Business Standard

Central govt counts on divestment to deliver

Stake sale proceeds could exceed BE by as much as ~20k crore

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY

As it tries to meet a tight fiscal deficit target for 2017-18, the government hopes that the proceeds from disinvestm­ent would not only be met but exceeded, by as much as ~20,000 crore.

This will compensate for someofthee­xpectedsho­rtfallin other revenue heads, officials have told Business Standard.

The divestment target for FY18 is ~72,500 crore, the highest fixed so far for any year. After successful launch of the government’s Bharat-22 exchange traded fund last month, the proceeds so far are ~52,500 crore, already ahead of 2016-17’s Revised Estimate of ~45,500 crore.

The finance ministry’s department of investment and public asset management has options (Dipam) which, it is hoped, will take stake sale proceeds even beyond ~90,000 crore. “We are sure the target will be met. Given the pipeline of stake sales Dipam is working on, it could be exceeded comfortabl­y,” said an official involved in the Budget-making process.

“Even a ~20,000-30,000 crore shortfall from other revenue items, including goods and service tax (GST), could be made up by divestment. Anything more than that and the fiscal situation really gets strained,” said a second official.

The basis of this optimism is a mega deal in the stateowned enterprise space, of energy behemoth ONGC acquiring Hindustan Petroleum. Officials are confident the deal, which could get the exchequer at least ~30,000 crore, will happen this year.

There are also a number of planned initial public offers (IPOs) of equity, offer-for-sales (OFS) and buybacks. Dipam is working with the defence and rail ministries on a number of IPOs — Ircon, RITES, Hindustan Aeronautic­s, Garden Reach Shipbuilde­rs, Bharat Dynamics, and Mazagon Dockyards, among others.

It is also working on some OFS proposals. Sources say it could offload 10 per cent stake in NHPC, Power Finance Corporatio­n, and Steel Authority of India; 15 per cent in NLC; five per cent in Rural Electrific­ation Corporatio­n; three per cent in Indian Oil. It had sold seven per cent in NTPC this August. Officials say four or five of the IPOs and OFS mentioned could garner ~10,000-15,000 crore for the exchequer.

The fiscal deficit target for 2017-18 is ~5.46 lakh crore or 3.2 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). As of endOctober the deficit was already 96.1 per cent of the full-year target. For April-September, the year’s first six months, the deficit was 6.3 per cent of GDP. The finance ministry has reined back spending over recent months and will continue to do so, after massive frontloadi­ng in the first half of the year.

On the revenue side, there are concerns. There could be a tax collection shortfall of ~20,000 crore due to revision in GST rates, said Sushil Modi, chairman of the group of empowered finance ministers on the subject, at the latest GST Council meeting. Central officials say that is his view and any shortfall could also be offset by greater compliance and increase in economic demand.

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