Monday, April 6, 2026

Goods and Services Tax (GST) in India: A Comprehensive note

April 06, 2026 0

 

Goods and Services Tax (GST) in India: A Comprehensive note

Introduction

 

The Goods and Services Tax (GST) represents the most sweeping tax reform in independent India's history, fundamentally transforming the country's indirect tax structure. Implemented on July 1, 2017, GST replaced a complex web of multiple central and state Indirect taxes with a single, unified value-added tax system. This landmark reform created "One Nation, One Tax, One Market," eliminating the cascading effect of taxes and establishing a seamless national market for goods and services.

 

GST is a destination-based, value-added tax levied on the manufacture, sale, and consumption of goods and services at the national level. As a dual GST model, it is simultaneously levied by both the Central and State Governments, reflecting India's federal structure while ensuring economic integration across state boundaries.

 

The Genesis and Journey to GST

 

Pre-GST Tax Structure

 

Before GST implementation, India's indirect tax system was fragmented and complex. The Central Government levied:

 

s Central Excise Duty on manufacturing

 

s Service Tax on services

 

s Central Sales Tax on inter-state trade

 

s Additional Customs Duties

 

s Special Additional Duties

 

State Governments levied:

 

s Value Added Tax (VAT)

 

s Entry Tax / Octroi

 

s Luxury Tax

 

s Entertainment Tax

 

s Purchase Tax

 

s Stem-duty

 

This multiplicity created several problems:

 

s Cascading effect of taxes: Tax on tax increased final prices

 

s Fragmented market: State barriers hindered free movement of goods

 

s Compliance burden: Multiple registrations and returns

 

s High logistics costs: Checkpoints at state borders caused delays

 

s Input tax credit blockage: Credits couldn't flow seamlessly across taxes

 

Legislative Journey

 

The concept of GST was first proposed in 2000 by then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. After extensive deliberations:

 

s 2006: MoU between Centre and States

 

s 2011: Constitutional Amendment Bill introduced in Lok Sabha

 

s 2014: Bill reintroduced after general elections

 

s 2016: Constitution (122nd Amendment) Act passed by both Houses

 

s September 2016: Rajya Sabha ratification by states

 

s April 2017: GST bills passed by Parliament

 

s July 1, 2017: GST officially implemented at midnight in Parliament Housefi+1

 

Understanding GST Structure

 

Dual GST Model

 

India follows a dual GST structure where both Central and State Governments simultaneously levy tax on the same tax base:

 

Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST)

 

s Levied by the Central Government on intra-state supplies

 

s Revenue goes to the Centre

 

s Applied alongside SGST for transactions within a state

 

State Goods and Services Tax (SGST)

 

s Levied by State Governments on intra-state supplies

 

s Revenue goes to the respective State

 

s Applied alongside CGST for intra-state transactions

 

Example: A Mumbai-based e-commerce brand sells goods to a customer in Mumbai. CGST of 6% and SGST of 6% apply, totaling 12% GST. The seller charges 12% GST and deposits the revenue to both the central and Maharashtra state governments.

 

Union Territory Goods and Services Tax (UTGST)

 

s Levied in Union Territories without legislature

 

s Functions similarly to SGST

 

Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST)        

 

s Levied by the Central Government on inter-state supplies

 

s Applied on imports and exports

 

s Equal to CGST + SGST/UTGST

 

s Ensures seamless input tax credit across state boundaries

 

Current GST Rate Structure

 

As of September 22, 2025, India follows a simplified four-rate GST structure:

 

 


GST Rate

Category

Examples

0%(Nil rate)

Essential items

Fresh vegetables, milk, curd, unbranded food grains

5%

Mass consumption items

Edible oil, spices, tea, coffee, sugar, medicines

18%

Standard rate

Soaps, toothpaste, mobile phones, computer parts, business class air tickets

40%

Luxury and sin goods

Cars, luxury items, cigarettes, aerated drinks

 

These changes were introduced on September 3, 2025, to boost consumption and mitigate the impact of tariffs imposed by the Trump administration.

 

Special Rates:

 

s Gold: 3% GST (unchanged)

 

s Semi-precious stones: 0.25% GST (unchanged)

 

Service Tax Reforms (2025):     


The GST Council implemented a substantial overhaul of the services tax structure effective 2025, transitioning to a simplified two-rate model:

 

s 5% with limited or no input tax credit (ITC)

 

s 18% with full ITC eligibility

 

This marks the most significant reform of service taxation since GST's introduction in 2017, aimed at easing compliance for consumer-facing sectors while maintaining seamless credit availability for business-to-business industries.

