TGPSC Current Affairs 1 July 2026 featuring key national and Telangana developments

Relevance: TGPSC Group-I Paper–III: Governance, Social Issues and Public Health

Important Keywords for Prelims and Mains

For Prelims:

  • SBM-U 2.0, IEC, Urban Local Bodies, Source Segregation, Home Composting, Amrut Mitra, Self-Help Groups

For Mains:

  • Behaviour change, citizen-led sanitation, community ownership, urban resilience, sanitation-worker welfare, women-led environmental action

Why in News?

Telangana has highlighted the outcomes of its 100-Day Information, Education and Communication Action Plan implemented under Swachh Bharat Mission-Urban 2.0.

The campaign used citizen mobilisation, household awareness, public-health measures and Urban Local Body action to improve cleanliness and promote lasting sanitation behaviour.

What is Telangana’s Clean Cities Campaign?

The campaign was a time-bound urban sanitation programme conducted from June 2 to September 10, 2025 across Telangana’s Urban Local Bodies.

Its central objective was to convert awareness into everyday practice by encouraging citizens to:

  • Segregate waste at source
  • Adopt home composting
  • Maintain public spaces
  • Participate in local cleanliness activities
  • Support healthier and safer urban neighbourhoods

The programme treated sanitation not merely as a municipal function, but as a shared responsibility of citizens, workers, women’s groups and local institutions.

Major Interventions under the 100-Day Action Plan

1. Household Waste Management

Door-to-door campaigns reached 27.09 lakh households.

The outreach promoted:

  • Separation of wet and dry waste
  • Home composting
  • Responsible disposal
  • Reduction of neighbourhood littering

This was important because efficient waste processing depends on segregation at the household level.

2. Citizen Mobilisation

  • Around 36,900 citizens participated in Swachhata rallies covering approximately 250 kilometres.The rallies created public visibility and encouraged community ownership of urban cleanliness.

3. Women-Led Environmental Action

Under Amrut Mitra–Women for Trees:

  • 24,708 saplings were planted
  • 10,704 women SHG members participated

The initiative linked women’s collective action with urban greening and environmental responsibility.

4. Sanitation-Worker Welfare

Health camps covered 25,386 frontline sanitation workers.

The camps recognised that urban cleanliness must be accompanied by:

  • Occupational health protection
  • Medical support
  • Worker dignity
  • Safer working conditions

5. Drainage and Disease Prevention

The campaign facilitated the cleaning of 18,351 kilometres of stormwater drains and nallahs.

It also included:

  • Seasonal disease awareness in about 15.02 lakh homes
  • Cleaning of 621 drinking-water overhead tanks

These measures supported flood prevention, safer drinking water and control of waterborne and vector-borne diseases.

6. SHG Livelihood Support

  • Loans worth ₹1,045.04 crore were disbursed to 8,546 Self-Help Groups.
  • SHG products were displayed at fairs and street-food festivals, generating sales of approximately ₹77.12 lakh.
  • This connected sanitation outreach with women’s financial empowerment and local livelihoods.

Follow-up 99-Day Action Plan

Building on the earlier campaign, Telangana launched a 99-Day Action Plan from March to June 2026.

Its focus included:

  • Garbage-free streets
  • Source segregation
  • Home composting
  • Safe drinking water
  • Heat mitigation
  • Grievance redressal
  • Citizen participation

Major activities included:

  • Outreach to more than 6.5 lakh households
  • 194 cleanliness drives
  • Health camps for sanitation workers
  • Swachhata rallies and pledge campaigns involving more than 22,000 citizens

The follow-up plan indicated an effort to move from a one-time campaign towards continuous urban service improvement.

Significance

Behavioural change:

The programme recognised that sanitation infrastructure works only when citizens consistently follow responsible waste practices.

Integrated public health:

Drain cleaning, water-tank maintenance and disease awareness linked cleanliness with health protection.

Women’s leadership:

Women SHGs participated in environmental action and livelihood activities.

Worker-centred sanitation:

Health camps brought attention to the welfare of frontline sanitation personnel.

Urban resilience:

Cleaning drainage networks supported flood mitigation and reduced disease risks.

Local governance:

The campaign strengthened cooperation between Urban Local Bodies and communities.

