Business Standard

Fiscal deficit, core sector boost for govt

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY

The Centre’s fiscal deficit for the April-June 2018 quarter was ~4.29 trillion, or 68.7 per cent of the 2018-19 budgeted estimate of 6.24 trillion, official data released on Tuesday showed. This compares favourably to the fiscal deficit for the same period last year, primarily due to lower administra­tive expenditur­e and non-tax revenue.

The fiscal deficit was at 80.8 per cent of the 2017-18 budgeted estimates in the April-June quarter of the last fiscal.

“The fiscal deficit for Q1 FY2019 recorded a mild yearon-year decline in absolute terms, with a robust 34 per cent expansion in revenue receipts and 27 per cent growth in capital expenditur­e,” said Aditi Nayar, Principal Economist at ICRA.

For 2018-19, the Centre’s

fiscal deficit target is 3.3 per cent of gross domestic product, compared with provisiona­l estimates of 3.53 per cent in 2017-18.

According to the data released by the Controller General of Accounts (CGA), tax revenue for April-June was ~2.37 trillion or 16 per cent of the BE, compared to 14.5 per cent for the same period last year. The total

receipts of the government were ~2.78 trillion during or 15.3 per cent of the BE, compared to 13.1 per cent for the same period last year.

Total expenditur­e during the first three months of the 2018-19 was ~7.07 trillion or 29 per cent of the budgeted estimates. The capital expenditur­e was ~870 billion or 29 per cent of the full-year target. Revenue expenditur­e was ~6.2 trillion, or 29 per cent of the full year-target, compared with 31.7 per cent for the same period last year, primarily on back of lower pending subsidy payments.

“The low growth in revenue spending was due to a contractio­n in outgo towards subsidies. Capital spending recorded a substantia­l growth in the first three months of this fiscal, led by sectors, such as roads and railways,” Nayar said.

Notwithsta­nding the mild improvemen­t in the fiscal deficit relative to the year-ago level, various fiscal concerns persist, including whether the budgeted targets for GST revenues, dividends and profits and disinvestm­ent would be realised, and whether the outlays required for revised MSPs, the National Health Protection Scheme, fuel and other subsidies, and bank recapitali­sation would prove to be adequate,” Nayar said.

“The Q1 fiscal deficit saw a mild year-on-year decline, with 34% growth in revenue receipts and 27% rise in capital expenditur­e” ADITI NAYAR Principal economist, Icra

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