 

The previous 12% and 28% GST slabs were eliminated, significantly simplifying the overall tax structure.

 

Key Features of GST

 

1. Comprehensive Tax Coverage

 

GST subsumed more than 17 central and state taxes, creating a unified tax regime covering:

 

s Almost all goods (except petroleum products initially)

 

s All services

 

s Both manufacturing and service sectors

 

2. Value-Added Tax System

 

GST is levied at each stage of the supply chain:

 

s Only the value added at each stage is taxed

 

s Input tax credit mechanism prevents tax-on-tax

 

s Final consumer bears the entire GST burden

 

s Businesses act as tax collectors on behalf of government

 

3. Input Tax Credit (ITC) Mechanism

 

This is the heart of GST, allowing businesses to claim credit for taxes paid on inputs:

 

How ITC Works:

 

s Business A purchases raw materials, pays ₹18 GST

 

s Business A manufactures and sells finished goods, charges ₹18 GST

 

s Business A can claim credit of ₹18 paid on inputs

 

s Business A pays only the difference (if any) to government

 

s Prevents cascading effect and reduces final price

 

4. Threshold Exemption

 

GST provides exemptions for small businesses:

 

s General category: ₹40 lakh annual turnover (₹20 lakh for special category states)

 

s Service providers: ₹20 lakh (₹10 lakh for special category states)

 

s Businesses below threshold not required to register (voluntary registration available)

 

5. Composition Scheme

 

Small businesses can opt for composition scheme:

 

s Threshold: ₹1.5 crore annual turnover (₹75 lakh for special category states)

 

s Tax rate: Lower rates (1-6% depending on business type)

 

s Benefit: Simplified compliance with fewer returns

 

s Limitation: Cannot claim ITC, cannot engage in inter-state trade

 

6. E-Way Bill System

 

For interstate movement of goods:

 

s Mandatory for goods worth ₹50,000 or more

 

s Generated electronically before goods movement

 

s Reduces checkpoint delays and corruption

 

s Provides real-time tracking of goods in transit

 

7. Online Portal and Digitization

 

The entire GST process is online through GSTN (Goods and Services Tax Network):

 

s Online registration

 

s Electronic return filing

 

s Digital payment of taxes

 

s Online ITC claim and reconciliation

 

s Automated refund processing

 

Types of GST Returns

 

Businesses must file various GST returns depending on their business type:

 

Regular Taxpayers:

 

s GSTR-1: Details of outward supplies (monthly/quarterly)

 

s GSTR-3B: Summary return with tax payment (monthly)

 

s GSTR-9: Annual return

 

s GSTR-9C: Reconciliation statement (for turnover above ₹5 crore)

 

Composition Dealers:

 

s GSTR-4: Quarterly return

 

s GSTR-9A: Annual return (introduced earlier, replaced with new format)

 

Non-Resident Taxpayers:

 

s GSTR-5: Monthly return

 

Input Service Distributors:

 

s GSTR-6: Monthly return

 

For small businesses, GST advantages include simplified returns, but disadvantages include difficulty comprehending GST structure and compliance challenges.

 

Advantages of GST

 

For the Economy

 

1. Creation of Unified National Market

 

s Eliminated state barriers for goods movement

 

s Created seamless pan-India market

 

s Enhanced economic integration across states

 

2. Removal of Cascading Tax Effect

 

s Eliminated tax-on-tax burden

 

s Reduced overall tax incidence on goods

 

s Lowered final consumer prices

 

3. Improved Logistics Efficiency

 

s Removal of checkposts at state borders

 

s Reduced transportation time by 20-30%

 

s Lower logistics costs for businesses

 

4. Increased Tax Compliance

 

s Digital trail of transactions

 

s Automated reconciliation between buyer and seller returns

 

s Reduced scope for tax evasion

 

5. Formalization of Economy

 

s Brought unorganized sector into formal economy

 

s Increased taxpayer base significantly

 

s Improved data on economic activities

 

6. Boost to Manufacturing Sector

 

s Removal of entry tax and octroi

 

s Easier interstate movement of goods

 

s Reduced production costs

 