Way Forward

  • Make IEC campaigns continuous and ward-based.
  • Link awareness drives with reliable door-to-door segregated waste collection.
  • Expand composting and material-recovery facilities.
  • Ensure regular health checks, insurance and protective equipment for sanitation workers.
  • Use SHGs as local sanitation educators and monitoring partners.
  • Integrate drain maintenance with urban flood-management plans.
  • Publish ULB-level cleanliness and service-delivery dashboards.
  • Strengthen citizen grievance redressal and neighbourhood-level accountability.

Conclusion

Telangana’s campaign demonstrates that sustainable urban sanitation requires more than municipal cleaning operations. It depends on household practices, citizen participation, worker welfare, women’s involvement and effective Urban Local Bodies.The initiative can become a durable model only if campaign-based mobilisation is converted into routine public behaviour and accountable local governance.

CARE MCQ

Q. Consider the following objectives of the Swachh Bharat Mission–Urban:

  1. Elimination of open defecation
  2. Scientific management of municipal solid waste
  3. Achievement of Garbage Free Cities
  4. Promotion of cleanliness-related behavioural change

How many of the above are associated with SBM-U and SBM-U 2.0?

A. Only one

B. Only two

C. Only three

D. All four

Answer: D

Explanation

  1. Elimination of open defecation — Correct:
    The first phase of SBM-U, launched in 2014, aimed to make urban India free from open defecation by improving access to toilets and urban sanitation facilities.
  2. Scientific management of municipal solid waste — Correct:
    SBM-U sought to ensure proper collection, segregation, transportation, processing and disposal of municipal solid waste instead of unscientific dumping.
  3. Achievement of Garbage Free Cities — Correct:
    SBM-U 2.0, launched in 2021, aims to make all cities “Garbage Free” by promoting effective waste processing, remediation of dumpsites and sustainable waste management.
  4. Promotion of cleanliness-related behavioural change — Correct:
    SBM-U 2.0 seeks to institutionalise “Swachh” behaviour among citizens. It promotes practices such as waste segregation, proper disposal of waste and responsible use of sanitation facilities.

FAQs

1. What is SBM-U 2.0?

It is the second phase of the Swachh Bharat Mission for urban areas, focused on garbage-free cities and sustainable sanitation.

2. What was Telangana’s 100-Day Action Plan?

It was a statewide sanitation and behaviour-change campaign conducted across Urban Local Bodies in 2025.

3. What is IEC?

IEC means Information, Education and Communication.

4. What was the campaign’s main household focus?

It promoted source segregation and home composting.

5. What is Amrut Mitra–Women for Trees?

It is an initiative involving women SHGs in plantation and environmental action.

6. How were sanitation workers supported?

They were covered through health camps and medical services.

 

Relevance: UPSC GS Paper II: Public Health, Nutrition, Women and Child Welfare, Government Policies and Interventions

Important Keywords for Prelims and Mains

For Prelims:

  • Anaemia Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan, 7×7×7 Framework, T4 Strategy, Iron-Folic Acid, WIFS, PMSMA, JANANI Portal, RBSK, U-WIN

For Mains:

  • Lifecycle approach, therapeutic anaemia management, continuum of care, intergenerational malnutrition, digital health tracking, Jan Bhagidari, whole-of-government approach

Why in News?

The Union Health Ministry released the revised Anaemia Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan Operational Guidelines during the 16th meeting of the Central Council of Health and Family Welfare.The revised framework marks a shift from preventive supplementation alone to a broader model based on testing, therapeutic treatment, dietary improvement, digital tracking and community participation.

What is Anaemia?

  • Anaemia is a condition in which the number of red blood cells or their oxygen-carrying capacity is insufficient to meet the body’s physiological needs.

Its major causes include:

  • Iron deficiency
  • Folate, vitamin B12 and vitamin A deficiencies
  • Parasitic infections
  • Malaria
  • Chronic inflammation
  • Inherited blood disorders

According to the WHO:

  • Women of reproductive age with haemoglobin below 12 g/dL are considered anaemic.
  • Children below five years with haemoglobin below 11 g/dL are considered anaemic.

Burden of Anaemia

Anaemia affects health, learning ability and productivity.

