--°C
Loading...
Advertisement
Listen to Article
2 min read
80%

According to the 2023-24 Budget, the Centre anticipates GST collections to increase by 12% in the current fiscal year.

Digital Desk: According to figures issued by the Union Finance Ministry on May 1, the government received a record Rs 1.87 lakh crore in Goods and Services Tax (GST) in April.

The GST collected in April was an all-time high by a wide margin, at Rs 1.87 lakh crore. The previous high was Rs 1.68 lakh crore, which was collected in April 2022.

The GST collected last month was 11.6 percent higher than in April 2022. The most recent GST collecting data is up 16.8 percent from March 2023.

The total was Rs 38,440 crore for Central GST, Rs 47,412 crore for State GST, Rs 89,158 crore for Integrated GST, and Rs 12,025 crore for compensatory cess.

The government settled Rs 45,864 crore to the Central GST and Rs 37,959 crore to the State GST from the Integrated GST in April. As a result, the total revenue for the month after settlement for the Centre was Rs 84,304 crore and Rs 85,371 crore for State GST.

According to the 2023-24 Budget, the Centre anticipates GST collections to increase by 12% in the current fiscal year.

The Centre anticipates a 12% increase in GST collections in 2023-24.

According to the finance ministry, April 20 witnessed the highest-ever tax collection on a single day.

"On April 20, 2023, Rs 68,228 crore was paid in 9.8 lakh transactions." Last year (on the same date), the largest single day payment was Rs 57,846 crore with 9.6 lakh transactions, according to the government.

GST receipts in April were much greater than expected. Collections are often greater in the first month of a fiscal year. In fact, since the implementation of the GST in July 2017, April collections had reached a new high. The lone exception is April 2020, when the economy was reeling from the coronavirus outbreak and was under lockdown across the country.

"The record GST collections relate to transactions in March, the final month of fiscal year 2022-23, when all organisations would have been eager to end the fiscal year on a high note," said MS Mani, Partner, Deloitte India.

"This comes on the heels of monthly GST collections exceeding Rs 1.4 lakh crore in 2022-23, and thus is a testament to the good economic growth and increased efforts aimed at improving compliance." "The majority of large states have reported 20 percent or higher growth over the same period last year, indicating broad-based growth across sectors and states," Mani noted.

While many states saw 20 percent or more growth in GST collections in April, as many as 14 states and union territories saw revenue growth of less than 14 percent. These include Chandigarh (2%), Odisha (3%), Gujarat (4%), Andaman and Nicobar Islands (5%), Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu (5%), Rajasthan (5%), Andhra Pradesh (6%), Meghalaya (6%), Puducherry (6%), Delhi (8%), Bihar (11%), and Kerala (12%). Lakshadweep had the lowest numbers, with receipts falling by 7% compared to the same month last year.

 

FOLLOW US F
POPULAR
FEATURE
TRENDY
Megapari Cricket Tour 2025: Aussie Fire Meets Island Fury
PM Modi Showcases India's Artistry through Exquisite Gifts to Global Leaders at G7 Summit
Kamakhya Temple Gears Up for Ambubachi Mela 2025: Key Guidelines and Devotee Advisory Issued
Iran Deploys Hypersonic Missiles in New Strike on Israel as Trump Issues Blunt Warning
Strict Pet Regulations: Shillong Municipal Board Mandates Dog Registration
CM Lays Foundation Stone for ₹25 Crore Centralised Community Kitchen in Dibrugarh