7. Ease of Doing Business

 

s Single registration for pan-India operations

 

s Simplified compliance procedures

 

s Attracted foreign direct investment

 

For Businesses

 

1. Simplified Tax Structure

 

s Single tax replacing multiple taxes

 

s Uniform compliance across states

 

2. Input Tax Credit Benefits

 

s Improved cash flow

 

s Reduced working capital requirements

 

s Better cost management

 

3. Reduced Compliance Costs

 

s Fewer registrations required

 

s Standardized procedures across states

 

4. Transparent Tax System

 

s Online processes reduce human interface

 

s Clear documentation requirements

 

s Automated scrutiny mechanisms

 

Disadvantages and Challenges of GST

 

Implementation Challenges

 

1. Initial Adaptation Period

 

s Businesses struggled with new system

 

s Technology adoption difficulties

 

s Learning curve for tax professional

 

2. Multiple Tax Rates

 

s Initially had 5 rates: 5%, 12%, 18%, 28%, plus cess

 

s Classification disputes between businesses and authorities

 

s Simplification in 2025 reduced to 4 rates, but complexity remained for some

 

3. Compliance Costs

 

s Software licensing expenses

 

s Hiring tax professionals

 

s Administrative overheads

 

4. Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) Challenges

 

s Higher operational expenses

 

s Cash flow constraints due to delayed refinances

 

s Difficulty competing with larger companies

 

Ongoing Challenges

 

1. Complexity for New Businesses

 

s Difficulty comprehending GST structure

 

s Frequent rate changes initially

 

s Technical issues with portal

 

2. Penalties and Non-Compliance

 

s Strict penalty provisions

 

s Interest on delayed payments

 

s Reconciliation difficulties with vendors' returns

 

3. One Regime Dilemma

 

s Businesses choosing between compositionscheme (no ITC) vs. regular scheme (higher tax)

4. Sector-Specific Impacts

 

s Some sectors faced higher tax liability

 

s Real estate impact initially negative

 

s Textile industry faced challenges with ITC blockage

 

5. Federal Tensions

 

s Centre-State revenue sharing disputes

 

s Compensation to states for revenue loss

 

s Special category states' representation

 

6. Unorganized Sector Impact

 

s Traditional traders struggling with digitization

 

s Cash economy pushback

 

s Employment disruption initially

 

GST Council: The Decision-Making Body

 

The GST Council is the constitutional body responsible for GST policy decisions:

 

Composition:

 

s Chairperson: Union Finance Minister

 

s Member: Union Minister of State for Finance

 

s Members: Finance/Tax Ministers from all States and UTs with legislature

 

Voting Structure:

 

s Centre has 1/3rd of total votes

 

s States collectively have 2/3rd of total votes

 

s Decisions require 3/4th majority

 

s Centre has 1 vote, each State has 1 vote

 

Key Functions:

 

s Determine GST rates and slabs

 

s Decide exemption lists

 

s Set threshold limits

 

s Recommend Model GST Law

 

s Resolve disputes between Centre and States

 

The GST Council has met regularly since 2016, making numerous decisions to refine and improve the GST regime based on ground-level feedback.

 

GST Registration Process

 

Who Must Register?

 

Mandatory Registration (regardless of turnover):

 

s  Inter-state suppliers

 

s E-commerce operators

 

s Casual taxable persons

 

s Non-resident taxable persons

 

s Persons liable under reverse charge

 

s E-commerce sellers

 

Threshold-Based Registration:

 

s Goods: ₹40 lakh (₹20 lakh for special category states)

 

s Services: ₹20 lakh (₹10 lakh for special category states)

 

Registration Process (Online)

 

Step 1: Visit GST portal 


Step 2: Register as "New Registration"        


Step 3: Fill Part A (PAN, mobile, email)      


Step 4: Part B (business details, promoter details, address)

         
Step 5: Submit with DSC/Electronic Signature Card         


Step 6: Receive Application Reference Number (ARN)         


Step 7: Verification by officer within 3 working days         


Step 8: Download GST Registration Certificate (GSTIN)

 

The process is typically completed within 7 working days if documents are in order.

