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GST’s real gain is efficiency and sustainability

GST’s real gain is efficiency and sustainability


By all counts, GST and the demonetisation-led formalisation of the economy is as big a transformation as the 1991 economic reforms. As we navigate through the current disruption, the GST narrative will change to productivity gains, formal jobs and better competitiveness.

With the benefit of hindsight, we now know that the impact of demonetisation went beyond unaccounted money; the real gain came from digitisation and formalisation of the economy, accompanied by an unprecedented move from physical to financial assets . The recapitalisation of public sector banks has been partly enabled by this tide of massive liquidity available with the banking system. Similarly, beyond efficiency transformation in taxation, the impact of the GST-led initial disruption has been underestimated because millions of enterprises are expected to make a shift in their approach towards cash, compliance and customer interaction. The GST is likely to have a positive impact by way of increase in competitiveness and productivity through improvement in quality of jobs, access to formal credit and significant reduction in the overall tax burden.
First, the informal sector is almost 40% of the Indian economy and employs almost 75% of the labour force. However, a significant part of SMEs (in the informal economy) do not have economies of scale or a technological edge. They survive on the cash economy to evade taxes, provident fund liabilities and minimum wages to employees. This directly impacts competitiveness of other SMEs who do business by the rules. Too often, informal enterprises have taken advantage of an archaic tax system, impractical labour regulations and an ineffective oversight at the local administration level. The GST, therefore, shall result in a shift in business from the informal to formal sector. Quality of jobs in formal enterprises will improve, giving a fillip to the government’s Skill India initiative. Going ahead there will be an increase in demand for better skills as firms try to build sustainable enterprises.

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