Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Some states suggest raising fiscal deficit target to 4%

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NEW DELHI: With tax revenue slowing in a sputtering economy, some states on Wednesday suggested Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman to go for fiscal expansion and relax the deficit target to 4% of the gross domestic product (GDP).

The finance minister in her July Union budget reduced the fiscal deficit target for FY20 to 3.3% from 3.4% earlier.

Keeping in mind its fiscal deficit target, the government has stayed with the borrowing plan for the fiscal as announced in the budget despite a sharp cut in corporate tax rate that is expected to cost ₹1.45 lakh crore.

During the pre-Budget consultati­on with the Union finance minister, some states made a case for fiscal expansion by boosting consumptio­n to tide over the sluggishne­ss in the economy.

“The biggest take home from pre-Budget discussion of FMs (finance ministers) is suggestion by Bihar and Kerala to raise the fiscal deficit limit to 4%. It was agreed to large number of states. In (the) current year, real expenditur­e of states will decline—a crazy macro outcome in time of recession,” Kerala finance minister Thomas Isaac said in a tweet after prebudget meeting here.

Some experts have already predicted that the fiscal deficit is expected to rise to 3.6-3.8% of the GDP during the current fiscal due to weak revenue collection­s resulting from sluggish economic growth and government’s sweeping corporate tax rate cut.

The country’s fiscal deficit hit 102.4% of FY20 budget estimate at ₹7.2 lakh crore at the end of October. The fiscal deficit or the gap between expenditur­e and revenue was at ₹7,20,445 crore as on October 31, 2019.

Many economists, including former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Raghuram Rajan, have expressed fear of India getting into a slow growth high inflation or stagflatio­n mode.

Rising food prices pushed retail inflation in November to over three-year high of 5.54%, while industrial sector output shrank for the third month in a row by 3.8% in October, indicating deepening slowdown in the economy.

India’s economic growth slowed to a six-year low of 4.5% in the July-September quarter. With inflation rising, fears of stagflatio­n—a fall in aggregate demand accompanie­d by rising inflation—have resurfaced.

The pre-Budget meeting was attended by chief ministers of Goa, Haryana and Puducherry, deputy chief ministers of Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar, Delhi, Tamil Nadu and Tripura, as well as 17 finance ministers/ministers representi­ng their states and senior officers from union government and states, a finance ministry statement said.

Sitharaman elucidated union

EXPERTS HAVE ALREADY PREDICTED THAT THE FISCAL DEFICIT IS EXPECTED TO RISE TO 3.6-3.8% OF THE GDP DURING THE CURRENT FISCAL DUE TO WEAK REVENUE COLLECTION­S

government’s philosophy of “cooperativ­e federalism” and steps taken by it to bolster growth of the economy.

The state government­s welcomed the opportunit­y to present their views and expressed their suggestion­s on growth, investment, resource requiremen­t and fiscal policy, it said. They also suggested measures to strengthen cooperatio­n between states and Centre to attain $5 trillion economy, the statement added.

Sitharaman welcomed the suggestion­s made by the state/ union territorie­s in the meeting. She assured that the memorandum­s submitted by them will be examined and suitably considered.

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Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman at the GST Council meeting in New Delhi on Wednesday.
PTI ■ Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman at the GST Council meeting in New Delhi on Wednesday.

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