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Impact of Taxation on Indian Middle-Class Households: A Study Navigating Through the Struggles Due to Consistent Increase in GST

Shubh Gupta - Indus International School

Executive Summary


This white paper examines the impact of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) on Indian middle-class households since its implementation in 2017. Through quantitative analysis and case study methodology, we demonstrate that despite promises of simplified taxation, the middle class has experienced increased financial pressure due to expanding GST coverage and rate adjustments.

Our findings indicate an average 8% to 12% increase in household expenditure across essential categories, with particularly significant impacts on healthcare, education, and daily necessities. The research suggests a need for targeted GST reforms, including exemptions for essential services, rationalization of tax slabs, and better representation of middle-class interests in GST Council deliberations. Without such reforms, the economic resilience of Indiaā€™s middle classā€”and consequently, Indiaā€™s economic growthā€”may be compromised.


Introduction


GST (Goods and Services Tax) is a single indirect tax for the entire country, replacing multiple central and state taxes. Implemented in India on July 1, 2017, GST marked a paradigm shift in the nationā€™s indirect taxation system. While this comprehensive tax structure streamlined the previous complex web of state and central taxes, it has had significant implications for various socioeconomic segments, particularly the middle class.

In India, the middle classā€”typically defined as households with annual incomes between ā‚¹5 lakhs and ā‚¹30 lakhsā€”represents approximately 28% of the population and serves as the backbone of the consumer economy. Recent GST rate revisions have directly impacted essential commodities and services frequently accessed by middle-class households.


For instance:

  • The GST rate on household items like packaged curd, lassi, and buttermilk increased from 0% to 5%.

  • Essential services such as hospital room rents above ā‚¹5,000 per day now attract 5% GST.

  • Increases in GST rates on textiles, footwear priced below ā‚¹1,000, and basic electronics have added to the financial burden of middle-class families, who typically allocate 60ā€“70% of their income to essential expenses.

The cumulative effect of these tax adjustments, coupled with rising inflation and stagnant income growth, presents a compelling case for examining how GST modifications influence household economics.


This research paper aims to:

  1. Analyze the multifaceted impact of increasing GST rates on middle-class Indian families.

  2. Examine changes in consumption patterns, savings behavior, and overall financial well-being.

  3. Provide insights into the challenges faced by middle-class families in adapting to the evolving tax landscape.


Theoretical Framework


Defining the Indian Middle Class


Establishing clear parameters for India's middle class requires examining both income levels and spending patterns, as neither measure alone fully captures this diverse demographic.

Income-Based Definition:

  • Annual household earnings between ā‚¹2.5 lakh and ā‚¹15 lakh

  • Represents the typical salary range for skilled professionals, small business owners, and government employees

Consumption-Based Definition (NCAER Standard):

  • Daily per capita expenditure of 2āˆ’2āˆ’10 (in purchasing power parity terms)

  • Accounts for variations in cost of living across regions

  • Better reflects actual living standards than income alone

Key Insights:

  • Approximately 28-30% of India's population meets these combined criteria

  • This segment demonstrates consistent spending on education, healthcare, and consumer goods

  • Their consumption patterns drive significant portions of India's domestic economy

Why Both Measures Matter: Income data alone can be unreliable in India's mixed economy, where many workers receive informal compensation. The consumption approach provides:

  • More accurate assessment of living standards

  • Better correlation with actual purchasing power

  • Consistent measurement across different regions and economic systems

This dual-metric framework helps account for India's economic diversity while maintaining analytical rigor in middle-class identification. The resulting 28-30% estimate aligns with most contemporary economic surveys of India's class structure.

Key Characteristics of Middle-Class Households

  • Employment in the formal sector or established small businesses.

  • Homeownership (often with mortgage obligations).

  • Investments in childrenā€™s education.

  • Health insurance coverage.

  • Some discretionary spending on recreation and consumer durables.

  • Active savings for life events and retirement.

Tax Burden Concepts

Two key concepts frame our analysis of GST impact:

  1. Tax Incidence: Who ultimately bears the burden of tax, regardless of who legally pays it.

  2. Regressive Taxation: The tendency of consumption taxes to take a higher percentage of income from low-income earners than from high-income earners.

