يحاول ذهب - حر

Next-Generation GST: From Transition to Transformation

September 05, 2025

|

The Morning Standard

When India rolled out the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in July 2017, it was not just a new tax—it was a new architecture for the Indian economy.

- Amit Malviya is the national head of BJP's Information & Technology and Sah Prabhari of West Bengal

When India rolled out the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in July 2017, it was not just a new tax—it was a new architecture for the Indian economy. For decades, businesses were trapped in a maze of state-level VATs, octroi, entry taxes, service tax, and cesses, each creating its own paperwork, compliance burdens, and opportunities for evasion. Goods were taxed multiple times, cascading costs inflated prices, and consumers ultimately paid the penalty. GST corrected this structural unfairness by replacing a jungle of 17 taxes and 13 cesses with the principle of One Nation, One Tax.

Eight years later, the results are undeniable. The taxpayer base has more than doubled—from 66 lakh in 2017 to over 1.5 crore in 2025. Revenues have surged, with gross GST collections touching ₹22 lakh crore last year, more than double in just four years. Monthly revenues that averaged ₹82,000 crore in 2017-18 now routinely cross ₹2 lakh crore. A Deloitte survey this year found that 85% of businesses, including MSMEs, are satisfied with GST. Clearly, GST has reshaped India's economic landscape.

However, reforms of this scale are never static. The GST that came into force in 2017 was a delicate compromise between the Centre and States. The design had to protect state revenues, shield essentials from high taxes, and simplify compliance for businesses—all at once. That balancing act worked, but eight years on, fresh challenges are visible: rate complexity, inverted duty structures, classification disputes, and compliance costs for small firms. The next phase of GST reforms must therefore move from transition to consolidation—making the system simpler, fairer, and more growth-oriented.

Why Rationalisation Matters

المزيد من القصص من The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

Projects worth ₹17 lakh crore in the pipeline under PPP: Govt

Government data released on Tuesday showed ₹417 lakh crore worth of 852 infrastructure projects are in the pipeline under the public private partnership (PPP).

time to read

1 min

January 07, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

THE 'FOREIGN HAND' THAT MADE INDIRA PARANOID

The abduction of Nicolás Maduro follows an old US playbook. Indira Gandhi worried of suffering a fate similar to that of Salvador Allende, who was removed in a CIA-backed coup in 1973

time to read

4 mins

January 07, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

Keeping up with Cloud Dancer

THE past year saw people craving for communities, connections, and calm.

time to read

2 mins

January 07, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

Deepam row: HC slams TN, upholds single judge's order

RUBBISHING the Tamil Nadu government's apprehensions of possible disharmony due to lighting of the Karthigai Deepam on the 'deepathoon' atop the Thiruparankundram hill as nothing but an 'imaginary ghost' created by it 'to put one community against another', the Madurai bench of the Madras High Court on Tuesday ordered the Thiruparankundram Subramaniya Swamy temple devasthanam to light the lamp on the deepathoon during Karthigai Deepam festival.

time to read

1 min

January 07, 2026

The Morning Standard

Head, Smith tons put Oz in control

TRAVIS Head’s third century of the series and Steve Smith’s first guided Australia to a 134-run first-innings lead over England by stumps on the third day of the fifth and final Ashes Test.

time to read

1 min

January 07, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

2 Punjabi-origin illegal Indian migrants held in US for cocaine trafficking

TWO illegal Punjabi-origin Indian migrants have been arrested in the United States for smuggling more than 309 pounds of cocaine in a semi-truck in Putnam County, Indiana, according to the US Department of Homeland Security.

time to read

1 min

January 07, 2026

The Morning Standard

STRANGER THINGS

IN Subi Taba’s stories, bullets or the swing of a machete may killa tiger but it will live again.

time to read

4 mins

January 07, 2026

The Morning Standard

‘Identify reasons 1st, then solution': SC raps CAQM

\"HAVE you been able to identify the causes of pollution? During all these days, a lot of material is coming into the public domain, experts are writing articles, people are having opinions, they keep on sending to us on e-mail,\" the Supreme Court told the Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) on Tuesday.

time to read

1 mins

January 07, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

Kejriwal’s ‘shoot and scoot’ politics will not work in Delhi, says Ashish Sood

DELHI Education Minister Ashish Sood on Tuesday levelled serious allegations against former chief minister and Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) national convener Arvind Kejriwal, accusing him of misleading the public and indulging in what he described as \"shoot and scoot\" politics.

time to read

1 mins

January 07, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

Consider '1-time magnanimity' for Ashoka varsity prof: SC

Posts on Operation Sindoor triggered row

time to read

1 mins

January 07, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size