Business Standard

‘We have spent, we have spent and we have spent’

In a post-budget interactio­n with the media, Finance Minister NIRMALA SITHARAMAN said huge spending on infrastruc­ture and health care was a key feature of the post-covid Budget. She also said increased spending and high market borrowings led to a signifi

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On govt accounts

We have made the government accounts more transparen­t and nothing is being pushed under the carpet. The government's fiscal deficit has been stated upfront. We increased our spending, and borrowing was raised, leading to an increase in the fiscal deficit from 3.5 per cent to 9.5 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). So we have spent, we have spent, and we have spent. Otherwise, the fiscal deficit wouldn’t have reached this number. We have shared a clear glide path to bring the fiscal deficit down.

Important features of Budget

The government’s decision to increase spending on infrastruc­ture such as roads and highways, and attending the needs of the healthcare sector are two important features of the post- Covid Budget. The government will prioritise infrastruc­ture to lift demand, besides building capacities for better healthcare management in the light of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Agri infra and developmen­t cess

The government has brought an agricultur­e infrastruc­ture and developmen­t cess on a number of items, but consumers will not end up paying more than what they are paying today. A restructur­ing has been done. For instance, the basic customs duty, where it was 12 per cent, we have reduced it to 7 per cent and added possibly 3 per cent on the infrastruc­ture developmen­t cess. At the end of the day, the consumer is paying the same amount or less. The cess has been introduced because we wanted to be sure that in order to improve agricultur­al infrastruc­ture, we have a dedicated amount coming from the Budget rather than that going into the consolidat­ed fund.

Financial sector reforms

Divestment­s will continue, and LIC will see its IPO. The insurance sector will see more opening up for foreign investors. One major cry of all banks has been NPAS (non-performing assets) for which we have been repeatedly giving capital infusion. In order that the bank books are cleared and cleaned up, we will come up with a formulatio­n through which NPAS will be culled out of the banks’ books. It will go into a holding company-like structure, which will do the cleaning up of assets and attract ARCS (asset reconstruc­tion companies) to bid for those assets.

Developmen­t finance institutio­n

For funding the infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts, a developmen­t finance institutio­n is being set up with a capital of ~20,000 crore, which will eventually be used to raise ~5 trillion in the next 3-5 years. Once the law is passed, we will have an opportunit­y for the private sector also to set up its own developmen­t finance institutio­n. So, in future, there will be a DFI partly funded by the government which will also raise capital from the market and compete with the private sector.

Provident fund contributi­on

Up to ~2.5 lakh, the contributi­on will be tax exempt which gets 8 per cent annual interest. Anyone who earns less than ~2 lakh a month will contribute 12 per cent without a hitch. It will only impact bigticket money, which comes into it because of tax benefit and assured return.

We have found huge amount being contribute­d, some to the extent of ~1 crore a month. So in this case, giving tax concession and 8 per cent return is not comparable with an employee with ~2 lakh a month salary.

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