Hindustan Times (East UP)

GST collection for March to hit a record at ₹1.30L-cr

A rapid economic growth and stricter compliance through e-invoicing are said to be the key reasons for enhanced collection­s

- Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE GOVERNMENT MADE E-INVOICING MANDATORY FOR BUSINESSES WITH A TURNOVER OF ₹100 CRORE PLUS FROM JANUARY 1

NEW DELHI: India’s Goods and Services Tax (GST) collection in March 2021 is expected to touch a record high of around ₹1.30 lakh crore on the backdrop of a rapid economic recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic and a hard lockdown necessitat­ed by it, two people aware of the developmen­t said.

The people, who asked not to be named, attributed the enhanced collection­s also to stricter compliance through e-invoicing, which had made it difficult to evade tax.

The revenue in March may cross the record ₹1,19,875 crore collected in January by at least ₹10,000 crore, the people said.

The recovery in GST collection­s reflects the larger revival in the economy. India’s economy shrank by 24.4% in the three months ended June 30 and 7.3% in the three months ended October, before entering growth territory and expanding by 0.4% in the three months ended December 31.

The government has estimated the entire year’s GDP contractio­n at 8%, although many experts expect it to do better.

After remaining in contractio­n mode for six months in a row, since March 2020 — India imposed a 68-day-long hard lockdown in late March — GST collection­s started growing from September 2020.

GST collection­s, which plunged to an all-time low at ₹32,172 crore in April 2020, touched a record ₹1,19,875 crore in January. The latest GST collection figure was ₹1,13,143 crore for February 2021, a 7.3% year-on-year growth.

Pratik Jain, partner and leader, Indirect Tax, PwC India, said: “GST collection­s are on an upsurge in last four-five months even without raising GST rates. This is because of tightening of compliance­s, increased rigours in audit /investigat­ion and leveraging technology to widen the tax base. Besides, economy is recovering fast and that would also be reflected in the March collection­s.”

The compulsory e-invoicing

system that started in January this year has plugged businessto-business (B2B) tax evasion to a great extent as transactio­ns above ₹100 crore are mostly B2B, where correct invoicing is insisted upon by both buyers and sellers to avail input tax credits and avoid penalties, one of the two people cited above said.

“Thus, increased use of technology has helped to ease compliance burden on the one hand and raised fear among unscrupulo­us elements on the other,” he added.

The government made e-invoicing mandatory for businesses with an annual turnover of ₹100 crore and above from January 1. The idea is to progressiv­ely make it compulsory for all.

The second person added that no significan­t B2B transactio­n is now possible below the GST radar as e-invoices require

QR codes, which are generated from the GST Network (GSTN). “GSTN has an instant record of all transactio­ns,” he added.

“There are two more reasons for the optimism that GST collection­s could cross ₹1.30 lakh crore in March. One is the fiscal year closing on March 31, and the other is a temporary freeze on refunds.”

The tax department usually goes slow on refunds towards the end of the financial year to make it easier to close books, this person explained.

The two people said the higher GST collection in March is expected despite February being a smaller month. Official GST collection data comes with a lag because the last date for paying GST is the 20th day of the following month.

Therefore, the March GST collection figure actually reflects business activities in February.

MS Mani, partner at Deloitte India, said: “Despite the fewer number of working days in February and although the services sector continues to operate with restrictio­ns, the GST collection­s for February [officially March figures] are expected to be robust due to the continued growth in GDP [gross domestic product] and the anti-evasion drive undertaken by the authoritie­s.”

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