Hindustan Times (Noida)

BUDGET 2021-22

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crore in three years, the finance minister announced.

The continued emphasis on government spending, and some pragmatic assumption­s on revenue – the budgeted tax revenue in 2021-22 is ₹15.45 lakh crore, compared to the 2020-21 revised estimate of ₹13.44 lakh crore and a budgeted estimate of ₹16.35 lakh crore for the same year – mean that the fiscal deficit remains high next year, 6.8%, compared to 9.5% (revised estimate, 2020-21) and an ambitious budget estimate of 3.5% in 2020-21. Recognisin­g the importance of government spending over the next few years, the government has given itself the room to spend, announcing that it will amend the Fiscal Responsibi­lity and Budgetary Management Act, and that it will reduce the fiscal deficit to 4.5%, only by 2025-26.

That same pragmatism is also evident in the budget’s targeted receipts from disinvestm­ent – ₹1.75 lakh crore as compared to a budgeted ₹2.1 lakh crore in 2019-20 (the revised estimate is ₹32,000 crore). Sitharaman also announced the monetisati­on of land belonging to government department­s as well as stateowned companies, and an initial share sale of the Life Insurance Corp, but has not factored any receipts from them. It is also likely that the proposal to privatise the state-owned banks will face some opposition from other parties, although it has been welcomed by the finance sector.

“The financial sector saw the announceme­nt of several landmark announceme­nts, including setting up a Bad Bank in the form of Asset Reconstruc­tion & Management Company, increasing the FDI limit in the insurance sector to 74% and the proposal to disinvest two Public Sector Banks, IPO of LIC and one General Insurance Company in FY22. All these are bold moves indeed, and are expected to buttress the growth recovery process apart from making our financial sector future ready,” said Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII) president Uday Kotak.

Congress leader and former finance minister P Chidambara­m said: “The government intends to privatise two PSBS. The intent of the government is clear: let the PSBS bleed slowly so that they can all be privatized in the short term. Let us see the reaction of the public to this unconceale­d desire to selloff all public sector banks.”

Finance minister Sitharaman said that she would try to “reason it out” and pointed out that the government believes state-owned banks have “an important role to play in the country” and that India needs more banks such as the stateowned State Bank of India (the country’s largest lender), but that the banks also “need to have the strength to scale up.”

The budget also announced a sharp increase in health spending, from ₹94.452 crore (budget estimate for 2020-21) to ₹2.23 lakh crore. The increase includes ₹35,000 crore for Covid-19 vaccines (and more will be made available on demand, the finance minister said during her speech, and reiterated in the interview), and finance commission grants for water and sanitation, and health.

“The pandemic has rightly brought back attention to the much-needed topic of improving health care infrastruc­ture for the populace. In this regard, we are heartened to note a large 137% increase in health and wellbeing spending for FY22,” Kotak said.

But apart from taxing interest on employee provident fund contributi­ons in excess of ₹2.5 lakh – which will affect a miniscule fraction of people – and carving out a share of import levies for an agri infra developmen­t cess (which means there is no increased cost for the importers or end users), the budget avoided any changes in tax. Sitharaman said that she was “clear from the beginning” that India would not do that. “… We had not even thought along those lines. And today, we are showing that this has not been on the board ever.”

That may have been the best message to send to stock markets that had fallen in the run-up to the budget, nervous at the prospect of a Covid-era tax. The result, as some analysts put it, was a relief rally that saw the benchmark Sensex index rise 5%, the highest Budget-day gain in 24 years. The higher government spending also saw the benchmark 10-year bond yield rise 0.13 percentage points to close at 6.08%.

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