Experts at a CESS seminar in Hyderabad called for a balanced approach to India’s GST 2.0 rollout, emphasizing the need to simplify compliance while protecting revenue. They highlighted a proposed two‑slab rate structure of 5% and 18%, reforms to address inverted duty structures in textiles and fertilizers, and concerns over misuse of the three‑day registration approval window. The Trust‑First philosophy notes that 95% of taxpayers operate without intrusive scrutiny.
GST 2.0 proposes a simplified two‑slab structure of 5% and 18%, with luxury and sin goods remaining in higher brackets.
The reform targets sectors such as textiles and fertilizers where inputs are taxed at higher rates than finished products.
The three‑day approval window has facilitated genuine business activity but is being misused by fraudulent entities to generate fake invoices, leading to revenue leakage.
95% of taxpayers operate without intrusive scrutiny.
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The Hindu · 5 days ago
Experts and tax officials at an ICSSR‑sponsored seminar in Hyderabad called for a balanced approach to India’s upcoming GST 2.0 rollout, highlighting the need to simplify rates while protecting revenue. They warned against the misuse of the three‑day registration approval window and the inverted duty structure in sectors such as textiles and fertilizers.
LinkedIn · 6 days ago
The Bombay High Court ruled that a minimum three‑month gap must exist between a Section 73(2) show‑cause notice and the final order under Section 73(10) in GST proceedings. Orders passed earlier, such as the two‑and‑a‑half‑month order in the A.M. Marketplaces case, were quashed. The decision underscores procedural fairness and the need for adequate time for taxpayers to respond.
Times of India · 9 days ago
The article discusses the completion of GST 2.0 in India, the removal of the GST compensation cess, and the introduction of new excise rates on demerit goods such as cigarettes. It highlights how the excise notification could trigger a tax shock, affecting tobacco growers, small retailers, and the broader economy. Monthly GST collections in late 2025 remained robust, exceeding Rs 1.7–1.9 lakh crore.
BWAUTOWorld · 14 days ago
The article argues that India’s 2026 budget should overhaul the GST structure, financing options, and fleet economics to accelerate electric vehicle adoption. It proposes reducing GST on batteries and charging services to 5%, reclassifying battery swapping as an energy service, extending vehicle life norms, and providing green credit and toll waivers to lower ownership costs and support large fleet conversions.
A2Z Taxcorp · 15 days ago
The article explains that the GST Council’s exemption of individual health and term insurance policies effective 22 September 2025 did not lower premiums because insurers lost the ability to claim input tax credit on operating expenses, making the exemption cost‑neutral. It outlines insurers’ options—absorbing costs, raising premiums, or recalibrating commissions—and calls for structural fixes such as partial ITC restoration and concessional GST rates.
BhaskarEnglish · 16 days ago
The 2025 GST exemption for individual health and term insurance in India has not led to significant premium reductions because insurers cannot claim input tax credit on operating expenses. The article explains how insurers absorb costs or adjust premiums, and outlines industry demands for partial ITC restoration and other reforms.