يحاول ذهب - حر
GST 2.0 A landmark overhaul
September 07, 2025
|The New Indian Express Mysuru
India's Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime is undergoing its most significant transformation since its inception in 2017.
Dubbed GST 2.0, this comprehensive set of reforms, announced after the 56th GST Council meeting on September 3, aims to simplify the tax structure, ease compliance, boost consumption, and fuel economic growth ahead of the festival season. The changes come into effect from September 22.
We break down for you the key changes, their implications, and the challenges that lie ahead.
The genesis: A promise from Red Fort The journey to GST 2.0 began with a promise. In his Independence Day address, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced from the ramparts of the Red Fort his government's intent to usher in next-generation GST reforms by Diwali. Terming it as a gift to the nation, the PM pledged reforms that would reduce the tax burden on the common man and provide a direct boost to economic activity. This set the stage for the GST Council's decisive meeting on September 3, where months of deliberation by a Group of Ministers (GoM) on rate rationalisation were finally put to work.
In an interview to a media house, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said the seeds of the major overhaul were sowed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a conversation eight months ago, when he asked her to do something with the GST rules (for ease of doing business) and later with the rates.
Three-pillar approach The reforms were based on three core pillars—structural changes, rate rationalisation and ease of living and doing business.
The structural changes include addressing long-standing issues like the inverted duty structure (where inputs are taxed higher than finished products) and resolving classification disputes. Rate rationalisation involves moving from a complex multi-slab system to a simplified two-rate structure for the vast majority of goods and services; and ease of living and doing business involves implementing process reforms to make compliance simpler, faster, and more predictable for businesses, especially MSMEs and exporters.
هذه القصة من طبعة September 07, 2025 من The New Indian Express Mysuru.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من The New Indian Express Mysuru
The New Indian Express Mysuru
TAKE AI’S HELP FOR SPEEDY JUSTICE
EW phrases encapsulate the despair of the Indian litigant more powerfully than Sunny Deol's anguished outburst in Damini: \"Tareekh pe tareekh\" (hearing after hearing).
3 mins
October 24, 2025
The New Indian Express Mysuru
IF YOU LOVE MAKING VIDEOS
HERE ARE 5 GADGETS YOU SHOULD OWN
2 mins
October 24, 2025
The New Indian Express Mysuru
More girls in govt-run CBSE schools, says secy
IT is crucial that society invest more in the education of the girl child, according to the Union Secretary of Education and Literacy, Sanjay Kumar.
2 mins
October 24, 2025
The New Indian Express Mysuru
AI speeds up HR verification processes
ARTIFICIAL intelligence (AI) has transformed the way human resources firms do background verification and onboarding.
1 mins
October 24, 2025
The New Indian Express Mysuru
321kg gold smuggled through 7 main routes seized in 10 months, says DRI
THE Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) has uncovered an increasingly sophisticated gold smuggling operation spanning continents. Between January and October this year, DRI intercepted and seized around 321kg of smuggled gold, valued at ₹406.35 crore.
1 mins
October 24, 2025
The New Indian Express Mysuru
Kohli’s twin failures, Sharma’s fifty talking points in India’s loss
IT'S hard to find context in an ODI bilateral series with no major events scheduled in that format for the next two years.
3 mins
October 24, 2025
The New Indian Express Mysuru
U’khand village puts cap on wedding expenses
TO curb the rising expenses and the culture of showiness at social ceremonies, the residents of Kandhar village in Uttarakhand's tribal region of Jaunsar-Bawar have passed a social bylaw limiting the gold jewellery married women can wear at weddings and family functions.
1 mins
October 24, 2025
The New Indian Express Mysuru
High on drugs, Indian-origin truck driver kills three in US crash; held
A 21-year-old Indian-origin truck driver, Jashanpreet Singh, who had reportedly entered the US illegally in 2022, has been arrested for causing a semi-truck crash in California's Ontario that snuffed out three lives and injured at least four other people on Tuesday.
1 mins
October 24, 2025
The New Indian Express Mysuru
'We have come far, but the digital divide still exists'
India's smartphone market may be approaching a saturation point but there is still room for innovating products to grow, says Madhav Sheth, CEO of Ai+ Smartphone and founder of NxtQuantum Shift Technologies, in an interaction with TNIE's Rakesh Kumar. Excerpts:
3 mins
October 24, 2025
The New Indian Express Mysuru
'Abhay' for anonymity: How Maoists evade police action
ENGLISH playwright William Shakespeare wrote in Romeo and Juliet, \"What's in a name?\" For the outlawed CPI (Maoist), the answer is everything. Names, often assumed or symbolic, are a tool of survival, strategy, and connection with the communities in which they operate.
1 mins
October 24, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

