The strong uptick, which reflects heightened trade momentum, aligns with
a rise in manufacturing output and retail demand, spurred by the festival
season. This increase in e-way
bills—electronic permits required for shipping goods across states—also
reflects a significant rise
over September’s figures. The festival season, which kicks off in
August-September with Raksha Bandhan, Ganesh Chaturthi, and Onam, leads into
Navratri, Dussehra, Diwali, and concludes with Christmas at the year’s end.
Companies often see another surge in e-way bills toward the financial
year-end as they clear inventory to meet targets.
The increase in e-way bills suggests a positive outlook for tax
revenues. As a high-frequency economic indicator, e-way bill activity closely
tracks broader economic trends, with higher freight volumes often signalling
increased economic output.
Riding on festival demand,
India’s Goods and Services Tax (GST) collections rose to ₹1.87 trillion in
October, the second-highest monthly revenue since the GST system’s 2017
inception. The figure marks an 8.9% annual increase, following
a ₹1.73 trillion collection in September, which had grown 6.5%
year-on-year.
“In the last few months, India’s e-way collections have been doing
exceedingly well,” said Manoranjan Sharma, chief economist at Infomerics
Ratings, and former chief economist at the Canara Bank.
“This clearly shows that technical glitches, leakages and inadequate
coverage are now history. More importantly, it clearly demonstrates the
strength and robustness of the India growth story, since the rising e-way
collections are often taken as a proxy for the traction in the macroeconomic
growth,” he added.
GST revenue closely tracks
e-way bill activity, as higher freight volumes translate to higher tax inflows.
The all-time GST revenue peak of ₹2.1 trillion was set in April, but
October’s figures underscore a consistent uptrend.
The encouraging e-way bill data aligns with improvements in other
economic indicators. Manufacturing activity, as measured by the HSBC India
Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), rebounded in October to 57.5, up
from September’s eight-month low of 56.5, driven by strong domestic and
international demand.
With e-way bill volumes and GST
collections on a steady rise, India’s tax revenues reflect ongoing improvements
in enforcement and compliance. Average monthly
GST collections have climbed to ₹1.81 trillion in the current fiscal year,
up from ₹1.68 trillion a year earlier.
Looking ahead, as the GST Council considers tax rate rationalization and
supply chains remain active, November’s revenue outlook appears robust,
reinforcing India’s economic momentum.