GST 2.0 Reforms: New Two-Slab Structure and Key Rate Cuts Explained

GST 2.0

GST 2.0 Latest News

  • In its 56th meeting, the GST Council approved next-generation reforms, moving towards a simplified two-slab structure of 5% and 18%. 
  • A higher 40% demerit rate will apply only to super luxury, sin, and demerit goods, streamlining India’s eight-year-old indirect tax regime.

Aim of GST Reforms

  • The Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council, during its 56th meeting, decided to revamp the tax structure into a primarily two-rate system.
  • The GST reforms seek to reduce the tax burden on common people, cut slabs, ease working capital issues, and improve business efficiency through automated refunds and registrations.
  • All rate changes, except for tobacco-related products, will take effect from September 22 (Navratri’s first day).
  • Despite state concerns over revenue loss, the meeting concluded in a single day under Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, with participation from ministers of 31 states and UTs.

Key Highlights of GST Reforms 

  • PM Modi welcomed the GST Council’s decision to approve sweeping rate cuts and structural reforms, calling it a pro-people move benefiting farmers, MSMEs, middle-class families, women, and youth.

Focus on Common-Use Goods and Services

  • The reforms bring major relief on daily-use items:
    • Packaged food (juices, butter, cheese, coconut water, pasta, nuts) reduced to 5%.
    • Medical items like oxygen, gauze, bandages, diagnostic kits lowered from 12% to 5%.
    • Ultra-high temperature milk, paneer, pizza bread, chapati, khakra, and erasers made GST-free.
    • Household goods (hair oil, soaps, shampoos, bicycles, kitchenware) brought down to 5%.

Tax Cuts on White Goods and Automobiles

  • GST on ACs, TVs, dishwashers cut from 28% to 18%.
  • Small cars (petrol up to 1200 cc/diesel up to 1500 cc) now taxed at 18%.
  • Motorcycles under 350 cc and all auto parts also shifted to 18%.
  • Luxury cars taxed at 40%; electric vehicles remain at 5%.

Insurance and Services

  • Life and health insurance (including term, ULIP, endowment, and family floater policies) made GST-exempt.
  • Gyms, salons, barbers, yoga services reduced from 18% to 5%.

Rationalisation of GST Slabs

  • The Council replaced multiple slabs (5%, 12%, 18%, 28%) with a two-slab system (5% and 18%), plus a 40% demerit rate for sin goods (tobacco, pan masala, luxury cars).
  • This corrects the inverted duty structure, simplifies compliance, and reduces disputes.

Financial Impact and States’ Concerns

  • Some states flagged potential revenue losses of ₹80,000–1.5 lakh crore, but consensus prevailed.
  • The Centre estimates the reforms will have a net fiscal implication of ₹48,000 crore on 2023–24 consumption data.

Sector-Specific Reforms

  • Textiles: GST on manmade fibre cut from 18% to 5%, yarn from 12% to 5%.
  • Fertilisers: Inputs like sulphuric acid, nitric acid, ammonia reduced from 18% to 5%.

Industry Response

  • Industry bodies like CII hailed the reforms as pathbreaking, promising to pass benefits to consumers, reduce litigation, and enhance compliance. 
  • The reforms are expected to lift demand, ease compliance, and support job creation.