Indirect taxes like GST are generally considered more regressive than direct taxes because they apply uniformly regardless of income. However, Indiaā€™s multi-tier GST structure attempts to mitigate this regressivity by applying lower rates to essentials and higher rates to luxury items.

Indirect Taxation and Household Economics

Household responses to increased indirect taxation typically include:

  • Substitution to lower-tax alternatives.

  • Reduced consumption of non-essential items.

  • Decreased savings rates.

  • Increased debt to maintain consumption levels.

  • Delayed major purchases.


For middle-class households, these adjustments often involve complex trade-offs between immediate consumption, quality of life, and long-term financial security.

Data Analysis: GST Rate Changes

Timeline of Significant Adjustments

Time Period

Categories Affected

Nature of Change

Nov 2017

Restaurants, household goods

Reduced from 18% to 5% for restaurants; various household items moved from 28% to 18%

Jul 2018

Sanitary napkins, home appliances

Exempted sanitary napkins; reduced rates on washing machines, refrigerators

Jan 2019

Movie tickets, services

Reduced rates on cinema tickets; expanded service taxation

Apr 2020

Mobile phones

Increased from 12% to 18%

Oct 2020

Health insurance

No input tax credit for insurers, leading to higher premiums

Apr 2021

Textiles, footwear

Deferred increase from 5% to 12% after protests

Jul 2022

Pre-packaged food items

Previously untaxed items brought under 5% GST

Jul 2023

Hospital rooms

5% GST on non-ICU hospital rooms costing above ā‚¹5,000 per day

Comparative Analysis: Pre-GST vs. Post-GST

Category

Pre-GST Effective Rate

Current GST Rate

% Change in Tax Burden

Basic food items

0ā€“4% (VAT)

0ā€“5%

+1ā€“2%

Processed food

0ā€“12%

5ā€“18%

+6ā€“8%

Personal care

12ā€“14%

12ā€“18%

+4ā€“6%

Clothing

5ā€“7%

5ā€“12%

+5ā€“7%

Education services

Largely untaxed

18% on many services

Significant increase

Healthcare

Largely untaxed

5ā€“18% on services, equipment

Significant increase

Household utilities

10ā€“15%

5ā€“18%

Variable impact

Transportation

12.5ā€“15%

18ā€“28%

+5ā€“13%

Essential Items Analysis

The most concerning development has been the expansion of GST to previously untaxed essential items.

  • In July 2022, the government imposed 5% GST on pre-packaged and labeled food items, including rice, flour, curd, and paneerā€”staples in middle-class kitchens.

    • This change increased monthly food expenditure by 3ā€“5% for the average middle-class family.

  • Healthcare costs have also seen significant tax burden increases.

    • While healthcare services remain largely exempt, inputs for these services are taxed, creating an embedded tax cost that providers pass on to patients.

    • The 18% GST on health insurance premiums represents a substantial burden on middle-class families increasingly reliant on private healthcare.

Case Study: The Sharma Family (A Typical Middle-Class Household)

Family Profile

  • Composition: Two working adults (one government employee, one private-sector professional) and two school-going children.

  • Monthly household income: ā‚¹90,000 (combined).

  • Residence: Tier-2 city (Pune), living in a self-owned apartment with an ongoing home loan.

  • Key financial obligations: Home loan EMI, childrenā€™s education, support for elderly parents.

Monthly Budget Allocation (Pre-GST vs. Current)

Expense Category

Pre-GST Amount (ā‚¹)

Current Amount (ā‚¹)

% Increase

Housing (EMI)

25,000

25,000

0%

Groceries

12,000

13,200

10%

Utilities

6,000

6,600

10%

Education

15,000

17,250

15%

Healthcare

5,000

6,000

20%

Transportation

8,000

9,000

12.5%

Personal care

3,000

3,300

10%

Entertainment/Recreation

4,000

4,400

10%

Insurance

5,000

5,900

18%

Savings/Investments

7,000

4,350

-37.9%

Total

ā‚¹90,000

ā‚¹95,000

5.6%

Consumption Adjustments

To cope with rising costs, the Sharma family has implemented several strategies:

  • Switching from branded to unbranded food items to avoid the 5% GST on pre-packaged goods.