Health effects

  • Fatigue, weakness and dizziness
  • Reduced immunity
  • Poor concentration
  • Impaired cognitive and motor development in children
  • Prematurity, perinatal loss and low birth weight during pregnancy

Vulnerable groups

The burden is highest among:

  • Children below five years
  • Menstruating adolescent girls
  • Pregnant women
  • Postpartum women

Extent of the problem

Globally, anaemia affects:

  • 40% of children aged 6–59 months
  • 37% of pregnant women
  • 30% of non-pregnant women aged 15–49 years

According to NFHS-5, anaemia in India affects:

  • 67.1% of children below five years
  • 59.1% of adolescent girls aged 15–19 years
  • 57% of women aged 15–49 years
  • 52.2% of pregnant women

What is Anaemia Mukt Bharat?

  • Anaemia Mukt Bharat was launched in 2018 under the National Health Mission.
  • It adopted a lifecycle approach to address nutritional and non-nutritional causes of anaemia among children, adolescents, women of reproductive age and pregnant and lactating women.
  • Its objective was to combine prevention, screening, treatment and behaviour change.

Original 6×6×6 Strategy

The earlier framework consisted of:

  • Six beneficiary groups
  • Six interventions
  • Six institutional mechanisms

Its important interventions included:

Iron-Folic Acid supplementation:

Age-specific IFA supplementation was provided to children, adolescents, non-pregnant women and pregnant women.

Biannual deworming:

Albendazole was administered to children and adolescents to control worm infestation.

Testing and treatment:

Haemoglobin screening and treatment were promoted through health facilities and outreach services.

Food fortification:

Iron-fortified foods were included in public nutrition programmes.

Behaviour-change communication:

Families were counselled on dietary habits, supplementation and treatment adherence.

Management of non-nutritional causes:

The programme also addressed malaria, fluorosis and haemoglobinopathies such as sickle-cell disease.

Transition to Anaemia Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan

The revised programme expands the earlier model in four important ways:

  • Moves from prophylactic care to therapeutic care
  • Adds systematic follow-up and tracking
  • Introduces the Eating Right approach
  • Strengthens community participation through Jan Chetna and Jan Bhagidari

The change recognises that supplementation alone cannot reduce anaemia without diagnosis, treatment compliance and follow-up.

New 7×7×7 Framework

The earlier 6×6×6 model has been expanded into a 7×7×7 framework.

Seventh Beneficiary Group

  • Low Birth Weight babies aged 0–6 months have been added.
  • Their inclusion seeks to break the intergenerational cycle of maternal and childhood anaemia at the earliest stage.

Seventh Intervention

The Eating Right approach promotes:

  • Iron-rich foods
  • Diversified diets
  • Conscious daily food choices
  • Improved household nutrition practices

Seventh Institutional Mechanism

  • A strengthened Monitoring and Evaluation framework has been introduced for digital tracking and programme planning.

T4 Strategy

The earlier **T3 approach—Test, Treat and Talk—**has been expanded into T4: Test, Treat, Talk and Track.

Test:

Identify anaemia through haemoglobin screening.

Treat:

Provide treatment according to severity and clinical protocols.

Talk:

Counsel beneficiaries on food, supplementation and treatment adherence.

Track:

Monitor referral, follow-up and response to treatment.

The addition of tracking is intended to prevent beneficiaries from dropping out after screening.

Therapeutic Management

  • For severe anaemia and non-responders among pregnant and lactating women, the revised guidelines include intravenous iron therapy.

The approved interventions include:

  • Ferric Carboxymaltose
  • Iron Sucrose

This reflects the programme’s shift from routine supplementation to case-based clinical treatment.

Digital Tracking Architecture

The revised framework establishes a unified Anaemia Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan Portal.

It will integrate records from:

  • JANANI Portal: Pregnant women
  • RBSK Portal: Child health screening
  • U-WIN Portal: Immunisation-linked child records

The digital system will track the full continuum of care:

  • Screening
  • Haemoglobin testing
  • Counselling
  • Treatment
  • Referral
  • Follow-up

This can improve accountability and help identify regional or beneficiary-level gaps.

Related Government Initiatives

Weekly Iron and Folic Acid Supplementation

  • The WIFS programme provides supervised weekly IFA tablets to adolescent girls and boys,It also includes biannual deworming with Albendazole.

Universal Screening of Pregnant Women

Anaemia screening forms part of antenatal care.

Pregnant women receive IFA tablets through:

  • Sub-centres
  • Primary Health Centres
  • Other public health facilities
  • Village Health and Nutrition Days

Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan

Under PMSMA, special antenatal check-ups are conducted on the 9th of every month to detect and manage high-risk pregnancies, including anaemia.