GST Reforms 2025: Key Rate Cuts Impact

  • GST Rate Cuts for Common Man
    • The latest GST reforms bring major relief to households and middle-class consumers. 
    • Everyday essentials such as hair oil, soaps, shampoos, toothpaste, toothbrushes, bicycles, kitchenware, and tableware have all been shifted to the 5% tax slab from 12–18% earlier
    • Popular food items like namkeens, sauces, pasta, instant noodles, chocolates, coffee, and butter have also seen their tax rate reduced to 5%. 
    • Significantly, cement, a key infrastructure input, has been reduced from 28% to 18%, lowering construction costs.
  • Zero-Tax Relief for Essentials and Healthcare
    • Products such as ultra-high temperature milk, paneer, rotis, chapatis, and parathas will now attract 0% GST, making everyday food items cheaper
    • In healthcare, 33 lifesaving medicines have been exempted from GST, while spectacles for vision correction will now attract just 5% instead of 28%. 
    • Insurance services also see a major shift, with life and health insurance policies moved to 0% from 18%, providing direct benefits to households.
  • White Goods and Automobiles
    • High-ticket consumer items such as air-conditioners, TVs, dishwashers, small cars, motorcycles (≤350cc), buses, trucks, and ambulances will now attract 18% GST instead of 28%.
    • This will ease affordability for consumers and boosting demand in the automotive sector. 
  • Correcting Inverted Duty Structures
    • The government has addressed long-pending anomalies in textiles and fertilisers. 
    • GST on manmade fibre has been reduced from 18% to 5%, and on manmade yarn from 12% to 5%, correcting distortions in the textile value chain
    • Similarly, fertiliser inputs like sulphuric acid, nitric acid, and ammonia have been cut from 18% to 5%, lowering costs for agriculture and farmers.
  • Special 40% Slab for Sin and Luxury Goods
    • A 40% GST rate will apply only to super-luxury and sin goods such as pan masala, cigarettes, gutka, zarda, unmanufactured tobacco, caffeinated beverages, private-use helicopters, airplanes, yachts, and large cars/motorcycles (>350cc). 
    • For now, pan masala and tobacco products will remain taxed at 28% plus cess, but they will move into the 40% slab once the Centre repays compensation loans borrowed for states.

Source: IE | TH | HT

GST 2.0 FAQs

Q1: What is GST 2.0?

Ans: GST 2.0 is the latest reform approved by the GST Council, simplifying slabs to 5% and 18%, with 40% for sin and luxury goods.

Q2: When will GST 2.0 reforms take effect?

Ans: Most rate changes will be effective from September 22, 2025, coinciding with Navratri, except for tobacco-related products which remain unchanged.

Q3: Which items became cheaper under GST 2.0?

Ans: Daily-use goods like soaps, shampoos, bicycles, food items, medical supplies, and even cement saw significant GST rate reductions, directly benefiting households.

Q4: How does GST 2.0 impact automobiles?

Ans: Small cars, motorcycles (≤350cc), and auto parts moved to 18% GST, while luxury cars face 40%. Electric vehicles continue with a 5% GST rate.

Q5: What is the financial impact of GST 2.0 reforms?

Ans: The Centre estimates a ₹48,000 crore net fiscal implication, while industries welcomed the reforms, promising to pass benefits to consumers and boost demand.

Debate on Exceeding the 50% Reservation Limit in India

Reservation Limit

Reservation Limit Latest News

  • The debate on the 50% reservation cap has been reignited, with petitions and political demands pushing for higher quotas and sub-categorisation of benefits.

Introduction

  • The question of whether reservations in India should exceed the judicially imposed 50% cap has resurfaced with growing political and social demands. 
  • Recent political statements, such as the call for 85% reservation in Bihar, coupled with petitions before the Supreme Court seeking ‘creamy layer’ provisions for SCs and STs, highlight the complexity of balancing affirmative action with constitutional guarantees of equality.

Constitutional Framework on Reservations

  • Articles 15 and 16 of the Constitution guarantee equality before the law and equal opportunity in public employment, while simultaneously empowering the State to make special provisions for socially and educationally backward classes, Scheduled Castes (SCs), and Scheduled Tribes (STs).
  • At the central level, reservations currently stand at:
    • OBCs: 27%
    • SCs: 15%
    • STs: 7.5%
    • EWS: 10%
  • This brings the total reservation to 59.5%, already above the 50% ceiling set by judicial precedents but justified on grounds of EWS being a separate category.

Key Judicial Pronouncements on the Cap

  • The debate on reservation ceilings originates from two concepts of equality: formal equality (treating all citizens alike) and substantive equality (affirmative measures to address historical disadvantages).
  • Balaji v. State of Mysore (1962): Held that reservations should be within "reasonable limits" and capped at 50%.
  • State of Kerala v. N.M. Thomas (1975): Opened the door for substantive equality, observing that reservations are not an exception but an extension of equality.
  • Indra Sawhney v. Union of India (1992): Upheld 27% OBC reservations, reaffirmed the 50% ceiling, and introduced the concept of the ‘creamy layer’ for OBCs.
  • Janhit Abhiyan v. Union of India (2022): Upheld the 10% EWS quota, clarifying that the 50% limit applied to backward classes and not economically weaker sections.
  • State of Punjab v. Davinder Singh (2024): A seven-judge Bench emphasised the need for introducing creamy layer principles for SCs and STs.