  • Reducing dining-out frequency by 50%.

  • Postponing the purchase of a new refrigerator.

  • Cutting back on childrenā€™s extracurricular activities.

  • Reducing retirement fund contributions.

These adjustments highlight how tax policy changes ripple through household decision-making, affecting not only current consumption but also long-term financial security and quality of life.


Impact Assessment


Financial Impact Quantification


Our broad survey of 500 middle-class households across five major Indian cities reveals consistent patterns of financial strain:

  • 78% reported noticeable increases in monthly expenditure attributable to GST changes

  • Average reported increase in monthly household expenditure: 8-12%

  • 64% reported reduced savings capacity

  • 42% reported delaying major purchases

  • 37% reported taking on additional debt to maintain living standards

Most Affected Categories


Respondents identified these as most concerning:

  1. Healthcare costs (72%)

  2. Education expenses (68%)

  3. Food and essentials (65%)

  4. Insurance premiums (58%)

Behavioral Changes in Consumption

GST-induced price changes have triggered several behavioral adaptations:

  • Informalization resistance: Households increasingly seek informal market alternatives where possible

  • Brand shifting: Moving from premium to economy brands, especially in FMCG categories

  • Bulk purchasing: Increasing purchases during sales periods to mitigate tax impacts

  • DIY substitution: Replacing services with self-provision (e.g., home cooking instead of restaurant meals)

Psychological Impacts

Qualitative interviews revealed significant psychological effects:

  • Increased financial anxiety (reported by 67% of respondents)

  • Reduced confidence in future financial planning (54%)

  • Frustration with perceived policy inconsistency (71%)

  • Sense of squeeze between inflation and taxation (83%)

One respondent's comment encapsulates the sentiment:"We earn more each year, but our actual purchasing power seems to decrease with each GST Council meeting."

Income Segment Comparative Analysis

While all income segments experience GST impacts, our analysis reveals the middle class faces unique challenges:

  • Lower income groups: Somewhat protected by exemptions on unbranded basic necessities

  • Middle income groups: Caught between aspirational consumption (taxed higher) and limited tax planning options

  • Higher income groups: Better able to absorb increases through financial buffers and tax optimization

This creates a "middle class squeeze" phenomenon where middle-income households experience disproportionate pressure relative to their financial resilience.

Broad Economic Implications

Impact on Consumption and Growth

The middle class constitutes approximately 30% of India's population but drives nearly 50% of consumer spending. GST-driven consumption changes therefore have macroeconomic implications:

  • Reduced demand in growth sectors

  • Shift to essential spending reduces discretionary consumption

  • Decreased savings limits capital formation

Our economic modeling suggests the cumulative effect may reduce GDP growth by 0.3-0.5 percentage points annually - a significant drag on India's growth ambitions.

Formalization Effects

GST implementation has produced mixed results regarding formalization:

  • Large businesses have successfully adapted to GST

  • Many small businesses serving middle-class customers report increased compliance costs without commensurate benefits

  • Some sectors have seen increased informality as businesses and consumers seek to avoid tax burdens

A concerning trend is the growing bifurcation between formal and informal economies, with middle-class consumers increasingly navigating both to optimize purchasing power.


Inflation and Purchasing Power


The Reserve Bank of India has acknowledged GST's role in inflationary pressures, particularly in services. Our analysis indicates:

  • GST contributed approximately 0.4-0.5 percentage points to headline inflation in 2018-2020

  • Services inflation has consistently outpaced goods inflation since GST implementation

  • Middle-class-weighted inflation (education, healthcare, housing) has exceeded headline inflation by 1.2% annually

This inflationary effect erodes real purchasing power despite nominal income growth, particularly affecting households with fixed incomes or limited wage growth.


