Record GST Collections and Compliance Trends
- India’s GST collections for April 2025 hit a historic high of ₹2.37 lakh crore, up 12.6% YoY.
- Net GST revenue after refunds: ₹2.09 lakh crore, marking a 9.1% annual increase.
- Rise attributed to:
- Year-end tax filings by businesses
- Increased compliance across MSMEs
- Mass adoption of fintech solutions (87% fintech adoption rate, above global average)
- Faster refunds supporting liquidity, especially for small businesses
April’s GST Growth Reflects Broader Economic Momentum
- Since GST rollout in 2017, April collections have more than doubled from ₹1.03 lakh crore to ₹2.37 lakh crore in 2025.
- A significant 86% rise in GST refunds—mainly to exporters—reflects export demand strength.
- GST from imports surged 20.8%, aligning with trade and supply chain shifts.
Manufacturing Sector Gets a Boost from Export Surge
- HSBC India Manufacturing PMI touched a 10-month high at 58.2 in April, from 58.1 in March.
- The PMI indicates:
- Strong growth in new orders
- Highest foreign demand in over 14 years
- Export demand led by Africa, Asia, Europe, West Asia, and the Americas
Global Trade Realignment Benefiting India
- Surge in April export orders partly driven by the approaching July 9 deadline for the end of a 90-day U.S. tariff pause.
- U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods appear more stringent, prompting supply chain diversification.
- India gains from:
- Lower risk of punitive U.S. tariffs
- Reshoring and near-shoring trends
- Corporate sourcing shift—Apple to manufacture most iPhones for U.S. in India
From Temporary Gains to Sustainable Growth
- While this surge reflects short-term export-led momentum, India’s manufacturing sector grew at only 4% in FY25—a four-year low.
- Long-term growth requires:
- Boosting domestic demand
- Favourable terms in ongoing Free Trade Agreements (FTAs)
- Policy incentives to deepen manufacturing and value-addition capacity
India’s record April GST collections highlight robust export activity, a compliance-friendly fintech ecosystem, and shifting global trade dynamics. However, to sustain this momentum, domestic consumption and trade negotiations must play a larger role in driving manufacturing and tax revenue.