Thought Capital: Open Up The GST Data For Insights On The Economy

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Read Time: 7 mins
Close view of Indian currency banknotes, rupee arranged for photograph. (Photo: Vijay Sartape/NDTV Profit)

The future, they say, is uncertain. True. In India, policy and design are fraught with inadequacies. The basic mantra of development informs us that 'what is measured can be bettered'. However successive governments have struggled to know and analyse the facets of the economy — growth, employment/unemployment, income, poverty, production and consumption. The many gaps and inconsistencies in the data landscape render the past fuzzy and the present tense.

This month marks seven years of the goods and services tax. It is verily work in progress — the multiplicity of rates, misaligned classification, the exclusions are yet to be dealt with. But there is no denying it has provided the states and the Union government visibility and predictability of revenues to plan allocations for development expenditure. As Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman pointed out, GST collections boosted revenue of states by over Rs 9 lakh crore.

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The induction of GST has enabled ridding the system of multiple layers of taxation, propelled formalisation of the economy and established a large common market. The GSTR system — with all its troubles and history — has provided a window into the paradigm of India's continental-size economy

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