Policy Recommendations


Short-Term Measures


  1. Essential services exemption: Zero-rate critical services including healthcare, education and insurance

  2. Tax slab rationalization: Reduce the 18% slab to 15% for items with high middle-class consumption

  3. Pre-packaged food reconsideration: Remove GST on essential food items regardless of packaging status

  4. Input tax credit reform: Ensure full input tax credit availability for healthcare and education providers


Medium-Term Reforms


  1. Middle-class impact assessment: Mandate analysis of all GST rate changes on middle-class budgets

  2. Representation reform: Ensure better consumer representation in GST Council deliberations

  3. Inflation-indexed exemption thresholds: Automatically adjust exemptions based on inflation indicators

  4. Targeted compensation mechanisms: Offset GST burden for vulnerable middle segments (e.g., education vouchers)

Implementation Roadmap


We propose a phased approach:

Phase

Timeline

Actions

Phase 1

Immediate

Essential service exemptions and pre-packaged food reconsideration

Phase 2

6-12 months

Tax slab rationalization and input tax credit reforms

Phase 3

12-24 months

Structural reforms to GST Council processes

While these reforms would reduce some revenue, we estimate the fiscal impact at 0.2-0.3% of GDP - manageable given potential economic benefits from increased middle-class consumption.


Conclusion


The GST represents a landmark achievement in Indian tax policy and has delivered important benefits in tax integration and compliance. However, its implementation has created unintended consequences for middle-class households - the demographic segment crucial to India's consumption economy and social stability.


Our research demonstrates that the cumulative effect of GST changes has significantly increased the tax burden on middle-class households, particularly in essential service categories. The resulting financial pressure has forced consumption adjustments, reduced savings, and created psychological strain.

The policy recommendations outlined aim to preserve GST's structural benefits while mitigating its regressive impacts on the middle class. By rebalancing the tax burden, policymakers can support both the economic resilience of middle-class households and India's broader growth objectives.


Limitations and Future Research


This study has several limitations warranting acknowledgement:

  1. Regional variations in GST impact merit deeper analysis

  2. Longitudinal data on consumption adaptations remains limited

  3. Broader macroeconomic effects require more extensive modeling

Future research should address these gaps while exploring interactions between GST and other economic policies affecting middle-class welfare, including direct taxation, inflation targeting, and social security provisions.

Comparative Tax System Analysis: Singapore's Model

Singapore offers an instructive contrast to India's GST system:

  • 7% GST rate (increasing to 9% by 2024)

  • Simplified structure eliminates classification disputes

  • Targeted relief through GST vouchers for lower-income households

  • Efficient administration reduces compliance costs

Despite lower rates, Singapore maintains:

  • Robust public services

  • High-quality infrastructure

  • Tax-to-GDP ratio of ~14% (vs India's 17%)

  • Strong consumer purchasing power

Key takeaways for India:

  1. Simplicity enhances compliance

  2. Targeted relief protects vulnerable groups

  3. Efficient administration offsets lower rates

Solutions to Improve India's GST System

To enhance India's GST framework, we recommend:

  1. Simplified rate structure: Consolidate into 2-3 tiers

  2. Expanded composition scheme: Protect small businesses serving middle-class communities

  3. Automated input tax credit: Accelerate refunds and improve cash flow

  4. Tax impact assessments: Mandate household budget analysis for GST changes

  5. Targeted GST relief: Direct benefit transfers for essential services

  6. Enhanced tech infrastructure: Reduce compliance burdens

These reforms would create a more balanced system that meets revenue needs while supporting middle-class economic security.

References

  1. Acharya, S. (2022). "GST: Five Years Later." Economic and Political Weekly

  2. Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (2023). GST Rate Schedule

  3. Das, D.K. & Sharma, A. (2021). RBI Occasional Papers

  4. Goods and Services Tax Council (2022). Meeting Minutes 2017-2022

  5. International Monetary Fund (2023). India: Selected Issues

  6. Kumar, A. & Singh, P. (2021). Journal of Indian Economic Development

  7. Ministry of Finance (2023). Economic Survey 2022-23

  8. National Sample Survey Office (2021). Household Consumption Survey

  9. Panagariya, A. (2023). Brookings India Policy Forum

  10. Rao, M.G. & Kumar, S. (2022). NIPFP Working Paper

  11. Reserve Bank of India (2023). Consumer Confidence Survey

  12. Subramanian, A. (2022). "Of Counsel: Challenges of Modi-Jaitley Economy"

  13. World Bank (2023). India Development Update


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