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April, 2023 has registered a revenue collection (GST) at Rs. 187 lakh crore, which is the highest ever since introduction of GST in July, 2017. GST revenue for April, 2023 are 12 percent higher than April, 2022. Also, this April saw the highest single-day collection of Rs. 68,228 crore through 9.8 lakh transaction on the 20th, the due date for filing the GSTR-3 return Form (which shows actual tax payment after deducting input tax credit or ITC from gross tax liability. Prime Minister commented an this feat stating that “Great news for the Indian economy! Rising tax collection despite lower tax rates shows the success of how GST has increased integration and compliance”. This indicates economic recovery, better discipline amongst taxpayers and improved compliance.

Since the April, 2023 collections indicate March business, there is a likelihood of momentum being not the same in next few months as March is the last month of financial year which is known for higher business trend and many year-end transactions are recorded due to annual closing, inter branch settlement etc.

State wise GST contribution

In 13 states, GST growth in April, 2023 vis-à-vis April, 2022 is more than 20% with smaller states showing growth of upto over 60% . A look at following table showing this:

State April, 2022

(Rs. in crore)

April, 2023

(Rs. in crore)

Growth (%)
Jammu & Kashmir 560 803 44
Haryana 8,197 10,035 22
Uttar Pradesh 8,534 10,320 21
Sikkim 264 426 61
Arunachal Pradesh 196 238 21
Nagaland 68 88 29
Manipur 69 91 32
Mizoram 46 71 53
Tripura 107 133 25
Madhya Pradesh 3,339 4,267 28
Maharashtra 27,495 33,196 21
Karnataka 11,820 14,593 23
Goa 470 620 32
Ladakh 47 68 43

Of the above list, it can be noted that Sikkim tops the growth @ 61% followed by Mizoram, Ladakh and Jammu & Kashmir. Most of them are hill- north east small states. A perusal of State-wise performance reveals that only one state / UT, Lakshadweep has shown a negative growth of -7% while 11 states have recorded a single digest growth – others have shown a tax growth of 11-20%.

Highlights of April, 2023 GST Collections

  • GST revenue collection for April 2023 is the highest ever at Rs 1.87 lakh crore
  • The gross GST revenue collected in the month of April, 2023 is Rs. 1,87,035 crore of which CGST is Rs.  38,440 crore , SGST is Rs.  47,412 crore , IGST is Rs. 89,158 crore (including Rs. 34,972 crore collected on import of goods) and cess is Rs.  12,025 crore (including Rs. 901 crore collected on import of goods).
  • Gross GST collection in April 2023 is an all time high, Rs 19,495crore more than the next highest collection of Rs. 1,67,540 crore, in April, 2022.
  • GST revenues for April, 2023 are 12% higher than the GST revenues Y-o-Y basis.
  • Highest tax collected on a single day ever is reported at Rs. 68,228 crore through 9. 8 lakh transactions recorded on 20th April, 2023.
  • For the first time, gross GST collection has crossed Rs. 1.75 lakh crore mark. Total number of e-way bills generated in the month of March 2023 was 9.0 crore, which is 11% higher than 8.1 crore e-way bills generated in the month of February, 2023.

Signals from GST Collection

Rising tax collection of GST indicates that there is an uptrend in Indian economy resulting in more value added, both in goods and services. It inter alia signifies:

  • Better tax compliances including payment and filing of returns.
  • Previous fiscal 2022-23 ending up on a positive and promising note as the April collections are the reflection of business activities of March, 2023.
  • Indian economy is integrating and expanding throughout the country.
  • Higher tax collection calls for a need to further rationalize tax rates to optimize tax collections by way of lowering rates vis-à-vis expanding the tax base.
  • There may be lesser or no short-fall of GST revenue for the States in future, thereby resulting in no need for compensation to states.
  • There is a macro level growth of tax revenue, both across states as well as sectors including goods and services.
  • Tax collection to be taken as base for rate rationalization and minimizing
  • Tax collection will be positively impacted by anti-tax evasion measures by tax authorities, scrutiny and audits and more use of data analytics & use of artificial intelligence.
  • However, continued inflation may also have a direct bearing on tax revenue.

GST collection in future would much depend upon two crucial factors – inflation which is currently in range of 5.5-6.5 percent and GDP growth rate which may be 6-7 percent. That being the scene, even if GST collection grows @ 12 percent as projected in budget, the effective growth would be one percent only.  Further rationalization of tax rates and exemptions could pave the way for sustained and steady growth of GST revenue.

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