Intentar ORO - Gratis

Dealing with after-effects of reform

Financial Express Delhi

|

September 05, 2025

A critical part of the package are the process reforms for simplifying registrations and expediting refunds, both for inverted duty structure and exports

- VIVEK JOHRI

THE RUN-UPTO the 56th Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council meeting was full of mixed sentiments—lots of excitement about the broad-brush picture of GST 2.0 reform and yet some lurking apprehension about the likely fine print. There was some relief when the Group of Ministers approved the Centre's proposal on August 21. Given that some of the states had been expressing concerns about the revenue implications of the proposal and their pitch for seeking compensation, there was nervousness about which way the proposals would go in the GST Council when it met on September 3 and 4. Questions like whether the Council would reverse some of the proposed changes to accommodate these concerns or even defer it till a more acceptable alternative emerges were quite figural. Belying these apprehensions, the Council has exhibited statesmanship in fully endorsing what was inherently a sound and irresistible proposal promising meaningful simplification in the rate structure and real relief in tax burden to all constituencies that matter for providing either a consumption or growth impetus to the economy. The Council has been sagacious enough both to recognise its merit as well as the need for its immediate adoption—implicitly parking revenue concerns till the proposal has played itself out in the economy. In the press briefing, the revenue secretary also chose not to characterise the revenue implications of the proposal (estimated to be about ₹48,000 crore by the government) as a "loss" owing to the positive impact the rate cuts would have on consumption and demand, thereby providing adequate buoyancy to collections.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Financial Express Delhi

Financial Express Delhi

An eye for your car ride

THESE DASHCAMS DELIVER CLEAR AND SHARP VIDEO

time to read

1 mins

December 15, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

ED aims to end legacy FERA cases by early 2026

THE ENFORCEMENT DIRECTORATE has decided to bring to a conclusion cases registered under the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act (FERA), which was repealed by the country more than 25 years ago in 1998.

time to read

1 min

December 15, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Spotify lets you control your music

SPOTIFY WILL BEGIN testing a new feature that allows users to type an idea for a playlist into the app and receive a unique set of songs based on their historical taste and behaviour.

time to read

1 min

December 15, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

From catch-up to contender: How Gemini is challenging GPT

RAM SAID THAT Perplexity is strengthening its niche in citation-backed research, functioning as a precision search tool in contrast to legacy “needle-in-a-haystack” search models.

time to read

2 mins

December 15, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Go for aggressive hybrid funds for low volatility

THEY SCORE OVER DIVERSIFIED LARGE-CAP FUNDS IN RISK-ADJUSTED RETURNS

time to read

2 mins

December 15, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

TVs set to get costlier on weak rupee, memory chip crunch

PRICES OF TELEVISIONS are expected to rise by 3-4% from January on account of the rising cost of memory chips and depreciation of the rupee, which recently crossed the 90-to-a-dollar mark for the first time.

time to read

1 mins

December 15, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Amazon bets on short-term lending for q-comm growth

INVENTORY-LIGHT MODEL SEEN REDUCING CASH BURN

time to read

2 mins

December 15, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

India ranks 3rd in Stanford Global AI Vibrancy tool

INDIA HAS BEEN ranked third in Stanford University’s 2025 Global AI Vibrancy tool, which shows progress made across seven pillars comprising research and development, talent, infrastructure, in a year.

time to read

1 min

December 15, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

OpenAI scraps equity vesting policy

OPENAI TOLD STAFF that it was ending its policy requiring employees to work for at least six months at the company before their equity vests, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter.

time to read

1 min

December 15, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Maharashtra under fiscal pressure, admits Fadnavis

Claims state will become India’s first $1-trillion economy by’30

time to read

1 mins

December 15, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size