The Hindu (Kolkata)

A reform window

Buoyant GST revenues create a chance to prioritise its overhaul

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he financial year 202324 appears to have ended on a high on the revenue front. Net direct tax collection­s rose 19.9% by midMarch to hit 97% of revised Budget targets, while the Goods and Services Tax (GST) has yielded a robust ₹20.18 lakh crore. Gross GST revenues in March, for transactio­ns undertaken in February, crossed ₹1.78 lakh crore, the second highest tally since the rollout of the indirect tax six and a half years ago. The only month when collection stood higher was in April 2023, aided by yearend compliance­s. There is a good chance the same compliance effects will lift this month’s tally past ₹2 lakh crore, marking a fresh high. Average monthly collection­s have grown 11.6% in 202324 to over ₹1.68 lakh crore. The growth may be lower than the previous year’s 21.8% uptick but establishe­s a new normal for revenues that the coming year can build on. This should settle the Centre’s concerns that the GST has not yielded expected returns. Central GST collection­s in 202324 have overshot revised estimates presented in the interim Budget and the Finance Ministry may have to revise its 202425 targets when it presents the full Budget as those can now be achieved even if growth slips below 10%.

Some of the increase in collection­s may well stem from tax demands raised for past years and tightening the screws on known evasion routes such as fake invoices and fraudulent input tax credits. Yet, an uptick in growth of net GST revenues, which the government has started revealing since last month, and the rise in gross collection­s from domestic transactio­ns (17.6% compared with 13.6% in February) suggest economic activity has been busy in the last quarter of 202324. Perhaps, the only worry is a 5% decline in GST on goods imports during March, from an 8.5% rise in February, which may signal some cutbacks in discretion­ary consumptio­n. Yet, the overall GST trajectory should give the next government comfort to focus on muchneeded reforms to the tax. This must include retrieving the plan to rationalis­e its multiple rates from deep freeze, expanding it to excluded items such as electricit­y and petroleum products, and reducing high levies on key products such as cement and insurance. The GST Compensati­on Cess, now being used to repay the COVID19 pandemicer­a borrowings made to recompense States, raked in ₹1.44 lakh crore last year, and it is likely possible to wind it down earlier than the extended March 2026 deadline. It is critical to resist the temptation to replace it with a new levy except for truly demerit goods such as tobacco. Taxing hybrid vehicles over 40%, for instance, makes no sense, either for India’s green goals or boosting consumptio­n and spurring private investment­s.

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