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India presents budget focused on jobs and growth before national elections

▶ Modi government increases capital expenditur­e by 33% to $122.19bn in boost to infrastruc­ture

- REBECCA BUNDHUN Mumbai

The Indian finance minister yesterday presented the government’s last full budget before next year’s general election, with a focus on growth and job creation.

“The budget takes the lead, once again, to ramp up the virtuous cycle of investment and job creation,” said Nirmala Sitharaman as she announced that capital spending would be increased by 33 per cent to 10 trillion rupees ($122.19 billion) or 3.3 per cent of gross domestic product in the financial year beginning in April, highlighti­ng infrastruc­ture as a priority.

The increase in capital expenditur­e “will go a long way in building roads, ports, and airports, which is crucial for making India a reliable investment destinatio­n”, said Anand Rathi, founder and chairman of Anand Rathi Group, a financial services company in Mumbai.

The budget pegged total expenditur­e to rise by 7.4 per cent to 45 trillion rupees. Its gross market borrowing is projected at 15.43 trillion rupees.

The budget earmarked 350 billion rupees of investment for energy security, while agricultur­e credit was increased, and more money was extended to the country’s affordable housing scheme.

The government also unveiled tax reductions for lower and middle income individual­s.

The budget’s changes to the personal income tax structure are “expected to raise disposable incomes for the middle class … [and] give a moderate boost to domestic consumptio­n”, said Suman Chowdhury, executive director and chief analytical officer at Acuite Ratings & Research. While it takes elections into account as Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeks another term next year, the government is also trying to rein in its fiscal deficit in the budget after it spent billions of dollars during the Covid-19 pandemic on vaccines, food for the poor and discounted loans for small businesses. Ms Sitharaman said she was committed to reduce the fiscal deficit to below 4.5 per cent by the financial year to the end of March 2026.

The deficit ballooned to 9.3 per cent during the financial year to the end of March 2021.

But that is projected to have come down to 6.4 per cent in the current fiscal period, and the government is aiming to cut that to 5.9 per cent in the next financial year. Bonds declined but stock markets in India rallied yesterday, with the benchmark S&P BSE Sensex up 1.65 per cent in trading immediatel­y after the budget. The rupee strengthen­ed, with the US dollar down 0.25 per cent to 81.72 against the rupee.

The budget comes at a time when US-based Hindenburg Research’s claims of financial irregulari­ties by the Adani Group are rattling investors.

It is also being presented against an economic backdrop of high inflation and slowing economic growth, although Ms Sitharaman insisted the economy was on the “right track”.

India, which overtook the UK to become the world’s fifth-largest economy last year, is expected to grow by 6.1 per cent this year, passing other major economies, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said. But the projection is down from 6.8 per cent for 2022. The IMF forecast that the Indian economy would grow by 6.8 per cent again next year, “with resilient domestic demand despite external headwinds”.

India’s economic survey pegged the country’s GDP growth at between 6 per cent and 6.8 per cent in the coming financial year, from a projected 7 per cent in the current fiscal year, because weak global economic conditions could affect the country’s exports.

Inflation in India has been easing as food prices have come down, but it is still very close to the upper threshold that the Reserve Bank of India has set – the target is to keep it between 2 per cent and 6 per cent.

India’s economic survey pegged the country’s GDP growth at between 6% and 6.8% in the coming fiscal year

 ?? Reuters ?? India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman heads to parliament to present the budget
Reuters India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman heads to parliament to present the budget

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