Mother and Child Tracking Systems

Digital systems are used to report and monitor anaemic and severely anaemic pregnant women.

Blood Banks and Storage Units

District hospitals and sub-district facilities are being strengthened to manage complications arising from severe anaemia.

Governance and Community Participation

  • Health is a State subject, and implementation rests mainly with States and Union Territories.
  • The Union government provides technical and financial support through the National Health Mission.

The revised programme adopts:

Jan Bhagidari:

Community participation in prevention, treatment and awareness.

Jan Chetna:

Public awareness aimed at de-normalising fatigue, weakness and poor nutrition.

Significance

Lifecycle coverage:

The programme addresses anaemia from infancy to adulthood.

Intergenerational impact:

Including low-birth-weight babies can help interrupt the cycle of maternal and childhood anaemia.

Therapeutic orientation:

Severe cases will receive active treatment instead of supplementation alone.

Digital accountability:

Integrated tracking can improve referral and follow-up.

Maternal and child health:

Reduced anaemia can contribute to lower IMR and MMR.

Human-capital gains:

Better nutrition can improve learning, productivity and long-term development.

Key Challenges

  • Inadequate haemoglobin testing in remote areas
  • Poor compliance with IFA supplementation
  • Side effects leading to treatment discontinuation
  • Limited access to diversified diets
  • Weak follow-up after screening

Way Forward

  • Ensure routine haemoglobin testing in schools, Anganwadi Centres and health facilities.
  • Strengthen the availability of IFA supplements and therapeutic iron.
  • Improve counselling on side effects and treatment adherence.
  • Promote affordable, region-specific iron-rich diets.
  • Expand screening for malaria, fluorosis and haemoglobin disorders.
  • Train ASHAs, Anganwadi workers and health personnel in referral and follow-up.
  • Ensure interoperability and accurate data entry across portals.
  • Use schools, SHGs and local bodies for sustained Jan Chetna campaigns.

Conclusion

The Anaemia Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan marks a shift from a supplementation-centred programme to a comprehensive system of testing, treatment, counselling and tracking.

Its success will depend on effective State implementation, timely diagnosis, dietary improvement, digital follow-up and community participation. By treating anaemia as a lifecycle and cross-sectoral challenge, India can improve maternal and child health and strengthen human development.

UPSC PYQ

Q. Consider the following statements in the context of interventions being undertaken under the Anaemia Mukt Bharat Strategy:

  1. It provides prophylactic calcium supplementation for pre-school children, adolescents and pregnant women.
  2. It runs a campaign for delayed cord clamping at the time of childbirth.
  3. It provides for periodic deworming of children and adolescents.
  4. It addresses non-nutritional causes of anaemia in endemic pockets, with special focus on malaria, haemoglobinopathies and fluorosis.

How many of the statements given above are correct?

A. Only one

B. Only two

C. Only three

D. All four

Answer: C

Explanation

Statement 1 is incorrect:
Anaemia Mukt Bharat provides prophylactic Iron and Folic Acid supplementation, not calcium supplementation. Iron and folic acid help in the formation of haemoglobin and prevent nutritional anaemia among children, adolescents and pregnant women.

Statement 2 is correct:
The strategy promotes delayed cord clamping at the time of childbirth. Delaying the clamping of the umbilical cord for a short period allows additional blood to pass from the placenta to the newborn. This improves the infant’s iron stores and reduces the risk of anaemia during early infancy.

Statement 3 is correct:
Anaemia Mukt Bharat provides for periodic deworming of children and adolescents, generally using Albendazole. Intestinal worms can cause blood loss and reduce the absorption of nutrients, thereby contributing to anaemia.

Statement 4 is correct:
The strategy also addresses non-nutritional causes of anaemia in endemic areas. These include:

  • Malaria, which destroys red blood cells
  • Haemoglobinopathies, such as sickle-cell disease and thalassaemia
  • Fluorosis, which may interfere with normal blood formation

Therefore, Statements 2, 3 and 4 are correct, while Statement 1 is incorrect.

CARE MCQ

Q. Consider the following statements regarding Anaemia Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan:

  1. It expands the earlier 6×6×6 strategy into a 7×7×7 framework.
  2. Low Birth Weight babies aged 0–6 months have been added as a beneficiary group.
  3. The T4 strategy stands for Test, Treat, Talk and Track.
  4. The revised guidelines exclude intravenous iron therapy for severe anaemia.

