8 Years of GST
Kartavya Desk Staff
Syllabus: Economy
Source: BS
Context: India marks 8 years of Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation, with automation significantly improving IGST refund processing for exporters.
About 8 Years of GST:
What is GST?
• A comprehensive, multi-stage, destination-based indirect tax that subsumes major central and state taxes (excise, VAT, service tax).
• Aims to create a unified national market with seamless input tax credit and reduced tax cascading.
Launched On: 1st July 2017, following the enactment of the Constitution (101st Amendment) Act, 2016.
Key Features:
• Dual GST Model: Centre levies CGST; States levy SGST.
• One Nation, One Tax: Unified indirect tax structure for goods and services.
• Technology-Driven: Uses GSTN for registration, return filing, and compliance.
• Input Tax Credit: Allows credit of input tax across the supply chain.
• Zero-Rated Exports: Ensures no tax burden on exports (via refund or LUT mechanisms).
Achievements in 8 Years:
• Widened Tax Base: GST taxpayer base grew to over 1.45 crore by 2025.
• Revenue Milestone: Monthly GST collections averaged ₹1.65 lakh crore in FY25, with a record high of ₹2.10 lakh crore in April 2025.
• Improved Refund Processing: IGST refunds now processed within one week via Customs ICEGATE portal and ₹1.18 lakh crore refunded in FY25.
• Ease of Doing Business: Automation has reduced refund time, improving export competitiveness.
• Common National Market: Reduced tax barriers and logistics costs across states.
Shortcomings of GST:
• Refund Delays under GST Officers: Refunds filed via GST portal can take up to 90 days, unlike automated IGST refunds (within 7 days).
• Tech-Compliance Gaps: Disparities between Customs and GST systems hamper seamless verification.
• Complexity in Return Filing: Technical glitches and reconciliation issues persist for small businesses.
• Compliance Burden: Frequent notifications, rate changes, and portal issues increase procedural complexity.
• Limited Fiscal Autonomy for States: States express concerns over revenue dependence on Centre.
Way Forward:
• Integrate GST and Customs Systems: Real-time data sharing to expedite cross-platform refund processing.
• Enhance Automation for All Refunds: Extend automated workflows to GST officer-led refunds.
• Simplify Compliance for MSMEs: Introduce graded reporting and single-page returns for small taxpayers.
• Strengthen GST Appellate Mechanisms: Ensure timely disposal of disputes for improved taxpayer confidence.
• Institutionalise GST 2.0: Review rate structure, expand tax base (including fuel/alcohol), and stabilize tax governance.
Conclusion:
Eight years of GST represent a transformational journey in India’s indirect tax regime. While automation has streamlined exporter refunds, systemic and procedural gaps need urgent attention. To unlock its full potential, GST must evolve into a more agile, transparent, and taxpayer-friendly system.