Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Budget to focus on rural sectors and infra

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Union budget for 2018-19 will focus on infrastruc­ture, rural spending and small and medium enterprise­s for higher growth and job creation, finance minister Arun Jaitley said on Thursday.

Jaitley will present the Union budget on February 1, which will be the last full budget of the NDA government ahead of the general elections in 2019.

Speaking at the 15th HT Leadership Summit, Jaitley said there have been tectonic changes in the economy in the past one year and the government will now focus on infrastruc­ture and rural sector in the budget.

“Now is the time really to concentrat­e. And the two areas to be concentrat­ed on are infrastruc­ture and rural India. I do expect that whatever the additional resources we have, a lot is going to be spent in these areas,” he said.

Besides small and medium industries, essentiall­y the manufactur­ing sector, Jaitley said the government will also focus on the informal sector for higher job creation.

Jaitley will start holding pre-budget consultati­ons with different stakeholde­rs starting December 5.

His first meeting will be with representa­tives of agricultur­e groups followed by one with representa­tives of trade unions, the finance ministry said in a statement.

This will also be the first budget after the Goods and Services Tax (GST) was implemente­d from July 1. The Centre now cannot on its own change the indirect tax structure, except for customs duties, as this would need approval of the GST Council. This may substantia­lly shift the focus of the next budget to quality of government expenditur­e.

Jaitley had earlier said he will stick to the glide path for fiscal deficit announced in the last budget, ruling out a breach of the self-imposed fiscal discipline target to boost economic growth.

The government aims to contain the fiscal deficit at 3.2% of GDP in 2017-18 and 3% of GDP in 2018-19. However, given the expected revenue shortfall and additional burden due to public sector bank re capital is at ion, the government is expected to revise its fiscal consolidat­ion road map.

The ministry recently asked the 15th Finance Commission to recommend a fiscal consolidat­ion roadmap for both the Centre and states, indicating that it may defer implementa­tion of the N KS ingh committee report by two years.

On the panel’ s recommenda­tions on creating a fiscal council,Ja it leysaidt his needs tobe further debated as to whether more power should be vested in non-elected institutio­ns.

Asked whether India can achieve doubledigi­t growth, Jaitley said it is challengin­g as it will not depend merely on domestic factors. “It will also depend on how the world is moving. We managed a 7%-8% growth rate at a time the world was moving slowly. We effectivel­y used that period to bring a series of structural changes in the economy,” Jaitley said, hours before release of the third quarter GDP numbers that showed a growth of 6.3% after slowing down to a three-year low at 5.7% in the June quarter.

“Structural reforms have their own shortterm impacts and then you pickup again. Certainly it will help us in the short to medium term to help expedite growth itself. But I am realistic that to reach a double-digit growth you need to have a kind of boom period that you had between 2003 and 2008,” he added.

 ?? BURHAAN KINU/HT PHOTO ?? Union finance minister Arun Jaitley will start holding prebudget consultati­ons with different stakeholde­rs from December 5.
BURHAAN KINU/HT PHOTO Union finance minister Arun Jaitley will start holding prebudget consultati­ons with different stakeholde­rs from December 5.

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