Which of the statements given above are correct?

A. 1 and 2 only

B. 1, 2 and 3 only

C. 2, 3 and 4 only

D. 1, 2, 3 and 4

Answer: B

Explanation

Statement 1 is correct: The revised programme adopts a 7×7×7 framework.

Statement 2 is correct: Low Birth Weight babies aged 0–6 months are the new beneficiary group.

Statement 3 is correct: T4 means Test, Treat, Talk and Track.

Statement 4 is incorrect: Intravenous iron therapy is included for severe cases and non-responders among pregnant and lactating women.

FAQs

1. What is Anaemia Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan?

It is the revised national programme for preventing, diagnosing, treating and tracking anaemia across the lifecycle.

2. When was Anaemia Mukt Bharat launched?

It was launched in 2018 under the National Health Mission.

3. What causes anaemia?

The major causes are iron deficiency, vitamin deficiencies, infections, chronic inflammation and inherited blood disorders.

4. What was the earlier strategy?

The original programme followed a 6×6×6 strategy.

5. What is the new framework?

The revised programme follows a 7×7×7 framework.

6. Who is the new beneficiary group?

Low Birth Weight babies aged 0–6 months.

7. What is the new intervention?

The Eating Right approach, which promotes diversified and iron-rich diets.

8. What does T4 stand for?

Test, Treat, Talk and Track.

Relevance: UPSC GS Paper III: Indian Economy, Taxation, Formalisation and Ease of Doing Business

Important Keywords for Prelims and Mains

For Prelims:

  • GST, 101st Constitutional Amendment, Articles 246A, 269A and 279A, GST Council, GSTN, CGST, SGST, UTGST, IGST

For Mains:

  • One Nation, One Tax, destination-based taxation, cooperative federalism, Input Tax Credit, tax formalisation, digital tax administration, common national market

Why in News?

The Goods and Services Tax completed nine years on July 1, 2026. Introduced in 2017, GST replaced multiple Central and State indirect taxes with an integrated tax framework. Over the years, rate rationalisation, digital compliance systems and Centre–State coordination has strengthened its role in creating a common national market.

What is GST?

  • The Goods and Services Tax is an indirect tax levied on the supply of goods and services for domestic consumption.
  • Although consumers ultimately bear the tax, businesses collect it at the point of sale and deposit it with the government.
  • GST is imposed on the value added at each stage of the supply chain. Through Input Tax Credit, a business can deduct the tax already paid on inputs from its final tax liability, thereby reducing the cascading effect of taxation.

Evolution of GST in India

2003:

  • The Kelkar Task Force on Indirect Taxes recommended the introduction of a comprehensive GST.

2006:

  • The Union Budget proposed the implementation of a national GST.

2014:

  • The Constitution Amendment Bill was introduced as the 122nd Constitutional Amendment Bill.

2016:

  • The Bill was enacted as the Constitution (101st Amendment) Act, 2016.

2017:

  • GST came into force across India on July 1, 2017.
  • It subsumed 17 taxes and 13 cesses, replacing a fragmented indirect-tax system with a more uniform framework.

Constitutional Framework

Article 246A

  • It grants Parliament and State Legislatures concurrent powers to make GST laws.
  • However, Parliament has exclusive authority to legislate on GST relating to inter-State trade or commerce.

Article 269A

  • It deals with GST on inter-State supplies.
  • The Union government levies and collects the tax, which is then apportioned between the Centre and States.

Article 279A

  • It provides for the establishment of the GST Council by the President.
  • The Council recommends tax rates, exemptions, threshold limits, procedural rules and special provisions.

Salient Features of GST

Tax on supply:

  • GST is levied on the supply of goods and services rather than separately on manufacture, sale or service.

Destination-based tax:

  • Tax revenue generally accrues to the State where the final consumption takes place.

Value-added taxation:

  • Input Tax Credit prevents repeated taxation of the same value.

Dual structure:

  • Both the Union and State governments levy GST on intra-State supplies.

Common national market:

  • Uniform principles reduce internal tax barriers and support inter-State trade.

Digital administration:

  • Registration, return filing, tax payment, invoice reporting and refund processing are largely electronic.

Components of GST

Central Goods and Services Tax

  • CGST is levied by the Union government on intra-State supplies.

