Business Standard

Govt mulls primary deficit targets for new FRBM road map

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY

The finance ministry, which is discussing the recommenda­tions of the Fiscal Responsibi­lity and Budget Management (FRBM) committee, could possibly include the suggestion­s of Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramania­n on primary deficit in the government’s deficit targets for six years till 2022-23.

The FRBM panel has recommende­d a fiscal deficit target of 2.5 per cent of gross domestic product, revenue deficit of 0.8 per cent and a combined Centre-state debt ceiling of 60 per cent for fiscal year 2022-23, the end point of its six-year medium-term fiscal road map. Other recommenda­tions include setting up of a fiscal council and giving the government tightly defined escape clauses to deviate from the road map.

Panel member Arvind Subramania­n has authored a lengthy dissent note to the committee’s recommenda­tions, in which he suggests that the focus of policymake­rs should be on reducing primary deficit rather than fiscal deficit. The other members of the panel drafted a rejoinder to Subramania­n’s dissent note.

The other members of the panel are former member of Parliament and revenue and expenditur­e secretary N K Singh, former finance secretary Sumit Bose, RBI governor Urjit Patel, and Rathin Roy, director of National Institute of Public Finance and Policy.

“I would propose a simpler architectu­re, comprising just one objective: Placing debt firmly on a declining trajectory. To achieve this, the operationa­l rule would aim at a steady but gradual improvemen­t in the general government primary balance (non-debt receipts minus non-interest expenditur­es), until the deficit is entirely eliminated,” Subramania­n wrote in his dissent note.

His advice was not officially a part of the FRBM recommenda­tions. Even then, the senior policymake­rs in the government are discussing whether to include his advice on primary deficit in the FRBM framework, which will gain legal backing through a new Bill expected in the winter session of Parliament. If passed, the proposed debt management and fiscal responsibi­lity Bill will replace the existing FRBM Act.

“Subramania­n’s recommenda­tions seem more doable,” a top finance ministry official said.

“Though the discussion­s are at an initial stage, we are deliberati­ng not only on the FRBM panel’s recommenda­tions but also Subramania­n’s proposal. The latter could provide the government greater flexibilit­y to spend during economic downturns, along with the panel’s proposal of a fiscal council,” said another official, who is aware of the deliberati­ons.

As reported earlier, the government is already said to be in favour of setting up a fiscal council, a semi-independen­t body to be tasked with monitoring the Centre’s fiscal announceme­nts for any given year, providing its own forecasts and analysis for the same as well as advice the Centre on deviating from the fiscal path under certain circumstan­ces.

The FRBM panel has recommende­d a fiscal deficit target of 2.5 per cent of gross domestic product, revenue deficit of 0.8 per cent and a combined Centre-state debt ceiling of 60 per cent for fiscal year 2022-23

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