Journal of Strategic Human Resource Management

1. Rajat Deb – Assist. Prof., Dept.of Commerce, Tripura Univ. (a Central University), West Tripura, Tripura.

2. Raju Debnath – Assist. Prof., Dept.of Commerce, Tripura Univ. (a Central University), West Tripura, Tripura.

3. Priti Kumari Mahto – Assist. Prof., Dept.of Commerce, Tripura Univ. (a Central University), West Tripura, Tripura.

Received
15-Feb-2020
Accepted
-
Published
15-Feb-2020
Abstract
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The Goods and Services Tax (GST), a big and much awaited bet, likely to alter the Indian economy’s landscape significantly. It has been estimated that the combined GST collection would exceed the individual collections of erstwhile excise and service tax collections which would contribute around 6 percent in GDP. The study has attempted to assess the selective stakeholders’ GST perceptions during the transition period of its rollover. It has framed two hypotheses and a conceptual model for executing the study. By adopting the cross-sectional research design and applying the survey strategy, it has gathered data from 170 sample respondents. Convenience sampling technique has been used for collecting the primary data. Reliability and validity of the tool has also been tested. Significant statistical results have indicated that the taxpayers’ attitudes and costs of compliance have probably effected the GST compliance which, in turn would curb inflations and evading the tax evasions. Limitations, practical implications and future research directions have been highlighted.
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