As India’s overhauled Goods and Services Tax (GST) system, introduced as GST 2.0 has come to the effect, with Prime Minister, Narendra Modi asserting that the reforms will accelerate India’s growth story, increase ease of doing business and attract more investors, prices of kitchen staples to electronics, from medicines and equipment to automobiles, will get cheaper, mass consumption items like ghee, paneer, butter, ‘namkeen’, ketchup, jam, dry fruits, coffee and ice creams, and aspirational goods like TV, AC, washing machines will also become cheaper. With GST on most drugs and formulations, and medical devices like glucometers and diagnostic kits reduced to 5 percent, the cost of medicines will come down for the common man. Also, home builders will benefit as GST on cement has been cut to 18 percent, from 28 percent.
This fresh regime simplifies the multi-slab structure into a primarily two-tier model—5% for essentials and 18% for most goods and services—while introducing a 0% rate for 50 critical items and a 40% slab for sin goods and ultra-luxuries like tobacco, alcohol, and high-end SUVs. The reforms, approved by the GST Council, aim to reduce compliance burdens, lower costs for the average citizen, and stimulate economic growth. For consumers, GST 2.0 delivers tangible relief, enhancing purchasing power and curbing inflation on daily essentials.
Economic experts say that despite the optimism, consumers face uneven impacts. During the initial three-month transition, billing inconsistencies and supply chain glitches could lead to erratic pricing, eroding trust in e-commerce platforms. Rural and low-income buyers, reliant on unorganized retail, may not see immediate pass-through benefits due to hoarding or middlemen markups.
However, GST 2.0 is widely seen as pro-corporate by some economic experts and opposition political parties due to its structural changes favoring large businesses, though it also aims to simplify the tax system for broader economic benefits. The reduction from multiple slabs (0%, 5%, 12%, 18%, 28%) to primarily two (5% for essentials, 18% standard rate, with 40% for luxury goods) minimizes classification disputes and compliance costs. Large corporations with nationwide operations and dedicated tax teams benefit most from streamlined digital filings and uniform rules, cutting logistics and administrative costs by 20-30%. Faster input tax credit (ITC) refunds and automated registrations improve cash flow, particularly for capital-intensive firms like those in manufacturing or retail. With the National Anti-Profiteering Authority (NAA) dissolved in 2022 and weak enforcement by the Competition Commission of India (CCI), corporates can retain more profits from rate cuts rather than passing savings to consumers, unlike smaller businesses with tighter margins.
While GST 2.0’s fresh approach heralds affordability and efficiency, benefiting 80% of households and MSMEs, its success hinges on swift transitions and anti-evasion measures. While short-term pains like fiscal strain and disruptions are evident, the long-term gains in equity and growth could redefine India’s economy only if implementation avoids past pitfalls.