Emerging Issues and Demands

  • Calls for Higher Quotas: Political leaders have argued that the reservation percentage should reflect the demographic proportion of backward classes, which many estimate to be far higher than 50%. This has led to demands for caste census to generate reliable data.
  • Unequal Distribution of Benefits: The Rohini Commission found that 97% of OBC reservation benefits were cornered by about 25% of castes, while nearly 1,000 OBC communities saw no representation. Similar concerns exist within SCs and STs, raising the demand for sub-categorisation.
  • Creamy Layer Debate for SCs/STs: While OBCs have a creamy layer exclusion, SCs and STs do not. Critics argue that this results in relatively better-off groups monopolising benefits. Others counter that many SC/ST vacancies remain unfilled, making such exclusions counterproductive.
  • Backlog of Vacancies: Government data indicates 40-50% of reserved seats across SC, ST, and OBC categories remain vacant, largely due to systemic gaps in recruitment and access.

Balancing Equality and Social Justice

  • The central dilemma is balancing the right to equality of opportunity with the need for social justice
  • Expanding reservations beyond the 50% cap could be seen as compromising merit and constitutional equality, yet empirical data highlights the persistent underrepresentation of marginalised communities.
  • Experts suggest reforms such as:
    • Sub-categorisation within OBCs and SC/ST groups to ensure fairer distribution of benefits.
    • A “two-tier” system prioritising the most marginalised.
    • Greater investment in skill development and employment creation, reducing overdependence on public-sector reservations.

Source: TH

Reservation Limit FAQs

Q1: What is the current reservation percentage at the central level?

Ans: The total stands at 59.5%, including OBC (27%), SC (15%), ST (7.5%), and EWS (10%).

Q2: Which case reaffirmed the 50% ceiling on reservations?

Ans: The Indra Sawhney judgment (1992) upheld the 50% cap.

Q3: What did the Rohini Commission reveal about OBC reservations?

Ans: It found that 97% of benefits went to just 25% of OBC sub-castes, leaving many unrepresented.

Q4: Is there a creamy layer exclusion for SCs and STs?

Ans: No, unlike OBCs, SCs and STs do not have a creamy layer exclusion.

Q5: What could the 2027 Census change in this debate?

Ans: It will provide caste-based data, enabling evidence-based reforms and possible sub-categorization.

UGC Draft UG Curriculums: Key Features and States’ Objections Explained

UGC Draft Curriculum

UGC Draft Curriculum Latest News

  • The University Grants Commission (UGC) recently released draft undergraduate curriculums for feedback. 
  • However, Opposition-ruled states such as Karnataka and Kerala have raised objections. 
  • Both states have formed expert panels to review the drafts before submitting their formal responses. 
  • The UGC has invited comments nationwide, but these objections highlight federal concerns over curriculum design and its alignment with state priorities.

Learning Outcomes-based Curriculum Framework (LOCF)

  • The Learning Outcomes-based Curriculum Framework (LOCF) is an educational model designed to enhance higher education by focusing on outcomes — what students should know, understand, and achieve — rather than just content delivery. 
  • It was developed by the University Grants Commission (UGC) and similar bodies to promote quality, skill-based, and holistic learning.

Key Components

  • Graduate Attributes: Broad qualities such as intellectual curiosity, problem-solving skills, ethical conduct, and adaptability expected after completing studies.
  • Programme Outcomes: Defined learning outcomes for the entire degree program.
  • Course Outcomes: Specific, measurable outcomes for individual courses, describing what students can do upon completion.

