City
Epaper

GST reforms to put more money in hands of people in rural areas: NABARD Chairman

By IANS | Updated: September 4, 2025 19:10 IST

New Delhi, Sep 4 The government's move to revamp the goods and services tax (GST) structure with two ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 4 The government's move to revamp the goods and services tax (GST) structure with two major slabs of 5 per cent and 18 per cent will put more money in the hands of rural people amid increasing prosperity in the far-flung regions, NABARD Chairman Shaji KV said on Thursday.

"People are ready to move forward and India's growth trajectory you are aware. Over and above that, there is a good monsoon and 8 per cent more cropped area is there. So, the setting was correct, and then the GST cut is putting more money in the hands of the rural people," the NABARD Chairman told IANS.

He said that rural prosperity is already coming in and the recent NABARD rural sentiment survey proved that there is more formalisation and cost reduction in terms of accessing credit because more people are borrowing from the formal sources. The inflation sentiment is also benign.

The chairman noted that with the new GST reforms, cost of most farm equipment will come down as they will fall under the 5 per cent slab, and many of them will remain tax-free as well.

"So, that means more money in the hands of the people. Since the mechanisation cost is coming down, they will now invest more in capacity addition, which would augur well for future production as well," Shaji stated.

According to him, the government move would not only boost the current but future production as well.

He pointed out that the rural income demand is increasing, which means it will give rise to more production, thus strengthening the manufacturing sector.

"It means Atmanirbhar Bharat is actually playing out well in rural areas and the government has taken right steps to give it a boost with the current GST rate cuts," he mentioned.

The farm machinery, like tractors, will become cheaper, and their operational cost will also come down.

"We are now focusing on building capacities because the productivity has to catch up to the levels of international productivity,” he noted.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUkraine calls Miami meetings "productive, constructive", discusses development of 20-point plan with US

InternationalIndian H-1B visa holders who flew back to renew work permits left stranded

InternationalEpstein files: US Department of Justice reposts President Trump's photo

InternationalPakistan: Man allegedly opens fire inside house; kills wife, two women, one minor

InternationalRussia launched 1300 drones, 1200 guided aerial bombs at Ukraine over past week: Zelenskyy

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyS. Korean trade minister voices concern over new Canadian steel import policy

TechnologyEVs driving India's growth in clean mobility & jobs: Minister

TechnologySimpler laws, trust-based governance key to India’s growth: FM Sitharaman

TechnologyNHPC to start commercial operations of Subansiri Project’s 2nd unit on Dec 23

TechnologyIndian startup funding jumps 2.6X to $364 million this week