GST mop-up grows 3.2% in May to ₹1.94 lakh cr.


GST Mop-Up Grows 3.2% in May 2026 to ₹1.94 Lakh Crore — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2014 Modi government constitutes 14th Finance Commission; GST reform gains political momentum
2016 101st Constitutional Amendment Act passed; Article 246A, 269A, 279A inserted
July 1, 2017 GST officially launched — "One Nation, One Tax, One Market"
FY 2018–19 Monthly collections stabilise above ₹1 lakh crore threshold for first time consistently
April 2022 First-ever ₹1.68 lakh crore collection; ₹1 lakh crore becomes the new floor
April 2023 All-time high at that time: ₹1.87 lakh crore
April 2024 New all-time high: ₹2.10 lakh crore [S3]
FY 2024–25 Record gross annual GST collection [S2]
April 2025 Fresh all-time high: ₹2.37 lakh crore [S2]
May 2026 ₹1.94 lakh crore; 3.2% y-o-y growth [S1]

Predecessors replaced by GST: Central Excise Duty, Service Tax, VAT, CST, Entry Tax, Octroi, Entertainment Tax, Luxury Tax (17+ levies).


4. Core Static Facts

Constitutional & Legal Basis

GST Council

Tax Structure

Component Levied by Applicable on
CGST Centre Intra-State supply
SGST State Intra-State supply
IGST Centre (shared) Inter-State + Imports
UTGST Centre Union Territories without legislature
Compensation Cess Centre Luxury/sin goods

Rate Slabs

May 2026 Breakup [S1]

Head Amount
CGST (domestic) ₹37,397 crore
SGST (domestic) ₹45,143 crore
IGST ₹51,990 crore
Gross Total ₹1,94,000+ crore

Technology Backbone

Implementing Ministry


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Governance / Administrative

Legal / Constitutional

Federal / Political

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. GST was launched on July 1, 2017 — implemented via the 101st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2016.
  2. Article 279A of the Constitution establishes the GST Council; the Finance Minister of India is its ex-officio Chairman.
  3. Article 246A grants simultaneous (concurrent) power to Parliament and State Legislatures to legislate on GST.
  4. IGST is levied on inter-State supplies and imports; collected by the Centre and shared with States.
  5. GST Council decisions require a three-fourths majority of votes cast; Centre has one-third voting weight.
  6. GSTN (GST Network) is a Section 25 (not-for-profit) company — it is the IT backbone for GST, NOT a government department.
  7. Implementing body for CGST: Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC), under Ministry of Finance.
  8. The GST Compensation Cess was originally guaranteed for 5 years (till June 2022); extended for loan repayment purposes.
  9. May 2026 gross GST collection: ₹1.94 lakh crore — 3.2% y-o-y growth. [S1]
  10. May 2024 GST collection: ₹1.73 lakh crore — 10% y-o-y growth. [S3]
  11. April 2025 GST collection: ₹2.37 lakh crore — all-time high as of that date. [S2]
  12. SC in Mohit Minerals case (2022): GST Council recommendations are persuasive, not binding on Union or States.
  13. The four GST rate slabs are 0%, 5%, 12%, 18%, 28% — cess is levied above 28% on demerit goods.
  14. E-invoicing under GST is mandatory for B2B transactions (threshold has been progressively lowered to small businesses).
  15. GST replaced 17 taxes and 23 cesses at Central and State levels.

8. Mains Relevance

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Indian Economy — Mobilisation of Resources; Tax reforms; Fiscal Policy
GS-II Government Policies & Interventions; Federalism; Centre-State financial relations
GS-II Statutory Bodies — GST Council as a quasi-federal institution

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "Monthly GST collection data is increasingly cited as a barometer of India's economic health. Critically examine the limitations of using GST mop-up figures as an indicator of economic buoyancy." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "The Supreme Court's ruling in Union of India vs Mohit Minerals (2022) fundamentally altered the nature of cooperative federalism in India's GST framework. Discuss." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  3. "Despite record GST collections in FY 2024–25, several structural challenges persist in India's GST architecture. Enumerate these challenges and suggest reforms for a second-generation GST." (GS-III, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Finance Commission (16th FC) Determines tax devolution formula — GST flows into the divisible pool
Fiscal Federalism & Centre-State Financial Relations GST Council is the centrepiece of cooperative fiscal federalism
Goods & Services Tax Council (Statutory Body) Constitution, composition, voting, landmark decisions
Union Budget — Indirect Tax Receipts GST forms the largest component of indirect tax revenue in Union Budget
Economic Survey — State of Economy Monthly GST data feeds into Economic Survey's consumption and demand analysis
Direct Tax reforms & TDS/TCS GST + Direct Tax = India's full tax architecture; often compared in Mains
Inflation & Core CPI GST rate changes directly pass through to consumer prices; relevant for monetary policy
Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code (IBC) GST dues are a significant portion of creditor claims under IBC proceedings

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. IGST vs CGST confusion: IGST is collected by the Centre on inter-State transactions/imports and then apportioned to Centre (CGST share) and States (SGST equivalent) — it is NOT a separate third tax to be retained entirely by Centre.

  2. GST Council as a Constitutional body: Aspirants confuse it with a statutory body. It IS a Constitutional body under Article 279A (not created by a statute like CBIC/SEBI).

  3. 101st Amendment year: Often confused with 122nd Constitution Amendment Bill (that was the Bill number in Lok Sabha; it became the 101st Amendment Act). Remember: Act = 101st; Bill number = 122nd.

  4. GST Compensation Cess ended June 2022 — but the cess continued beyond 2022 to repay Centre's back-to-back loans to States. Aspirants incorrectly state cess was abolished in 2022.

  5. Mohit Minerals case: Some aspirants misstate that the SC held GST Council decisions are "binding." The ruling was the opposite — recommendations are persuasive/non-binding; States retain sovereign power to deviate.


11. Sources