 

GST Compliance Requirements

 

Regular File Returns

 

Monthly Filings:

 

s GSTR-1: Outward supplies (due by 11th of next month)

 

s GSTR-3B: Summary return with payment (due by 20th of next month)

 

Quarterly Filings (for small taxpayers under QRMP scheme):

 

s Same forms but quarterly

 

Annual Filings:

 

s GSTR-9: Annual return (due by December 31 of next financial year)

 

s GSTR-9C: Reconciliation statement for taxpayers above ₹5 crore turnover

 

Payment of Taxes

 

s Taxes must be paid by 20th of next month through electronic cash ledger or input tax credit

 

s Late payment attracts 18% annual interest

 

s Late filing attracts ₹50 per day (₹20 for nil returns)

 

Record Maintenance

 

Businesses must maintain:

 

s Books of accounts

 

s Tax invoices

 

s Credit/debit notes

 

s Delivery challans

 

s Input-outout register

 

s Electronic records for 6 years

 

GST Impact on Different Sectors

 

Manufacturing Sector

 

Positive Impacts:

 

s Reduced logistics costs

 

s Seamless ITC flow

 

s Easier interstate expansion

 

s Lower working capital requirements

 

Service Sector

 

Positive Impacts:

 

s Clear taxability standards

 

s Reduced compliance burden

 

s Export benefits under LUT (Letter of Undertaking)

 

s FTZ benefits

 

E-commerce Sector

 

Impacts:

 

s TCS (Tax Collected at Source) provisions

 

s Mandatory registration for all platforms

 

s Simplified interstate operations

 

s Uniform tax rates across states

 

Real Estate Sector

 

Initial Challenges:

 

s Higher tax rates initially

 

s ITC blockage issues

 

s Reduced affordability

 

Improvements:

 

s Reduced rates on affordable housing

 

s Simplified compliance

 

s ITC availability for certain categories

 

Agriculture

 

Benefits:

 

s Most agricultural inputs at 0-5% GST

 

s Reduced input costs for farmers

 

s Better supply chain efficiency

 

s Reduced post-harvest losses

 

Textile Industry

 

Challenges:

 

s ITC blockage issues

 

s Multiple rate categories

 

s Export complications

 

GST Reforms Since 2017

 

Major Reforms by GST Council

 

2017-2018:

 

s Multiple rate rationalizations

 

s Threshold adjustments

 

s Simplification of forms

 

2019:


composition scheme enhancements

 

s E-invoicing pilot introduction

 

s Refund processing improvements

 

2020:

 

s GST rate reductions for several items

 

s Presumptive taxation expansion

 

s Relief measures during COVID-19 pandemic

 

2021:

 

s E-invoicing mandatory for large taxpayers

 

s Faceless assessment introduced

 

s Pre-filled returns testing

 

2023:

 

s Further e-invoicing expansion

 

s Enhanced GSTITC reconciliation

 

s Anti-profiteering measures

 

2025:

 

s Major rate simplification: eliminated 12% and 28% slabs

 

s Transition to 4-rate structure (0%, 5%, 18%, 40%)

 

s Service tax restructuring to 2-rate model

 

Technology Upgrades

 

GSTN Enhancements:

 

s Improved portal stability

 

s Pre-filled forms using GST data

 

s AI-based reconciliation

 

s Automated risk management system

 

s Blockchain pilots for ITC tracking

 

E-Invoicing:

 

s Mandatory for businesses above ₹10 crore turnover

 

s Real-time invoice registration

 

s Mandatory QR codes

 

s Automated ITC matching

 

GST in the Global Context

 

GST Worldwide

 

Over 160 countries have implemented GST/VAT:

 

s France: Pioneer country (1954)

 

s Canada: Dual GST model (similar to India)

 

s Singapore: Low rate (9%)

 

s UK: Standard rate 20%

 

s Australia: GST at 10%

 

s Japan: Consumption tax at 10%

 

India's GST is unique as the largest country by population to implement dual GST, balancing federal structure with economic unity.

 

International Best Practices

 

India has adopted several international best practices:

 

s Destination-based taxation principle

 

s Comprehensive ITC mechanism

 

s Threshold exemptions for small businesses

 

s Regular council meetings for policy decisions

 

s Technology-driven compliance

 

Current Issues and Future Reforms

 

Ongoing Issues

 

1. Petroleum Products  


Petroleum products (petrol, diesel, crude, natural gas, aviation turbine fuel) remain outside GST, though their inclusion is under consideration.

 

2. Alcohol for Human Consumption


Excluded from GST, subject to state excise duty and VAT.

 

3. Real Estate Transactions    


Land and building transactions partially covered, creating complexity.

