Business Today

Cash Upfront

Ministries are front-ending allocation­s to counter the slowdown.

- BY JOE C. MATHEW @joecmathew

Ministries are front-ending allocation­s to counter the slowdown

The Narendra Modi government may have had some role in the current slowdown, but it cannot be blamed for not trying to correct the situation. All central ministries and department­s, with primary responsibi­lity for social and infrastruc­ture spending, are on overdrive to front-end expenditur­e to make up for the slowdown in consumptio­n and private investment.

By August 31, apex food grain procuremen­t agency Food Corporatio­n of India received 85 per cent of the budgetary allocation of `1.07 lakh crore for food subsidy from the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distributi­on. In fact, the Department of Food and Public distributi­on under the ministry had utilised 70 per cent of its budgetary allocation of `1.5 lakh crore in the first four months of the current financial year ( April- July 2017). The ministry plays a key role in balancing consumer interest and farmers’ interest by stabilisin­g the prices of cereals and pulses while ensuring support prices for procuremen­t.

According to data compiled by the Controller General of Accounts ( CGA), the Ministries of Urban Developmen­t, Rural Developmen­t, Petroleum and Natural Gas, and Road Transport and Highways are all among the department­s that have spent a higher share of the budgetary allocation­s in the first four months of the current financial year.

For instance, 55 per cent of the total budgetary allocation of `29,157 crore for the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas was spent by July 2017 as against 22 per cent spent during the same period in the last fiscal. The Department of Rural Developmen­t spent `48,836 crore, nearly half of its `1.05 lakh crore annual allocation, in the first four months. The Ministry of Urban Developmen­t also utilised 45 per cent of budgetary resources by July end.

The Ministry of Road Transport, which saw its annual budgetary allocation go up from ` 52,447 crore in 2016/17 to `64,900 crore this year, spent `28,613 crore during the April-July period.

According to CGA data, the central government spent `8.08 lakh crore from its budgeted expenditur­e plans by July end. It amounts to 38 per cent of the total annual allocation, higher than 33 per cent spent by this time last year. The capital expenditur­e component of the total spend was `95,126 crore, about 31 per cent of the total capital expenditur­e planned for 2017/18.

The extra spend was possible because the government advanced the date of the Union Budget to allow disburseme­nt of funds to various department­s and ministries at the beginning of the current fiscal. Since the change of the Budget date had no impact on revenue collection, total receipt of `3.03 lakh crore continues to be 19 per cent (18.2 per cent around the same time last year) of the expected revenue receipt of `16 lakh crore for 2017/18. The additional quantum of expenditur­e resulted in a fiscal deficit of `5.05 lakh crore, 92 per cent of its annual fiscal deficit target of `5.47 lakh crore in the first four months. While these percentage­s will change as revenue collection improves in the coming months, the fact remains that the government may have to pump in additional money to sustain the growth push it is trying to provide to the Indian economy. ~

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