The Goods and Services Tax (GST), introduced in India in 2017, represented one of the most ambitious indirect tax reforms in the country’s history. By replacing a complex system of central and state-level taxes with a unified structure, GST aimed to streamline compliance, widen the tax base, and foster greater economic efficiency.
GST 2.0: Key Features
GST 2.0 differs from the original framework in three important ways:
1. Rate Rationalization – Convergence of multiple tax slabs into fewer categories, reducing cascading effects and compliance burdens (Sankar, 2021).
2. Wider Exemptions for Essentials – Basic food, education services, and healthcare are increasingly zero-rated, shielding vulnerable households from inflationary pressures (Rani & Dutta, 2022).
Impact on Lower-Income Households
Impact on the Middle Class
– Education and Healthcare: Continued exemption helps shield this group from inflationary pressures in human capital investments.
Impact on the Affluent Class
– Real Estate: Rationalized rates may encourage investment in housing, but the benefits are partly offset by compliance tightening.
Broader Macroeconomic Implications
2. Fiscal Sustainability: Improved compliance expands tax revenues, enabling higher public spending without imposing undue burdens on vulnerable groups (Kumar, 2023).
3. Inequality Reduction: By easing the regressive bias of indirect taxation, GST 2.0 narrows inequality in real consumption, though structural reforms in direct taxation remain necessary (Rao, 2019).
Challenges and Limitations
Despite improvements, several challenges remain:
– Compliance Burden on Small Enterprises: Digital filing systems may disproportionately strain micro and small businesses, indirectly raising costs for consumers.
– Inflationary Pass-Through: Even with exemptions, producers may adjust pricing strategies in ways that partially offset consumer gains.
– State-Level Variations: Since consumption baskets differ regionally, the impact on purchasing power is uneven across states, particularly in rural versus urban contexts (Sankaran, 2020).
Conclusion
References
- Kumar, A. (2023). Digital compliance and GST 2.0: Implications for India’s tax ecosystem. Economic and Political Weekly, 58(14), 45–53.
- Maitra, B., & Mukherjee, A. (2021). Distributional impact of GST on Indian households: An empirical assessment. Journal of South Asian Development, 16(2), 211–234.
- Patnaik, I., & Sen, P. (2021). Tax reforms and inclusive growth in India: Evidence from GST implementation. India Review, 20(3), 223–240.
- Rani, K., & Dutta, S. (2022). Exemptions and equity in GST 2.0: Shielding the vulnerable. Indian Journal of Public Finance, 46(1), 12–28.
- Rao, M. G. (2019). Indirect taxes and inequality in India: The GST experience. National Institute of Public Finance and Policy Working Paper.
- Sankar, A. (2021). Rate rationalization under GST: Efficiency versus equity trade-offs. Asian Economic Policy Review, 16(4), 602–619.
- Sankaran, K. (2020). GST and regional inequality in India. Economic Survey Research Series, 37(2), 89–108.
- Sharma, R., & Bhatia, A. (2022). GST 2.0 and household purchasing power: Evidence from NSSO data. Journal of Economic Policy Research, 44(3), 301–320.
About the authors:
- Dr. Nitish Kumar Arya is an Assistant Professor (Economics), University Department of Economics, Bhupendra Narayan Mandal University, Madhepura, Bihar, India
- Mrs. Tulika Singh is a research scholar at the University Department of Economics, Bhupendra Narayan Mandal University, Madhepura, Bihar, India.