State Goods and Services Tax

  • SGST is levied by the concerned State government on the same intra-State transaction.

Union Territory Goods and Services Tax

  • UTGST applies to intra-Union Territory supplies in applicable Union Territories, together with CGST.

Integrated Goods and Services Tax

  • IGST is levied by the Union government on inter-State supplies and imports. Its proceeds are shared with the destination State.

Taxes Subsumed under GST

Major Central levies

GST replaced taxes such as:

  • Service Tax
  • Central Excise Duty on covered goods
  • Additional Duties of Customs
  • Special Additional Duty of Customs
  • Relevant Central cesses and surcharges

Major State levies

It subsumed:

  • State VAT or Sales Tax on covered goods
  • Purchase Tax
  • Luxury Tax
  • Entry Tax and Octroi
  • Entertainment Tax, except local-body levies
  • Taxes on lotteries, betting and gambling
  • Relevant State cesses and surcharges

Items and Levies Outside GST

Alcoholic liquor for human consumption

It remains outside the scope of GST and is taxed by States.

Petroleum products

GST may be imposed on the following products from a date recommended by the GST Council:

  • Petroleum crude
  • Petrol
  • High-Speed Diesel
  • Natural gas
  • Aviation Turbine Fuel

Until then, excise duty and State VAT continue to apply.

Other independent levies

These include:

  • Basic Customs Duty
  • Stamp Duty
  • Motor Vehicle Tax
  • Electricity Duty
  • Toll Tax
  • Anti-dumping and safeguard duties
  • Certain local-body taxes

GST Council and Cooperative Federalism

The GST Council is a constitutional body under Article 279A.

It brings the Union and States together to decide:

  • Tax rates
  • Exemptions
  • Threshold limits
  • Model laws
  • Procedural rules
  • Special provisions for States

Because both levels of government share the GST base, the Council has become an important institution of cooperative fiscal federalism.

Goods and Services Tax Network

The GSTN provides the digital infrastructure for the GST system.

It supports:

  • Registration
  • Return filing
  • Electronic payments
  • Refunds
  • E-invoicing
  • Input Tax Credit matching
  • Data exchange among tax authorities

GSTN connects the Centre, States, taxpayers and other stakeholders through a common technological platform.

Next-Generation GST Reforms

The 56th meeting of the GST Council approved a new phase of reforms that came into effect in September 2025.

Simplified rate structure:

The tax system was primarily reorganised around the 5% and 18% slabs.

Luxury and sin goods:

A higher 40% rate was introduced for specified luxury and demerit goods.

Consumer relief:

Rate reductions and exemptions were aimed at improving affordability of selected essential goods and services.

Correction of inverted duty structures:

Changes sought to reduce situations where tax on inputs exceeded tax on finished products.

Easier compliance:

Registration, refunds and return filing were simplified, especially for MSMEs and start-ups.

Relief for MSMEs and Small Taxpayers

Higher registration threshold

  • The GST registration threshold for suppliers of goods was increased from ₹20 lakh to ₹40 lakh, subject to applicable conditions.

Composition Scheme

  • Eligible small taxpayers can pay tax at a prescribed rate on turnover with simpler return and record requirements.

The turnover limit was raised to ₹1.5 crore for eligible taxpayers.

QRMP Scheme

  • The Quarterly Return Monthly Payment Scheme allows taxpayers with annual turnover up to ₹5 crore to file returns quarterly while paying tax monthly.

NIL returns through SMS

  • Taxpayers with no transactions can file specified NIL returns using SMS.

E-commerce relief

  • Eligible small suppliers making intra-State supplies through e-commerce operators were exempted from compulsory registration under prescribed conditions.

Dispute relief

  • Measures were introduced to reduce appeal pre-deposits and provide conditional waiver of interest and penalties for certain past demands.

Technology-Driven Tax Administration

E-invoicing:

Real-time invoice reporting improves accuracy and reduces fake invoicing.

Automated reconciliation:

Supplier tax liability is matched with the recipient’s Input Tax Credit claims.

Pre-filled returns:

System-generated information reduces repetitive reporting and manual errors.

Artificial Intelligence and analytics:

AI and machine learning identify suspicious registrations, invoice patterns and tax-evasion risks.

Risk-based scrutiny:

Authorities can focus on high-risk taxpayers while reducing unnecessary intervention for compliant businesses.

