– He stated that the reported 14% GST growth in July 2025 is inflated due to a “low base effect” stemming from reduced GST collections during July 2024.
– The net GST revenue increased from ₹2,755 crore in July 2023 to ₹2,930 crore in July 2025,showing only a two-year growth of 6.3%, averaging an annual increase of just 3.13%.- Gross GST revenue saw a rise of merely 2.88% over the same period.
Buggana Rajendranath Reddy’s critique centers around manipulated interpretations of economic data within Andhra Pradesh’s political discourse. His assertion highlights how statistical measures like the low base effect can distort perceptions when used selectively-raising concerns about transparency in public communication and fiscal accountability.
Key takeaways from this scenario include recognizing the importance of year-on-year comparative analysis that accounts for underlying factors such as policy shifts or external economic challenges. While the direct implications may vary depending on future actions by both parties, such debates underscore deeper issues regarding effective governance strategies needed to sustain long-term growth without compromising public trust or delivering inflated narratives.
Both sides might benefit from pursuing robust structural reforms targeted at enhancing regional progress rather than engaging primarily with statistical rebuttals or claims without meaningful progress reflected across key economic metrics.
Read more: The Hindu