
GST mop-up at ₹1.96 trillion in July, but higher refunds slow net revenue growth
After adjusting for refunds, the net GST revenue stood at ₹ 1.69 trillion, just 1.7% higher than the year-ago period. Businesses received ₹ 27,000 crore in tax refunds in July, marking a 67% increase from the same month last year.
Despite the surge in refunds, cumulative GST revenue for the current fiscal year has grown 8.4% to ₹ 7.1 trillion after refunds.
Gross central and state GST receipts, prior to refunds, rose more than 9% in July. Tax collections on inter-state sales and imports increased by 5%. However, GST compensation cess, levied on items such as tobacco, carbonated beverages, and automobiles, particularly sport utility vehicles, contracted by 2% year-on-year in July.
The Federation of Automobile Dealers Association (FADA) had noted last month that automobile retail grew by just 0.73% year-on-year in June, which is typically the weakest month for auto sales. Taxes on June transactions are collected in July.
The 117% increase in refunds on domestic sales, much of which may be attributed to inverted duty structure refunds, underscores the urgency of rate rationalisation under GST, according to Vivek Jalan, partner at Tax Connect Advisory, a multi-disciplinary tax consultancy.
Instances where raw materials are taxed at higher rates than the final product often lead to refund claims, an anomaly the government has previously tried to address but has not fully resolved. While these inputs are used by businesses, the tax rate visible to the end consumer is that of the final product, making upward rate corrections politically sensitive.
'The increase in refunds augers well for businesses as it indicates stability in the online refund processes and quicker refund sanctions,' said M.S. Mani, partner at Deloitte India.
Among large state economies, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Gujarat, and Uttar Pradesh reported less than 10% annual GST revenue growth in July. In contrast, Punjab and Haryana each posted 12% growth, while Andhra Pradesh saw a 14% increase.
GST revenues have steadily risen over the years, driven by economic expansion, greater formalisation, and enhanced compliance efforts. Robust data capture across the supply chain and cross-verification with other data sources have made tax evasion more difficult under the new regime.
The GST Council is currently reviewing further rate rationalisation and simplification of the tax framework.
Citing the modest 1.7% growth in net GST receipts for July, Pratik Jain, partner at Price Waterhouse & Co LLP, said, 'The GST council may like to discuss possible measures to augment revenues in its next meeting…With GST compensation cess going away, states may also be a bit more concerned about the slowdown in GST collections.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
20 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Building a better GST: New reforms mark progress, but more is needed
The call for a single rate correctly identifies this multiplicity as a central problem Ajay Shah Arbind Modi Listen to This Article The debate on India's goods and services tax (GST) has been stimulated. The leader of the Opposition, Rahul Gandhi, offered a four-point critique: The existing system is overly complex arising from multiple rates; disadvantages micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs); undermines fiscal federalism; and prematurely excludes petroleum products. In response, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has announced a 'double Diwali' package of 'next-generation GST reforms', promising to simplify the tax structure by collapsing it into two main slabs of 5 per cent and 18 per cent. These developments can be assessed by measuring them against the principles of 'the perfect GST'
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
an hour ago
- Business Standard
Air conditioner, TV makers upbeat about sales amid signs of GST cuts
Consumer durables makers are happy after the expectation that goods and services tax (GST) on air conditioners and television panels above 32 inches may be reduced to 18 per cent, as this could help revive the sector. According to news reports, the Centre is looking to rationalise GST rates soon. Currently, these items fall under the 28 per cent GST bracket. If the two segments come under the 18 per cent GST bracket, prices would immediately correct by 10 per cent and this is set to lure buyers back to the stores. However, on the flip side, fears of dealers and customers pushing back their purchases also looms till the final GST rate for the two segments is announced. 'If the GST rate is decided at 18 per cent, then it is definitely a good and a welcome move, but we also hope that state governments are on board with the new rates. However, dealers are already sitting on high levels of inventory, as temperatures didn't run high and the expectation of lower GST rates will make dealers wait for new prices to kick in. This will also be the case with customers, as they will hold back on expectations that prices could come down,' B. Thiagarajan, managing director (MD) at Blue Star, told Business Standard. He also said that if prices come down due to GST, there could be more customers opting to buy 5-star rated air conditioners. KJ Jawa, chairman and managing director of Daikin India expects this move to widen the net and more customers will buy air conditioners if the GST slab is reduced. 'This has been a long-pending demand of the industry. Air conditioners have become a necessity and if the segment falls under 18 per cent, the prices will come down and will push for demand for higher energy-efficiency air conditioners.' He said the category has a seven per cent penetration, which could go up if prices are lowered. Avneet Singh Marwah, chief executive officer (CEO) at Super Plastronics (television panel manufacturer) said sentiment will improve in the industry as India is a price-conscious market. 'If it changes, it will definitely push festival demand much higher than expected. This will help cover up the slowdown witnessed in the last few months,' Singh said.


