Essayer OR - Gratuit

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.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Financial Express Delhi

Financial Express Delhi

Jindal Group enters urban mobility with Trevel launch

ELECTRIC MOBILITY STARTUP

time to read

1 min

December 16, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Australia plans stricter gun regulations

AUSTRALIA VOWED STRICTER gun laws on Monday as it began mourning victims of its worst mass shooting in almost 30 years, in which police accused a father-andson duo of killing 15 people at a Jewish celebration at Sydney's famed Bondi Beach.

time to read

1 min

December 16, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Kaynes Tech turns focus to cash flow

NON-SMART METER GROWTH RECOVERY LIKELY TO SERVE AS A CATALYST

time to read

1 mins

December 16, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Delhi AQI hits 498; skyline disappears into grey haze

A SHARP DROP in visibility and haze-obscured skyline marked another low for Delhi on Monday as its AQI touched 498 in the morning and settled at 427 by the evening, with air quality in the hazardous “severe” zone.

time to read

1 mins

December 16, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Rupee slides to another record low

THE RUPEE'S DOWNWARD slide continued on Monday, ending at a new low of 90.73 against the dollar—down 31 paise—on weak market sentiment.

time to read

1 min

December 16, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Noida airport set for flight into the future

Designed to operate largely on automation and self-service

time to read

2 mins

December 16, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

360 ONE Asset raises ₹2.3K cr fund

360 ONE ASSET

time to read

1 min

December 16, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

Revamped MGNREGA: Infra, foolproof funding in focus

CENTRE, STATES TO SHARE COSTS IN 6:4 RATIO

time to read

2 mins

December 16, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

India, US close to pact on extra tariff removal

. CBAM issue on the table in FTA talks with EU

time to read

1 mins

December 16, 2025

Financial Express Delhi

With YONO 2.0, SBI aims to double users to 200 mn

STATE BANK OF INDIA on Monday launched YONO 2.0, a revamped version of its digital banking platform You Only Need One (YONO).

time to read

1 min

December 16, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size