Article Abstract
International Journal of Advance Research in Multidisciplinary, 2026;4(2):01-07
To what extent have 2025 GST rate cuts on agro-processing items like refined sugar (from 12% to 5%) and processed fruits/vegetables (from 12% to 5%) reduced production costs and boosted farmer incomes for Maharashtra's 50 lakh sugarcane and horticulture producers, relative to any state GST revenue shortfalls observed in 2025-26 Economic Survey data?
Author : Dhanvin Premal Shroff
Abstract
This study examines the economic impact of 2025 GST rate reductions on agro-processing in Maharashtra, India, specifically assessing effects on production costs, farmer incomes, and state revenues among small sugarcane and horticulture producers. Amid Maharashtra's projected 7.9% GSDP growth for 2025-26, contrasted by agriculture's 3.4% expansion, the reforms lowered GST on refined sugar, processed fruits/vegetables, and fish products from 12% to 5%, targeting cost savings of 6-7% for 50 lakh smallholders with holdings under 2 hectares (Economic Survey of Maharashtra 2025-26; PIB India "GST Reforms 2025").
Utilizing secondary data from economic surveys, government releases, and sectoral reports, the analysis compares pre- and post-reform indicators, including input-output ratios, GST collections, and income metrics. Results indicate limited benefits for marginal farmers: burdensome compliance requirements (e.g., invoicing, e-way bills) and ineligibility for Input Tax Credit on high-GST inputs like pesticides (18%) and diesel negated output-side relief (ClearTax "Impact of GST"; Cashflo). Additional constraints of 6-15% post-harvest losses, water scarcity, and supply chain disparities further constrained gains, while initial state revenue shortfalls of 2-3% raised fiscal concerns (The Week "GST 2.0's quiet bias").
Findings reveal structural barriers undermining reform efficacy, perpetuating Agri-sector imbalances. Policy recommendations include targeted exemptions, digital compliance tools, and ITC access for smallholders to promote equitable growth.
Keywords
GST reforms, agro-processing, small farmers, Maharashtra economy, production costs, farmer incomes, Input Tax Credit, revenue shortfalls