Get App
Download App Scanner
Scan to Download
Advertisement
This Article is From Dec 27, 2017

The Many Ways To Read The GST Revenue Data

The Many Ways To Read The GST Revenue Data
Arun Jaitley, India’s finance minister, gestures as he speaks during a panel session at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. (Photographer: Matthew Lloyd/Bloomberg)

There are many different ways to read the Goods and Services Tax revenue collection data for the month of November. Let's start with listing the latest available data...

GST Revenue

  • July: Rs 92,283 crore (later revised to Rs 94,063 crore)
  • August: Rs 90,669 crore
  • September: Rs 92,150 crore
  • October: Rs 83,346 crore
  • November: Rs 80,808 crore
Taxpayers registered under GST as of Dec. 25: 99.01 lakh

Composition Scheme Dealers: 16.6 lakh


GST Returns Filed

  • July: 38.38 lakh - revised to 58.7 lakh
  • August: 37.63 lakh - revised to 58.9 lakh
  • September: 42.91 lakh - revised to 57.3 lakh
  • October: 50.1 lakh
  • November: 53.06 lakh

How To Read The November GST Revenue Data

1. That it's over Rs 2,500 crore lower than the October number, which in itself was much lower than the September collections. That may be construed as bad news as over time a wider base and better compliance should have boosted revenue not reduced it.

2. Don't forget that November saw the GST Council cut rates for over 200 items. The estimated revenue loss (as mentioned by one Council member) was to be Rs 20,000 crore and that works out to roughly Rs 1,600 per month. So much of the Rs 2,500 crore gap between November and October could be attributed to that.

3. Also October was a festival month and so it's no surprise collections were higher in October than November. Though, in all honesty, that should just shift the focus of concern on to the October data as the festival season should have translated into higher-than-September revenues, which it didn't.
As of now the number of returns filed also seems to have declined — from 57.3 lakh to 50.1 lakh. But that may not be sacrosanct as data revisions continue.

4. None of this is worrisome as the government is still on track to achieve revenue neutrality by some estimates. One, to be specific. Credit Suisse's India Equity Strategist Neelkanth Mishra computes revenue neutrality to be at Rs 10.6 lakh crore per annum, roughly Rs 88,000 crore per month.

By that measure the government should have collected Rs 4.41 lakh crore in the first five months of GST, July-November.
The actual collections add up to VOILA... Rs 4.41 lakh crore. Phew!

Newsletters

Update Email
to get newsletters straight to your inbox
⚠️ Add your Email ID to receive Newsletters
Note: You will be signed up automatically after adding email

News for You

Set as Trusted Source
on Google Search