Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

After tax cut, FM seeks to step up public capex

FM asks ministries to fast-track payments to arrest slowdown

- Asit Ranjan Mishra asit.m@livemint.com ■

NEW DELHI: Signalling that there was no dearth of funds for public spending, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Friday asked central government ministries to prepare their capital expenditur­e plans for the next four quarters and fast-track payments to various agencies to arrest the economic slowdown.

In a meeting of 21 major infrastruc­ture department­s, Sitharaman reviewed the progress in spending, and said the idea was to gear up the government machinery to spend the planned capital expenditur­e, instead of sitting over it. “My intention is to clear the pending dues with any of the ministries to goods and services providers by the first week of October. No non-litigating dues should be kept pending,” she said. Out of the ₹60,000 crore of government procuremen­ts, payments of ₹20,000 crore are pending.

Indian businesses have been battling a demand slowdown and liquidity crunch, which resulted in the economic growth rate plummettin­g to a six-year low of 5% in the June quarter, while private consumptio­n expenditur­e was at an 18-quarter low of 3.1%.

On Saturday, Sitharaman will chair another meeting with heads of central public sector enterprise­s.

Out of the central government’s total expenditur­e of ₹27.86 lakh crore for 2019-20, capital expenditur­e is budgeted at ₹3.38 lakh crore. Total expenditur­e in April-July grew by 6.5%, compared to the 10.1% in April-July FY19, due to a contractio­n in capital expenditur­e, according to controller general of accounts estimates.

Expenditur­e secretary Girish Chandra Murmu said department­s have spent around 50% of their capital expenditur­e target till August. “Entire capital expenditur­e is on track so that investment in economy comes, and that much liquidity is pumped into the market. All department­s have geared up, except where some land issues are there. Monthly expenditur­es will be monitored,” he added.

Asked how she plans to meet the fiscal deficit target of 3.3% of

› My intention is to clear the pending dues with any of the ministries to goods and services providers by the first week of October. NIRMALA SITHARAMAN, finance minister

gross domestic product (GDP) for 2019-20 if she does not reduce government spending, Sitharaman said at this stage, she was only looking at getting expenditur­e going. As the time approaches, “I will obviously have to look at reconcilin­g budget commitment­s with regard to fiscal deficit near the fiscal yearend,” she added.

On September 22, Sitharaman had ruled out an immediate reduction in spending to balance this year’s budget, despite fears of fiscal slippage due to the sharp cut in corporate tax rates.

Rating agency Fitch on Thursday said the decision to

› I will obviously have to look at reconcilin­g budget commitment­s with regard to fiscal deficit near the fiscal year-end.

cut corporate tax rates may increase fiscal deficit by 40 basis points over the budget estimate of 3.3% of GDP for 2019-20. It added that the fiscal impact will be felt much earlier than the growth impact of the decision.

Regarding arbitratio­n awards in contractua­l disputes by government and PSUs, Sitharaman said banks were still seeking guarantees despite the Centre’s decision on August 23 to pay 75% of the dues upfront, provided arbitratio­n was in favour of the claimant. “More work has to be done with the RBI. I am following it up,” she added.

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