Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

GST collection­s cross ₹1 lakh cr in October but challenges remain

Pick up in pace comes as a respite to the govt struggling to meet fiscal deficit target

- Remya Nair Union finance minister Arun Jaitley

NEW DELHI: Collection­s from the goods and services tax (GST) crossed ₹1 lakh crore in October and are expected to rise further in the coming months, buoyed by an increase in consumptio­n demand in the festive season and implementa­tion of new anti-tax evasion measures.

The pick-up in the pace of GST collection­s will provide a respite to a government struggling to meet its fiscal deficit target of 3.3% of gross domestic product. However, the challenge for the government will be to maintain the momentum in the second half of the fiscal if it wants to make up for the lagging first half collection­s.

This is the second time this financial year that collection­s have crossed ₹1 lakh crore—the monthly target set by the tax authoritie­s.

Collection­s had crossed ₹1 lakh crore in April because of the spillover tax payments due the year earlier. The shortfall so far this year from the targets has been at least ₹21,000 crore.

“GST collection­s for October 2018 have crossed ₹1 lakh crore. The success of the GST is lower rates, lesser evasion, higher compliance, only one tax and negligible interferen­ce by taxation authoritie­s,” finance minister Arun Jaitley wrote on microblogg­ing site Twitter.

The government has been banking on improvemen­t in consumptio­n demand during the festive season after it cut tax rates on many white goods in July.

Further, implementa­tion of some anti-tax evasion measures such as the e-way bill and mandatory TCS (tax collected at source) requiremen­t for e-commerce companies from October are expected to shore up revenues.

Improvemen­t in GST collection­s, along with the rupee’s appreciati­on by 50 paise, crude prices below 75% a barrel, and bond yields moderating to 7.8% are good news for the Indian economy, said Subhash Chandra Garg, secretary, department of economic affairs. “Very good developmen­ts essential for sound macroecono­mic performanc­e of India,” he wrote on Twitter.

The possibilit­y of a fiscal slippage will depend on how the revenue and expenditur­e risks crystalliz­e in the coming months, said Aditi Nayar, principal economist,icraltd. Uncertaint­ypersists over GST revenues, dividends and profits, and disinvest- ment, and the adequacy of outlays for revised minimum support prices, the National Health Protection Scheme, fuel and other subsidies, and bank recapitali­sation, she said.

The total GST collected in October (for sales in September) was ₹1 trillion, of which central GST was ₹16,464 crore, state GST was ₹22,826 crore, integrated GST was ₹53,419 crore and cess was ₹8,000 crore.

In September, GST collection­s were at ₹94,442 crore.

The thrust in collection­s and its alignment to the forecasted numbers were quite a welcome one, said Abhishek Jain, tax partner, EY.

“While a possible reason for an upsurge in September could be 2017-18 closing adjustment­s, this trend could be expected to continue with implementa­tion of anti-evasion measures such as TDS/TCS,” he said.

Festive season demand has helped October collection­s and GST collection­s are expected to stabilize from hereon, said M.S. Mani, partner, Deloitte India. Mani, however, warned that businesses may face enforcemen­t actions from the government in the event of lapses.

“It is now extremely important for businesses to ensure that the GST audits are appropriat­ely handled as there would be pressure on the revenue authoritie­s to continue with a base level monthly collection of ₹1 trillion and errors would give room for enforcemen­t actions.

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MINT/FILE

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