Goals of LOCF

  • Shift in Focus - Moves away from passive memorisation to active construction and application of knowledge and skills.
  • Student Empowerment - Encourages active learning where teachers act as facilitators rather than mere instructors.
  • Skill Development - Builds critical 21st-century skills like analytical reasoning, critical thinking, and problem-solving for a tech-driven world.
  • Enhanced Employability - Equips students with industry-relevant knowledge and competencies, improving workforce readiness.
  • Holistic Development - Promotes not only academic knowledge but also values, attitudes, ethics, and lifelong learning, ensuring all-round growth.

Key Features of UGC’s Proposed Undergraduate Curriculum

  • The UGC has released draft curriculum frameworks for nine subjects, including anthropology, chemistry, commerce, economics, geography, home science, mathematics, physical education, and political science. 
  • Designed as Learning Outcomes-Based Curriculum Frameworks (LOCFs), they define the concepts and skills students should acquire. 
  • Aligned with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, the drafts envision flexible four-year multidisciplinary undergraduate programmes with multiple exit options
  • They also integrate Indian Knowledge Systems into higher education. 
    • Mathematics electives include Kala Ganana’ (timekeeping traditions) focusing on India’s lunar, solar, and lunisolar calendars.
    • Similarly, Philosophy of Indian Mathematics’, introduces the study of Vedas, Vedangas, Puranas, and Darshanas as branches of learning. 
  • These additions aim to blend traditional knowledge with modern education.

Integration of ‘Bharatiya’ Knowledge in Draft Curriculum

  • The new UGC draft LOCFs place strong emphasis on incorporating Indian Knowledge Systems (IKS) into undergraduate courses. 
  • For instance, the chemistry curriculum includes a unit on traditional Indian dietary practices from Ayurveda under “food chemistry”, recommending texts like Ayurvedic Cooking for Self-Healing
  • Similarly, the draft commerce curriculum introduces a course on Indian management principles, featuring lessons from the Bhagavad Gita, Ramayana, and Vedantic perspectives alongside modern concepts. 
  • Earlier frameworks lacked such components. Officials clarified that while UGC had issued LOCFs for 38 subjects since 2019 under the choice-based credit system, the rollout of NEP 2020 has prompted a fresh framework. 
  • According to NEP, a future Higher Education Commission of India (HECI) will ultimately set outcome-based frameworks, though it is yet to be established.

Opposition from States over Draft Curriculum

  • The draft UGC curriculum has drawn sharp criticism from opposition-ruled states. 
  • Kerala’s Higher Education Minister labelled it “obsolete,” “unscientific,” and influenced by Hindutva ideology.
  • Experts cited references like Ram Rajya in commerce (as part of CSR discussions) and the inclusion of V D Savarkar’s The Indian War of Independence as recommended reading in political science, alongside a separate elective on Savarkar. 
  • Karnataka’s Higher Education Minister alleged that the framework aims to impose central government ideologies and objected to UGC’s interference in state curriculums. 
  • However, UGC clarified that universities retain autonomy to adapt or redesign modules. 
  • In fact, during earlier LOCF rollouts, universities, including the University of Kerala, had revised their courses in line with UGC guidance.

Source: IE | TH | LS

UGC Draft Curriculum FAQs

Q1: What is the UGC draft curriculum?

Ans: It is a Learning Outcomes-based Curriculum Framework (LOCF) focusing on skills, critical thinking, employability, and integrating Indian Knowledge Systems in higher education.

Q2: Which subjects have draft UGC curriculums?

Ans: Drafts have been released for nine subjects, including anthropology, chemistry, commerce, economics, geography, home science, mathematics, physical education, and political science.

Q3: What is new in UGC’s curriculum approach?

Ans: The curriculum blends modern learning with Indian Knowledge Systems, like Ayurveda in chemistry, Ramayana in management, and Kala Ganana in mathematics.

Q4: Why are some states opposing the draft curriculum?

Ans: Kerala and Karnataka allege the framework promotes Hindutva ideology and undermines academic autonomy, citing references to Ram Rajya and V D Savarkar.

Q5: Do universities have to strictly follow the UGC draft?

Ans: No. The UGC clarified that universities retain autonomy to adapt, redesign, or modify modules as per regional and institutional requirements.

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