Seven Indian Institutes including central universities, IITs (Indian Institute of Technology Delhi), and state-run and private universities are now under investigation by the Directorate General of Goods and Services Tax Intelligence (GST) and have received Tax related Show-Cause letters on GST for research fundings. The demand includes provisions for interest and penalties.
The demands are as follows :
- DGGI notice to Punjab University is for 4 crores.
- IIT Delhi for 120.3 crore
- Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology for 7.3 crore,
- Centre for Sponsored Research and Consultancy (Anna University) for 5.4 crore
- Shanmugha Arts, Science, Technology & Research Academy for 10 crore
- Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham for 63 crore
- Kalasalingam Academy of Research and Education for 10 crore.
The show-cause notice that has been issued to IIT Delhi, seeks reason why IIT-D should not be liable to pay Rs. 120 crore in GST for research funding that was given from 2017 to 2022. It has granted the institution 30 days to respond.
These GST show-cause notices to the institutes once again brings the debate about whether research work at academic institutes should be exempted from tax in the forefront.
A senior Ministry of Education official reportedly said that the notice of the GST is a “misinterpretation.” He said that research funded by the government should not attract GST, and such taxation would stand in the way of academic progress. Promotion of research should be the key goal set nationally, something not taxed.
While the National Education Policy (NEP) aims to nurture a culture of research among learners and higher education institutions and promote a scientific culture of research in universities and colleges, towards creating a conducive ecosystem, this tax burden could be seen as a major bottleneck. Lack of substantial research work and insignificant research papers is also one of the key reasons for Indian Institutes not to be ranked in global rankings.
The imposition of taxes on research grants has siphoned vital resources off these critical projects, impacting research results and student experiences.
It would be a severe blow to Indian higher education is how a private university chancellor termed it. It was also pointed out that most of the funding had already been earmarked for consumables and assets bearing the Goods and Services Tax. This adds to the growing fear that treating educational institutes, primarily as centres of tax revenue, would escalate its cost and, by doing so, raise the innovation and development cost in academics.
With so many financial hurdles already affecting higher education institutions, the additional burden of GST liabilities could limit their ability to bring in exceptional talent and quality investments. As IIT-D readies its response to the GST notice, the outcome stands to establish a major precedent for the treatment of educational funding under GST law. Academic circles have been engaged in pressing for clearer tax regulations and policy reforms that promote research and educational excellence without causing undue financial strain. The ongoing discussion in academia now further emphasizes the balanced approach to which one needs to nurture educational advancement with due attention to the fiscal responsibilities at hand.