The Hindu - International

April’s gross GST takings power past ₹2.1 lakh cr. in new record

High tax collection­s with 12.4% growth over previous highest tally due to strong momentum in the economy, says Finance Minister; April’s GST revenues are usually the highest, as taxpayers meet compliance deadlines before end of ‡nancial year

- Vikas Dhoot

Year-end compliance­s lifted India’s gross Goods and Services Tax (GST) revenues past a record ₹2.1 lakh crore in April, re‹ecting a 12.4% growth over the previous highest tally of ₹1.87 lakh crore in the same month last year. Taking refunds into account, GST revenues for the month were at ₹1.92 lakh crore, 15.5% higher than the collection in April 2023.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman attributed the ₹2 lakh crore-plus GST revenues in April to “the strong momentum in the economy and e‚cient tax collection­s”, and said there were no dues pending on account of IGST (Integrated GST) settlement to the States.

Revenues from domestic transactio­ns grew 13.4%, the Finance Ministry

said, while goods imports yielded an 8.3% uptick, helping GST in‹ows “breach the landmark milestone of ₹2 lakh crore”.

Rebound in revenues

This marks a rebound in revenues from goods imports that had contracted 5% in March, while domestic transactio­ns’ growth weakened in April relative to the 17.6% uptick recorded in the previous month. Overall, gross GST revenues grew at a slower pace of 11.5% in March, while net revenues had risen 18.4%, faster than April’s growth.

April’s GST revenues, for transactio­ns in March, are typically the highest in a year as taxpayers square their books for the Šnancial year and remit any pending dues to meet compliance deadlines.

Following last month’s record spike, experts pro- ject revenues to moderate in coming months, with some growth expected over the ₹1.68 lakh crore monthly average GST collection of 2023-24.

GST compensati­on cess collection­s also hit an alltime high of ₹13,260 crore last month, which included ₹1,008 crore collected on imported goods. The cess is levied on select goods such as automobile­s and tobacco products, over and above the peak GST rate of 28%.

Initially introduced for Šve years to compensate States for revenue losses arising from the 2017 switch to the GST regime, the cess is now being used to repay loans taken during the pandemic to recompense States amid a lockdown-triggered collapse in revenues.

The Ministry emphasised that there had been a positive performanc­e across components, pointing to Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST) revenues of ₹43,846 crore, State GST revenues of ₹53,538 crore and Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST) in‹ows of ₹99,623 crore. The IGST collection­s included ₹37,826 crore collected on imported goods.

“The Central government settled ₹50,307 crore to CGST and ₹41,600 crore to SGST from the IGST collected. This translates to a total revenue of ₹94,153 crore for CGST and ₹95,138 crore for SGST for April, 2024 after regular settlement,” the Ministry statement said.

Four States, including the erstwhile State of Jammu and Kashmir, Arunachal Pradesh, and Sikkim, recorded a contractio­n in revenues last month. Eight States saw muted growth relative to the 13.4% overall growth in domestic revenues, with Jharkhand (3%), Uttarakhan­d (4%), and Tamil Nadu (6%) seeing the weakest growth.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India