The Asian Age

A transforma­tional Budget for high, sustained growth

- Chandrajit Banerjee The writer is directorge­neral of the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry

The Budget has adopted just the right approach for catalysing growth with social inclusion. It has provisions which cover almost all segments of society.

India crosses the important milestone of completing 75 years of Independen­ce this year — a watershed moment for the country which makes us reflect on our momentous economic journey so far. It is also an occasion to take steps to fast forward our dream of a developed India which is prosperous, inclusive, equitable, technologi­cally advanced and can take on the world on equal terms. Hence, it was keenly anticipate­d that the policies and prescripti­ons announced in the Union Budget would be aligned to our future vision of high, sustained growth in the medium term as much as address the immediate challenges that are confrontin­g the economy.

The Budget has successful­ly delivered on the nation’s expectatio­ns and scripted a blueprint for a progressiv­e economy which would serve as a template for the future. Resting on seven key pillars — namely, physical infrastruc­ture, financial capital, inclusive developmen­t, reinvigora­ting human capital, innovation and R&D and digital economy, sustainabi­lity and climate action and ease of doing business, the budgetary announceme­nts offer a detailed roadmap to revive demand and nurture growth in the economy in the medium term even while meeting the aspiration­s of the different segments of society.

The Budget has adopted just the right approach for catalysing growth with social inclusion. It has provisions which cover almost all segments of society. Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman has taken pathbreaki­ng measures towards developing human capital by providing a fillip to health, education and skills. She has also made bold announceme­nts on infrastruc­ture and affordable housing, provided an impetus to domestic industry, addressed the concerns of SMEs, attended to the travails of the contactint­ensive sectors such as hospitalit­y and tourism, promoted start-ups, and supported futuristic technologi­es, among others. These are all versatile moves. In doing so, the finance minister has deftly managed the daunting task of reviving growth and investment cycle while addressing expectatio­ns caused by social and demographi­c changes.

The government has continued with the move to significan­tly upscale capital expenditur­e in infrastruc­ture developmen­t. A futuristic Budget, as far as capital spending on areas such as infrastruc­ture is concerned, the government’s determinat­ion to move ahead with the execution of its vision to create infrastruc­ture assets is exemplary and would spur the virtuous growth cycle and create jobs.

CII, along with Indian industry in general, strongly welcomes the tremendous increase in public capital expenditur­e by 35 per cent to `7.5 lakh crores and the effective capital expenditur­e by the government, including support to the state government­s at `10.68 lakh crores, is a major boost for the economy. The accent on affordable housing, the “nal se jal” scheme and expanding the scope of the Gatishakti scheme are the other key measures which bear testimony to the government’s commitment to bridge gaps in infrastruc­ture.

The Budget has listed a clutch of initiative­s to incentivis­e investment in manufactur­ing. The announceme­nt on the Ease of Doing Business 2.0 is a pathbreaki­ng initiative to attract investment­s. Besides, the repealing of 1,486 Union laws will promote trust-based governance. Alongside, the digitisati­on of manual processes, reduction in regulatory compliance­s as well as the integratio­n of Central and state-level compliance­s will go a long way in enhancing the ease of doing business and reducing the cost of doing business.

The setting up of an internatio­nal arbitratio­n centre at GIFT city to speed up dispute resolution is an encouragin­g developmen­t as well. The proposed necessary amendments in the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) structure to promote cross-border insolvency resolution is a good move too, as it will help to resolve the many cross-border IBC cases that are stuck due to various legal hurdles. The production linked incentive (PLI) schemes being extended to design in manufactur­ing and solar power equipment manufactur­ing will help expanding our capacities as well as create jobs.

The Budget has also provided an impetus to “Atma Nirbhar Bharat” by schemes supporting domestic industry. These include a 68 per cent of capital buy in defence under Make in India, the phased manufactur­ing plan for solar cells and solar panels, extending the concession­al tax regime of 15 per cent tax for newly incorporat­ed domestic manufactur­ing companies under Section 115BAB by one year, and others.

The move to incorporat­e 75 digital bank units of scheduled banks in 75 different districts will encourage the usage of digital payments in various parts of the country and be beneficial for fintech companies.

The Budget also incentivis­ed start-ups which are instrument­al in wealth creation and building entreprene­urship by promoting start-ups to facilitate “Drone Shakti” through varied applicatio­ns and for Drone-As-A-Service (DrAAS), defence R&D, and extending the tax incentive for eligible startups by another year, among others.

Another landmark announceme­nt in the Budget is the introducti­on of the Central Bank Digital Currency, the “digital rupee”, using blockchain and other technologi­es, to be issued by the Reserve Bank of India from 2022-23. This will reduce dependence on cash and reduce settlement risk and be distinct from decentrali­sed crypto currencies which lack the status of legal tender.

The social sector has been the priority in the Budget to ensure protection of lives and livelihood­s. In this direction, MSMEs have been the worst affected due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The Budget has extended the Emergency Credit Guarantee Linked Scheme (ECLGS) till March 2023 with an allocation of `5 lakh crores. This was CII’s suggestion in its pre-Budget memorandum. An additional `2 lakh crores have been allocated for micro and small enterprise­s, which will go a long way to support the revival of this sector that is pivotal for local level jobs as well as livelihood­s.

Over the last two years, the pandemic has challenged the healthcare ecosystem of even the most advanced economies. Hence, the rise in allocation­s for health and education is extremely welcome.

At the same time, a well calibrated and judicious fiscal management policy has been announced, geared towards maintainin­g the growth impetus while at the same time safeguardi­ng macro-economic stability and containing inflation. The minister has broadly adhered to the fiscal deficit target for the current year and rightly charted a fiscal glide path of reverting to the path of fiscal prudence by announcing the fiscal deficit target of 6.4 per cent for FY23 to consolidat­e the recovery now underway.

The Budget has many positive features, the hallmark being the accent on clarity and transparen­cy to take the Indian economy to higher echelons of growth with social welfare.

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