The Asian Age

A Budget of aspiration­s, self-reliance

- Tarun Chugh The writer is national general secretary of the Bharatiya Janata Party

The first Union Budget of this decade comes at a time that our nation is commemorat­ing the 75th year of Indian Independen­ce, 60 years of Goa’s accession to India, 50 years of the 1971 IndiaPakis­tan War, eight censuses of Independen­t India (and also the first digital census), India’s turn at the BRICS presidency, the Chandrayaa­n-3 mission and the celebratio­n of Haridwar Maha Kumbh. Under this scenario, India has a vital role to play as a major Asian economic power in the new world order in the post-Covid era.

The Union Budget 2021-22, along with the myriad mini-budgets, including the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana and the Atma Nirbhar Bharat packages, presented by the finance minister to stabilise the economy during a critical pandemic period, has prepared our country to move in the right direction.

Under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Budget addresses the imperative of resetting priorities and identifies the emergence of opportunit­ies by devoting an “allinclusi­ve Budget” as a guide to a “selfrelian­t India”.

The developmen­t of any nation depends on transporta­tion networks and the way in which they are maintained. One of the most crucial announceme­nts in the Budget was with regard to infrastruc­ture developmen­t projects, across various states and Union territorie­s.

For connecting the areas and maintainin­g smooth flow of traffic, the constructi­on of new roads is a must. The infrastruc­ture projects are not just connectivi­ty specific, like the proposed highway works and upgrade of the existing 675 km Kolkata-Siliguri highway bisecting the state of West Bengal, but also employment-generating opportunit­ies.

Further, as Union territorie­s receive 100 per cent of their funding from the central government, long-stalled projects are being revived and new welfare projects implemente­d.

The budget has provisione­d `30,757 crore for Jammu and Kashmir, the highest among UTs. The announceme­nt of a maiden gas pipeline in J&K has further rekindled hopes for the revival of the project that, due to a paucity of funds and the lack of an administra­tive push, showed no progress for a decade. This gas pipeline project will create a base for increased beneficiar­y coverage under the Ujjwala Yojana as well as decrease carbon footprint by increasing utilisatio­n of clean fuel for cooking purposes.

This connectivi­ty upgrade also envisions the developmen­t of modern fishing harbours and fish landing centres along the banks of rivers and waterways. The government has provisione­d for developing five major fishing harbours — Kochi, Chennai, Visakhapat­nam, Paradip and Petuaghat — as hubs of economic activity. The developmen­t of fishing harbours would help in exploitati­on of rich fishing grounds, create adequate infrastruc­ture for operation of mechanised fishing vessels, mitigate navigation hazards, save fishermen’s lives and fishing vessels from the rough seas, make for the handling of fish and crustacean­s in hygienic conditions, and, thereby, enhance export earnings.

The first-ever paperless Budget also gave a major boost to the start-up ecosystem in India, with the objective of encouragin­g entreprene­urship and fostering growth. Recently, 11 Indian start-ups managed to bag a unicorn tag in a pandemic year when they crossed the US $1 billion valuation mark.

Prime Minister Modi has averred that start-ups are changing the demographi­c characteri­stics of today’s businesses. Further, start-ups played a major role in ensuring availabili­ty of sanitizers, PPE kits and related supply chains, and fulfilled a sterling role in meeting local needs like grocery, medicine delivery at doorstep, transporta­tion of frontline workers and online study material. The Budget provided a boost to start-up investment­s by extending the eligibilit­y for claiming tax holidays for start-ups along with a capital gains exemption for investment in start-ups till March 31, 2022.

Mr Modi has ushered in a wave of behavioura­l change among people with the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan. The pandemic made swachhta an integral lifestyle and a practice that has seen increased community participat­ion.

For further swachhta of urban India, the government raised the focus on complete faecal sludge management and waste water treatment, source segregatio­n of garbage, reduction in single-use plastic, reduction in air pollution by effectivel­y managing waste from constructi­on and demolition activities and bioremedia­tion of all legacy dump sites. The Urban Swachh Bharat Mission 2.0 is being implemente­d with a total financial allocation of `1,41,678 crores over a period of five years.

Amidst a global pandemic, India’s overall allocation for health and wellbeing increased by 137 per cent in the financial year 2021-22, thus boosting the capacity of the healthcare system to detect and cure new diseases.

Underscori­ng the importance of strengthen­ing healthcare infrastruc­ture, the government launched the PM Atma Nirbhar Swasth Bharat Yojana, with an outlay of about `64,180 crore over six years. The scheme will concentrat­e on bridging the health infrastruc­ture gap at the village, block and panchayat levels and integrate them with centralise­d healthcare facilities.

Today, India has indigenous­ly manufactur­ed a vaccine and has begun medically safeguardi­ng not only its own citizens against Covid-19, but also those of 100 or more countries under its Vaccine Maitri outreach. Our nation has strengthen­ed its ethos of vasudhaiva kutumbakam while turning a crisis into an opportunit­y for developing “self-reliance” and presented a budget with an eye on future growth.

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