85 pc of Indian businesses show confidence in GST amid ongoing reforms

IANS June 23, 2025 273 views

Indian businesses are increasingly confident in GST, with approval ratings jumping to 85% in 2025. Automation and policy tweaks like e-invoicing have boosted compliance, though implementation hurdles remain. Export-focused reforms now top corporate wishlists as GST collections cross ₹2 lakh crore. Experts call for AI-powered tools and rate rationalisation to unlock GST 2.0’s full potential.

"Eighth anniversary of GST marks a milestone with India Inc’s sustained optimism" – Gokul Chaudhri, Deloitte India
New Delhi, June 23: The confidence in Goods and Services Tax (GST) has steadily risen from 59 per cent in 2022 to 85 per cent in 2025, driven by improved compliance maturity, digitisation and proactive engagement by policymakers, a report showed on Monday.

Key Points

1

GST confidence surged from 59% in 2022 to 85% in 2025

2

Export liberalisation tops industry wishlist for GST 2.0

3

May 2025 GST collections hit ₹2.01 lakh crore, up 16.4% YoY

4

67% firms cite lingering implementation challenges despite progress

As India marks the completion of eight years since the GST rollout, Deloitte India’s survey captured a robust endorsement of the tax reform by businesses across sectors and sizes. The respondents expressed a strong sentiment to get to the next phase of GST reforms, keeping in line with the $5 trillion economy.

“Eighth anniversary of the GST regime marks a significant milestone, with India Inc showing sustained optimism towards the tax framework,” said Gokul Chaudhri, President, Tax, Deloitte India.

He emphasised that automation of tax processes, especially e-invoicing and return auto-population, continues to deliver tangible benefits, and that industry acknowledges the government's collaborative approach in resolving concerns through timely clarifications.

2024 was a blockbuster year of GST reforms, which included the streamlining of the investigation process, clarifications specifically around valuation, stemming unwanted litigation, export-focused clarifications, measures to reduce working capital and a reduction in the quantum of pre-deposits.

“In this backdrop, to fully realise the objective of GST 2.0, India must prioritise forward-looking reforms, AI-powered compliance tools for using data, effective grievance redressal mechanisms, building a more agile, inclusive and positively transformative tax ecosystem,” Mahesh Jaising, Partner and Indirect tax leader, Deloitte India said.

While most respondents acknowledged that GST circulars have improved clarity, a growing majority (67 percent in 2025 vs 55 percent in 2024) points to ongoing ground-level implementation challenges.

The survey made key recommendations for the GST Council to consider. Foremost among them is prioritising export liberalisation, marking a shift from its fourth-place position last year to the top priority in 2025.

This notable rise highlights a strategic move in industry expectations and a collective push for enhanced exports from India. The survey also reiterates its recommendation to rationalise GST rates across the supply chain. The survey also recommends a tailored policy approach on the MSME front.

“While progress has been encouraging, there is an increasing expectation of India Inc. for GST 2.0 to focus on positively evolving certain critical areas such as dispute resolution, audit simplification and GST rate rationalisation,” Jaising added.

The survey is based on 963 responses from senior corporate executives across eight industries.

India’s gross Goods and Services Tax (GST) collection for May 2025 reached Rs 2.01 lakh crore, marking a 16.4 per cent rise compared to the Rs 1.72 lakh crore collected in May 2024.

Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
As a small business owner, I've seen GST transform our operations. Earlier we had multiple tax headaches - now single compliance. E-invoicing is game changer! But request simpler return filing for MSMEs. Govt should listen to ground realities.
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Priya M.
GST has definitely improved but why so many slabs still? Common items like biscuits have 18% GST while luxury cars have 28% - both are consumption goods. Simplify rates to 5%, 12% and 18% only. One Nation One Tax should mean simple tax structure 🇮🇳
A
Amit S.
The auto-population feature in GST returns has saved us hundreds of man-hours! Kudos to the tech team behind this. Though sometimes system glitches cause unnecessary panic during filing deadlines. Hope AI-powered tools will make it more robust 🤞
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Sunita R.
Export focus is good but domestic businesses need equal attention. Our SME faces working capital blockage due to delayed refunds. GST Council should fix this on priority. Otherwise 'ease of doing business' remains only on paper for small players.
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Vikram J.
As CA professional, I see both sides - compliance has become smoother but litigation issues remain. Many notices are issued mechanically without proper application of mind. GST 2.0 should focus on reducing inspector raj and harassment of honest taxpayers.
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Neha T.
The 16% increase in collections shows GST is working! But government should use this money wisely - improve infrastructure and reduce income tax burden. After all, we're paying GST on everything from toothpaste to petrol. Time for some tax relief for common man 😊

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