KartavyaDesk
news

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.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

All News