Business Standard

STATSGURU: The enormity of Centre’s fiscal challenge

- ABHISHEK WAGHMARE

THE GRIM news of

24 per cent contractio­n in India’s quarterly gross domestic product (GDP) is old now. But its impact on the finances of the central government is going to linger. To cushion the debilitati­ng blow, the Centre, till July, has done its part to keep expenditur­e at the desired levels despite a precipitou­s fall in revenues.

Chart 1 shows that revenue spending (minus interest outgo) has grown by 17 per cent in the first four months of the financial year, against the budgeted growth of 11 per cent. Capex, however, has remained at last year’s level, and needs to grow at 25 per cent in the remainder of FY21 now.

Rural employment, income support to farmers, compensati­on to states were the priority spending areas in the first quarter of FY21, shows chart 2. Note that this compensati­on is the delayed payment for FY20 — due to shortfall in goods and services tax collection by states. At the same time, in areas such as capital purchases for defence, education and roads, spending has been lower than last year.

Till this point, things look good. The revenue position, however, is so stressed that Centre’s share in gross tax revenues (GTR) would need to grow at 20 per cent in the remaining eight months of FY21, if it wants to maintain the fiscal balance, chart 3 reveals. Against the expected growth of 9 per cent, its tax revenues have fallen 34 per cent in April-july FY21.

For the states, a comparativ­ely modest fall appears to be a relief. However, the required growth rate is similar, at 16 per cent. Further, states will lose in terms of devolution — which is a share of GTR — once the revised estimate of GTR falls below the current budgeted level.

Knowing that its budgeted target is unattainab­le, the Centre has already expanded its borrowing programme for the year, and borrowed a massive ~3.3 trillion in just two months: July and August, as chart 4 shows. Consequent­ly, yields on long term government bonds firmed up once again.

The National Institute of Public Finance and Policy has come up with studied projection­s on the Centre’s fiscal balance in FY21. If the annual expenditur­e is kept unchanged from the budgeted ~30 trillion, the worstcase scenario can push the Centre’s fiscal deficit to 8.1 per cent of GDP, it shows (chart 5). A hopeful scenario keeps it between five and six per cent; but for that to happen, the remainder of FY21 needs to counter the contractio­n in revenues in April-july to some extent, which is a big challenge.

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 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA
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