Government Budgeting: Deficits, Fiscal Policy & FRBM
Expert Answer & Key Takeaways
Need for government budgeting, components (revenue & capital accounts), types of deficits, fiscal policy, FRBM Act, outcome budgets, zero-based budgets.
Government Budgeting: Deficits, Fiscal Policy & FRBM
1. Need for Government Budgeting
The government budget is the most important annual financial statement of the state — a comprehensive plan of revenues and expenditures for the coming financial year. The Union Budget is presented under Article 112 of the Constitution (Annual Financial Statement).
Why budgeting is needed:
- Resource Allocation: The state must plan how to allocate scarce public resources across competing uses — defense, infrastructure, social services, subsidies.
- Economic Stabilization: Through counter-cyclical fiscal policy (deficit spending in downturns, surpluses in booms), the government can smooth economic cycles.
- Redistribution: Progressive taxation and targeted expenditure on poor redistribute income from rich to poor.
- Public Goods Provision: Markets under-provide public goods (defense, lighthouses); government must finance them.
- Accountability: The budget is a constitutional mechanism to ensure parliamentary control over the executive's financial actions.
- Long-term Development Planning: Budgetary allocations translate development plan targets into funded programs.
Changes in Budgetary Process since 2017:
- Advance presentation (February 1, from last working day of February) — ensures appropriation before April 1 fiscal year start.
- Merger of Railway Budget with Union Budget (from 2017).
- Abolition of Plan/Non-Plan distinction; replaced by Revenue/Capital distinction.
- Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) — 3-year expenditure projections.
2. Components of the Government Budget
Revenue Account
Revenue Receipts: Receipts that do not create liabilities or reduce assets.
- Tax Revenue: Income Tax, Corporate Tax, GST, Customs, Excise. Largest component (~85% of revenue receipts).
- Non-Tax Revenue: Dividends/profits of PSUs, interest on loans, fees, fines, external grants.
Revenue Expenditure: Expenditure that does not create assets or reduce liabilities.
- Current spending: Salaries/wages, interest payments (largest recurring item — ~20% of expenditure), pensions, subsidies, grants-in-aid, defense revenue, maintenance.
- Revenue Expenditure is "consumption" spending — it does not build productive capacity.
Capital Account
Capital Receipts: Receipts that either create liabilities or reduce assets.
- Borrowings: Market loans (G-Secs), T-Bills, external borrowings. Increase government debt.
- Recoveries: Repayment of loans given to states/PSUs.
- Disinvestment: Sale of government equity in PSUs — reduces assets.
- Small Savings: PPF, NSC collections channeled through the National Small Savings Fund.
Capital Expenditure: Expenditure that creates assets or reduces liabilities.
- Capital Formation: Building roads, railways, dams, ports.
- Lending: Loans to states and PSUs.
- Repayment of Debt: Retiring old borrowings.
- Capital Expenditure creates productive capacity — crucial for long-run growth; India has been increasing its capex share.
3. Measures of Government Deficit
Revenue Deficit (RD): = Revenue Expenditure - Revenue Receipts. Indicates the government is borrowing to fund consumption — a sign of unsustainability. A positive RD means the government cannot fund current spending from current income.
Effective Revenue Deficit (ERD): = Revenue Deficit - Grants for Capital Formation. Introduced in 2012-13. Adjusts RD to exclude grants given to states for capital creation (not pure consumption).
Fiscal Deficit (FD): = Total Expenditure - Total Receipts (excluding borrowings). = Borrowings of the government.
Most important indicator of government's financing need. FD as % of GDP indicates fiscal health. FRBM target: Fiscal Deficit ≤ 3% of GDP. COVID-19 caused FD to spike to ~9.2% of GDP (2020-21).
Primary Deficit (PD): = Fiscal Deficit - Interest Payments.
Measures current fiscal imbalance excluding the burden of past debt. PD = 0 means government can finance all current spending from current receipts except interest on legacy debt. PD < 0 (primary surplus) means government is generating savings to pay off past debt.
Monetized Deficit: When government finances FD by borrowing from RBI (printing money). Stopped since 1994 except in extraordinary circumstances.
4. Fiscal Policy
Fiscal Policy refers to the government's use of tax and expenditure decisions to influence macroeconomic outcomes — growth, employment, price stability.
Instruments of Fiscal Policy:
- Taxation: Progressive/regressive taxation; tax rates and coverage.
- Government Expenditure: Allocation between capital and revenue; social vs. economic services.
- Transfers: Subsidies, social security payments.
Expansionary Fiscal Policy: Increase spending / cut taxes → boost aggregate demand → increase output and employment. Used in recession. Risk: inflation, higher deficit.
Contractionary Fiscal Policy: Cut spending / raise taxes → reduce aggregate demand → control inflation. Used when economy overheats.
Automatic Stabilizers: Tax revenues fall and welfare spending rises automatically in recessions without active policy decisions — built-in stabilizers that dampen economic cycles.
Crowding Out Effect: If government borrows heavily in the market, interest rates rise, reducing private investment — "crowding out." This is why large fiscal deficits are harmful to private investment.
Ricardian Equivalence: Robert Barro's theory — deficit-financed spending is offset by increased private saving (as rational people anticipate future tax increases). If true, fiscal stimulus has no net effect. However, empirically this is rejected in many contexts.
5. Deficit Reduction and FRBM Act
Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act, 2003: Aimed at ensuring fiscal discipline by mandating:
- Elimination of Revenue Deficit by 2008 (goal repeatedly missed).
- Reduction of Fiscal Deficit to 3% of GDP (N.K. Singh Committee recommended adopting this as a permanent anchor).
- Annual publishing of Medium Term Fiscal Policy Statement, Fiscal Policy Strategy Statement, Macroeconomic Framework Statement.
N.K. Singh Committee (2017): Recommended replacing annual deficit targets with a fiscal space rule — Debt/GDP target of 60% (Centre 40%, States 20%) as the primary anchor. Fiscal Deficit of 2.5% of GDP, Revenue Deficit to be eliminated; Escape clauses for crises.
Escape Clauses (0.5%): Allow temporary deviation from fiscal targets during: National calamity, national security threat, structural reform with fiscal impact.
6. Other Types of Budgets
Outcome Budget: Evaluates government spending against measurable outcomes (not just inputs). Introduced in India in 2005-06, now mandatory. Links rupee spent to outcomes achieved.
Zero-Based Budgeting (ZBB): Every expenditure line is justified from scratch each year — no automatic rollover of past year's allocations. Forces prioritization. Introduced in India in some years/departments.
Gender Budget: Segregates expenditure by how it affects women vs. men — promotes accountability for gender equity. India presents a Gender Budget Statement since 2005-06.
Green Budget: Tags expenditure by environmental impact — aligns fiscal policy with sustainability goals.
Performance Budget: Allocations tied to measurable performance metrics — precursor to Outcome Budget.
MGNREGS Demand-Driven Budget: Budget allocation based on demand for work — not predetermined fixed amounts.
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