trillion,” said Pratik Jain, partner and leader, indirect tax, PwC.

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