 

4. Federal Tensions Persist

 

s Revenue compensation disputes

 

s State autonomy concerns

 

s Special category states' needs

 

Expected Future Reforms

1. Further Rate Rationalization       


Potential movement toward 3-rate structure:

 

s Essential goods: 0%

 

s Standard rate: 18%

 

s Luxury/sin goods: 40%

 

2. Petrol and Diesel Inclusion


Likely inclusion in GST to create complete value chain

 

3. Digital Economy

 

s Clearer provisions for digital services

s Equalization levy integration

s Data localization tax implications

 

4. Small Business Support

 

s Higher composition scheme threshold

 

s Simplified compliance for micro-enterprises

 

s Dedicated help desk for small taxpayers

 

5. Technology Enhancement

 

s Full AI integration

 

s Blockchain for ITC tracking

 

s Automated audits

 

s Pre-filled complete returns

 

6. Dispute Resolution

 

s Faster adjudication mechanisms

 

s Reduced litigation

 

s Better taxpayer grievance redressal

 

GST Implementation Statistics

 

Growth Since Implementation

 

Taxpayer Base:

 

s July 2017: ~6.5 million registered taxpayers

 

s 2025: ~15+ million active taxpayers

 

s Near three-fold increase in taxpayer base

 

Monthly Tax Collection:

 

s Initial months: ₹70,000-80,000 crore

 

s 2025 average: ₹1.5+ lakh crore per month

 

s Steady growth demonstrating improved compliance

 

E-way Bill Generation:

 

s Annual e-way bills: Over 1 billion

 

s Daily generation: 3-4 million

 

s Demonstrating interstate trade growth

 

Economic Impact

 

GDP Impact:

 

s Short-term disruption during implementation

 

s Medium-term growth boost estimated at 1-1.5%

 

s Improved ease of doing business ranking

 

Logistics Cost Reduction:

 

s Pre-GST: 13-14% of GDP

 

s Post-GST: Estimated 10-11% of GDP

 

s Time savings of 20-30% for interstate transport

 

Tax Base Expansion:

 

s Formal economy increased significantly

 

s Digital payments adoption surged

 

s Reduced shadow economy

 

Conclusion

 

The Goods and Services Tax has fundamentally transformed India's economic landscape, creating one of the world's largest unified markets. Since its inception on July 1, 2017, GST has eliminated the cascading effect of taxes, created a seamless national market, improved compliance through digitization, and boosted India's ease of doing business ranking.

 

While implementation challenges persisted initially—technology issues, compliance complexity, and sector-specific pain points—the system has evolved significantly through regular GST Council meetings and continuous refinements. The major rate simplification in September 2025, reducing slabs from 5 to 4 by eliminating 12% and 28% rates, demonstrates India's commitment to making GST simpler and more effective.

 

The benefits are increasingly evident: taxpayers now number nearly 15 million compared to 6.5 million at launch, monthly GST collection consistently exceeds ₹1.5 lakh crore, interstate logistics time has reduced by 20-30%, and the formal economy has expanded significantly.

 

However, challenges remain. The unorganized sector continues facing adaptation difficulties, multiple rates still create classification disputes, and federal tensions occasionally surface. The exclusion of petroleum products and alcohol from GS continues to limit complete value-chain integration.

 

Looking ahead, India's GST journey is far from complete. Further simplification, inclusion of excluded items, technology enhancements, and improved dispute resolution mechanisms will make GST even more effective. The recent service tax restructuring to a two-rate model and elimination of 12% and 28% slabs should be landmark reforms.

 

For businesses, understanding and adapting to GST is no longer optional but essential for survival and growth. The system rewards compliance with seamless refunds and ITC, while penalizing non-compliance through strict scrutiny. Small businesses should carefully evaluate the composition scheme versus regular scheme based on their specific circumstances.

 

As India continues its economic growth trajectory toward becoming a $5 trillion economy, GST serves as a critical enabler by providing a transparent, efficient, and unified tax framework. The journey from a fragmented tax system to "One Nation, One Tax, One Market" represents one of the most ambitious and successful economic reforms in Indian history.

 

The GST story is still being written, with regular refinements, technological upgrades, and policy adjustments ensuring it remains relevant and effective. For India's economic mammoth to continue rising, GST will remain at the heart of its fiscal policy, balancing revenue needs with economic growth, federal concerns with national unity, and compliance ease with effective enforcement.