September 20, 2025

Syllabus: General Studies Paper 3

Context

With the economy still hurting from the pandemic, the Budget on February 1 is likely to address concerns around growth, inflation and spending. The Budget, which will be tabled in Parliament by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, is the Government’s blueprint on expenditure, taxes it plans to levy, and other transactions which affect the economy and the lives of citizens.

Major Components of the Budget:

  • There are three major components— expenditurereceipts and deficit indicators. Depending on the manner in which they are defined, there can be many classifications and indicators of expenditure, receipts and deficits.

The Expenditure component:

  • Based on their impact on assets and liabilities,total expenditure can be divided into capital and revenue expenditure.
    • Capital expenditureis incurred with the purpose of increasing assets of a durable nature or of reducing recurring liabilities. For example,  expenditure incurred for constructing new schools or new hospitals, which is a creation of assets.
    • Revenue expenditureinvolves any expenditure that does not add to assets or reduce liabilities. Expenditure on the payment of wages and salaries, subsidies or interest payments would be typically classified as revenue expenditure.
  • Depending on the manner in which it affects different sectors,expenditure is also classified into:
    • General services
    • Economic services:It includes expenditure on transport, communication, rural development, agricultural and allied sectors.
    • Social services:It includes education or health is categorised as social services.
    • Grants-in-aid and contribution.
    • The sum of expenditure on economic and social services together form the development expenditure.
      • Again, depending on its effect on asset creation or liability reduction, development expenditure can be further classified as revenue and capital expenditure.

 

The Receipts of the Government have three components — revenue receiptsnon-debt capital receipts and debt-creating capital receipts.

  • Revenue receiptsinvolve receipts that are not associated with increase in liabilities and comprise revenue from taxes and non-tax sources.
    • Non-debt receiptsare part of capital receipts that do not generate additional liabilities. Recovery of loans and proceeds from disinvestments would be regarded as non-debt receipts since generating revenue from these sources does not directly increase liabilities, or future payment commitments.
    • Debt-creating capital receipts are ones that involve higher liabilities and future payment commitments of the Government.
  • Deficit side:
    • Fiscal Deficit is the difference between total expenditure and the sum of revenue receiptsand non-debt receipts. It indicates how much the Government is spending in net terms.
    • Since positive fiscal deficitsindicate the amount of expenditure over and above revenue and non-debt receipts, it needs to be financed by a debt-creating capital receipt.
    • Primary deficitis the difference between fiscal deficit and interest payments.
    • Revenue deficitis derived by deducting capital expenditure from fiscal deficits.

Implications of the Budget on the economy:

  • Generating Aggregate demand of an economy:  All Government expenditure generates aggregate demand in the economy since it involves purchase of private goods and services by the Government sector.
    • All tax and non-tax revenue reduces net income of the private sector and thereby leads to reduction in private and aggregate demand.
    • But except for exceptional circumstances, the GDP, revenue receipt and expenditure typically show a tendency to rise over time.
    • Thus, the trend in absolute value of expenditure and receipts in themselves has little use for meaningful analysis of the Budget. The trend in expenditures and revenue is analysed either by the GDP or as growth rates after accounting for the inflation rate.
  • Reduction in expenditure GDP ratio or increase in revenue receipt-GDP ratio indicates the Government’s policy to reduce aggregate demand and vice-versa. For similar reasons, reduction in fiscal deficit-GDP ratio and primary deficit-GDP ratios indicate Government policy of reducing demand and vice versa.
  • Implications for income distribution. For example –
    • Revenue expenditure such as employment guarantee schemes or food subsidies can directly boost the income of the poor.
    • Concession in corporate tax may directly and positively affect corporate incomes.
    • Though both a rise in expenditure for employment guarantee schemes or reduction in the corporate tax would widen the fiscal deficit, its implications for income distribution would be different.

Fiscal rules and how do they affect policy:

  • Fiscal rules provide specific policy targets on the basis of which fiscal policy is formed. Policy targets can be met by using different policy instruments.
  • There exists no unique fiscal rule that is applied to all countries. Rather, policy targets are sensitive to the nature of economic theory and depend on the specificity of an economy.
  • Recommendations of the N.K. Singh Committee Report. Allowing for some deviations under exceptional times, it has three policy targets — maintaining a specific level of debt-GDP ratio (stock target), fiscal deficit-GDP ratio (flow target) and revenue deficit-GDP ratio (composition target).
  • In India, it is primarily the expenditure which is adjusted to meet the fiscal rules at given tax-ratios.
  • Such an adjustment mechanism has at least two related, but analytically distinct, implications for fiscal policy.
  • Independent of the extent of expenditure needed to stimulate the economy or boost labour income, existing fiscal rules provide a cap on expenditure by imposing the three policy targets.
    • Under any situation when the debt-ratio or deficit ratio is greater than the targeted level, expenditure is adjusted in order to meet the policy targets.
    • By implication, independent of the state of the economy and the need for expansionary fiscal policy, existing policy targets may lead the Government to reduce expenditure. In the midst of the inadequacies of fiscal policy to address the contemporary challenges of unemployment and low output growth rate, the nature and objective of fiscal rules in India would have to be re-examined.

The Hindu Link

https://www.thehindu.com/business/Economy/understanding-the-formulation-of-the-budget/article38338054.ece#:~:text=The%20trend%20in%20expenditures%20and,accounting%20for%20the%20inflation%20rate.&text=Since%20different%20components%20of%20expenditure,has%20implications%20for%20income%20distribution.

Question- Discuss the basic components of budget and its implications on the economy.

 

 

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

© 2025 Civilstap Himachal Design & Development