Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Indian govt considerin­g additional spending of `2 tn to fight inflation

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NEW DELHI: The Indian government is considerin­g spending an additional Rs 2 trillion ($26 billion) in the fiscal year 2022-23 to cushion consumers from rising prices and fight multi-year high inflation, two government officials told Reuters.

The new measures will be double the 1 trillion rupees hit government revenues could take from tax cuts on petrol and diesel the finance minister announced on Saturday, both the officials said.

India’s retail inflation rose to an eight-year high in April, while wholesale inflation rose to at least a 17-year high, posing a major headache for the government.

“We are fully focussed on bringing down inflation. The impact of Ukraine crisis was worse than anyone’s imaginatio­n,” one official, who did not want to be named, said.

The government estimates another Rs 500 billion additional funds will be needed to subsidise fertiliser­s, from the current estimate of Rs 2.15 trillion, the two officials said.

The government could also deliver another round of tax cuts on petrol and diesel if crude oil continues to rise that could mean an added hit of 1 trillion-1.5 trillion rupees in the 2022/23 fiscal year started on April 1, the second official said.

Both the officials did not want to be named as they are not authorised to disclose the details.

The government did not immediatel­y comment outside office hours.

One of the officials said the government may need to borrow additional sums from the market to fund these measures and that could mean a slippage from the its deficit target of 6.4 per cent of GDP for 2022-23.

The official did not quantify the amount of borrowing or fiscal slippage saying it depended on how much funds they eventually divert from the budget in the financial year.

The Indian government plans to borrow a record Rs 14.31 trillion in the current fiscal year, according to budget announceme­nts made in February. The other official said the additional borrowing will not impact the planned April-September borrowing of Rs 8.45 trillion and may be undertaken in JanuaryMar­ch 2023.

India’s retail inflation rose to an eight-year high in April, while wholesale inflation rose to at least a 17-year high, posing a major headache for govt

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