This shift has made tax administration more transparent, data-driven and predictable.

Major Achievements

Unified national market:

GST reduced internal tax barriers and improved the movement of goods and services across States.

Reduction of cascading:

Input Tax Credit lowered the burden of tax on tax.

Wider tax base:

The number of registered GST taxpayers increased from about 66.5 lakh in 2017 to 1.65 crore by May 2026.

Higher collections:

Gross GST collections increased from approximately ₹7.4 lakh crore in 2017–18 to ₹22.27 lakh crore in 2025–26.

Economic formalisation:

Digital invoices and return filing brought more firms and transactions into the formal economy.

Ease of doing business:

A common framework replaced multiple State-level tax procedures.

Transparency:

Electronic records created an auditable trail for transactions and tax payments.

Revenue buoyancy:

Improved compliance and reporting strengthened fiscal transparency and predictability.

Way Forward

  • Continue rate rationalisation while safeguarding revenue stability.
  • Reduce classification disputes and inverted duty structures.
  • Make refunds faster and largely automated.
  • Protect genuine Input Tax Credit claimants through proportionate enforcement.
  • Strengthen GSTN capacity, cybersecurity and grievance redressal.
  • Use AI-based scrutiny transparently and fairly.
  • Consider phased inclusion of petroleum products through GST Council consensus.

Conclusion

GST is one of India’s most important structural tax reforms. It replaced a fragmented indirect-tax system with a destination-based, digitally administered and nationally integrated framework. Its achievements include a wider tax base, higher collections, reduced cascading and greater formalisation. However, GST remains an evolving reform. The next phase should focus on simpler rates, easier compliance, faster refunds, stable State finances and taxpayer trust.

UPSC PYQ

Q. GST is a/an (CAPF/2022)

A. Destination-based consumption tax

B. Origin-based production tax

C. Destination-based sales tax on transaction

D. Origin-based tax on sales transaction

Answer: A

Explanation

The Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a comprehensive indirect tax imposed on the supply of goods and services.

GST is described as a destination-based consumption tax because the tax revenue goes to the State or jurisdiction where the goods or services are finally consumed, rather than where they are produced.

For example, if a product is manufactured in Gujarat but consumed in Telangana, the tax revenue belongs primarily to Telangana, which is the destination State.

In the case of inter-State supply, Integrated GST (IGST) is collected by the Central Government and later apportioned between the Centre and the destination State.

Thus, GST follows the principle of taxation at the place of consumption.

CARE MCQ

Q. Consider the following statements regarding the Goods and Services Tax in India:

  1. GST is levied on the supply of goods and services.
  2. Article 246A gives concurrent GST law-making powers to Parliament and State Legislatures.
  3. GST is an origin-based tax under which revenue accrues to the producing State.
  4. IGST is imposed on inter-State supplies.

Which of the statements given above are correct?

A. 1 and 2 only

B. 1, 2 and 4 only

C. 2, 3 and 4 only

D. 1, 2, 3 and 4

Answer: B

Explanation

Statement 1 is correct: GST is imposed on the supply of goods and services.

Statement 2 is correct: Article 246A grants concurrent powers to Parliament and State Legislatures, subject to Parliament’s exclusive power over inter-State supplies.

Statement 3 is incorrect: GST is a destination-based tax, so revenue generally accrues to the place of consumption.

Statement 4 is correct: IGST applies to inter-State supplies and imports.

FAQs

1. What is GST?

GST is an indirect tax levied on the supply of goods and services.

2. When was GST implemented?

GST came into force on July 1, 2017.

3. Which amendment introduced GST?

The Constitution (101st Amendment) Act, 2016.

4. Which constitutional Articles deal with GST?

The key Articles are 246A, 269A and 279A.

5. Why is GST called a destination-based tax?

Its revenue generally goes to the State where the goods or services are consumed.

6. What is Input Tax Credit?

It allows a registered business to deduct tax paid on eligible inputs from its output-tax liability.

7. What is CGST?

CGST is the Central tax levied on intra-State supplies.

8. What is SGST?

SGST is the State tax levied on intra-State supplies.

9. What is IGST?

IGST is levied on inter-State supplies and imports.

10. What is UTGST?

UTGST is imposed on intra-Union Territory supplies in applicable Union Territories.

TGPSC Current Affairs July 3rd 2026

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