The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
New GST regime will be consumer-centric, says Centre
The new GST regime previewed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his Independence Day address would be consumer-centric, with particular emphasis on the poor, the MSMEs, the middle class and the farmers, senior government sources said on Sunday (August 17, 2025). The new two-tier Goods and Services Tax (GST) structure of 18% and 5% rates will have the twin objective of making rates and processes simpler and more rational, as it was originally intended to be, the sources said. 'More equitable taxation' 'This has been in the making for a while. Our learning from the last eight years is going into this, and this will be a fundamental change in the template of taxation,' one senior functionary said. 'The new GST regime will make our taxation more equitable, and will see reduced taxes on what these four categories consume. The template will be more from the consumers point of view, and it will be put to and explained to the States from the consumers point of view.' The Centre expects any reduction in revenues that this may cause to be soon offset by a new buoyancy in the economy expected from rate rationalisation and process simplification. 'Reduced rates will not lead to reduced revenues, and we expect compliance and collection going higher,' an official said, adding that the forthcoming tax regime will be 'fiscally sustainable'. Most of the items in the 28% rate of GST will move to 18% and 'a few' will go to 40%, which will apply to exceptional items, termed 'sin goods', sources said. 'Revenues may fall in the very short run but we expect change in consumption and ease of compliance to make up for it. Thus, it will be a fairly fiscally sustainable exercise,' said a source. Deepavali deadline The Centre expects the States to be on board with the proposals in time for the Deepavali — October 20 — deadline it has set for itself to set them in motion. In a press release following the PM's speech, the Ministry of Finance said the Centre would be engaging with the State governments in the subsequent weeks, in the run-up to the next GST Council meeting. Two Groups of Ministers (comprising representatives of the State governments) — one on rate rationalisation and another on compensation cess — will have to approve the details before they go to the GST Council for approval. GST has been an ongoing topic of conflict between Opposition-ruled States and the Centre, but the latter does not expect resistance to its revamp proposals. 'The concerns regarding any potential revenue losses are not theirs (Opposition-ruled States) alone to tackle. The Centre and the States should all work together to expand the revenues, using this opportunity. I do not think anyone will or can oppose the proposed reduction in rates,' the functionary said. They also added that, since the Centre does not have any representative in the GoM on rate rationalisation, if the GoMs decide against the Centre's proposal, it would look like the States are deciding against lowering taxes for the common man. Both GoMs, followed by the GST Council, are expected to meet in the coming weeks. One source said the compensation cess will soon cease, before its legal end-date of March 31, 2026. While it was originally set to cease in 2022, its duration was extended thereafter to repay the loan taken to compensate States as the cess collections themselves had been hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. That loan will be repaid before time. However, this also creates a problem for the Centre as the cess also applies on sin goods like tobacco. 'If the cess ends, then this would substantially lower the effective rate of tax on tobacco, gutka, and other sin goods,' the source explained. 'And this is something the Centre cannot be doing. So, this was yet another reason why the GST revamp needed to be done soon.' That the GST reforms are happening amid global uncertainties and tariff threats by the United States is mere coincidence, according to the sources.