New Delhi: The GST collection declined for the second consecutive month in August to Rs 86,449 crore, the Finance Ministry said Tuesday. On year-on-year basis, the August GST collection was 12 per cent lower compared to Rs 98,202 crore mopped up in the same month last year.
Of the gross collection, Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST) stood at Rs 15,906 crore, State Goods and Services Tax (SGST) Rs 21,064 crore, Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST) Rs 42,264 crore (including Rs 19,179 crore collected on import of goods) and Cess Rs 7,215 crore (including Rs 673 crore collected on import of goods).
Tax experts said the revenue numbers indicate that domestic economic activity is picking up and the drop in the collection is mainly due to reduced imports.
In a statement, the Finance Ministry said the government has settled Rs 18,216 crore to Central GST and Rs 14,650 crore to State GST from Integrated GST as regular settlement.
“The total revenue earned by Central Government and the State Governments after regular settlement in the month of August, 2020 is Rs 34,122 crore for CGST and Rs 35,714 crore for the SGST,” the Finance Ministry said.
The revenues for August are 88 per cent of the GST collected in the same month last year. During the month, the revenues from import of goods were 77 per cent and the revenues from domestic transaction (including import of services) were 92 per cent of the revenues from these sources during the same month last year, the ministry informed. It further said that taxpayers with turnover less than Rs 5 crore have been permitted to file GST returns till September.
The GST collections have faltered since the beginning of the current fiscal as COVID-19-induced lockdown hampered economic activity.
The revenue in April was Rs 32,172 crore, May (Rs 62,151 crore), June (Rs 90,917 crore) and July (Rs 87,422 crore).
PwC Leader (Indirect Tax) Pratik Jain said the trend in the last couple of months show collections seem to have stabilised at around 10 per cent lower than corresponding month last year. “As things are opening up gradually, the collection is likely to be progressively better in coming months,” Jain said.
Deloitte India Partner MS Mani said the collections are on the recovery path and GST collections on domestic transactions just eight per cent lower than the same month last year indicate revival of economic activities.
“The state-wise data of GST collections indicates that the revival process has resulted in marginal collection increases in some states like Rajasthan and UP, marginal reductions in states like Haryana and Gujarat with significant dips in Maharashtra, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu,” Mani said.