Business Standard

Financial year cycle likely to be changed from 2018

Budget could be in November

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

Come 2018 and the fiscal year could commence from January instead of April, as the Centre appears set to make the transition to end the 150-year-old tradition. Accordingl­y, the next Budget could be presented in November this year, government sources told

Come 2018 and the financial year in India could commence from January instead of April as the Centre appears set to make the historic transition to end the 150-year-old tradition.

Accordingl­y, the next Budget could be presented by the Centre in November this year, high-level government sources told PTI here on Monday.

The sources said the government is working on aligning the financial year with the calendar year after Prime Minister Narendra Modi pitched for a change.

This would be another historic change after the advancemen­t of the Budget presentati­on to February 1 this year, ending the decades-old practice of presenting the annual exercise in the last week of February.

According to the proposal under discussion, the Budget session of Parliament would have to be held well before December so that the budgetary exercise can be concluded by the year-end.

Since it takes nearly two months for the conclusion of the budgetary exercise, the possible dates for holding the Budget session could be the first week of November, the sources said.

The financial year from April 1 to March 31, currently in vogue nationally, was adopted in 1867 principall­y to align the Indian financial year with that of the British government.

Till then, the financial year in India used to commence on May 1 and end on April 30 of the following calendar year.

After Modi expressed his desire to align the financial year with the calendar year, the government had last year appointed a high-level committee to study the feasibilit­y of shifting the financial year to January 1. The panel submitted its report to the Finance Minister in December.

Among the various factors, a NITI Aayog note had said a change in the financial year was required as the current system leads to sub-optimal utilisatio­n of the working season.

It had also noted that the current financial year cycle was chosen without any reference to national culture and traditions or convenienc­e of legislator­s.

Also, the financial year is not aligned with internatio­nal practices and it impacted data collection and disseminat­ion from the perspectiv­e of national accounts, according to the note prepared by NITI Aayog member Bibek Debroy and Officer on Special Duty Kishore Desai, citing experts.

A few months back, the Parliament­ary Standing Committee on Finance also recommende­d shifting the financial year to JanuaryDec­ember.

Modi, while advocating a change in the financial year, had said there was a need to develop robust arrangemen­ts that could function amidst diversity.

"Because of poor time management, many good initiative­s and schemes had failed to deliver the anticipate­d results," the prime minister had said.

Madhya Pradesh became the first state to announce shifting of its financial year format to January-December from 2018.

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