The Sunday Guardian

‘BOLD’ CAPEX A TRIGGER FOR PRIVATE FLOWS

- NIVEDITA MUKHERJEE NEW DELHI

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s capital expenditur­e plans with an outlay pumped up by 11.1 per cent for FY25, to Rs 11.1 lakh crore, is an exercise of command, control, and clairvoyan­ce over public finance. The targeted expenditur­e aligns with the Government’s steadfast commitment to economic growth and an ambitious roadmap for unpreceden­ted growth till 2030 as it looks to return to power. “The Interim Budget for FY25 has kept up focus on capital expenditur­e given its high multiplier effect, and the government has substantia­lly bolstered such spending in recent years to first nurse a

Covid-ravaged economy back to health and thereafter to sustain the high growth rate,” said Sitharaman on Thursday.

Arguably, the Government’s focus and statement on capital expenditur­e has been the subject of intense anticipati­on, scrutiny, interest and optimism across the decade of governance with FY14 to FY24 witnessing over fivefolds (RE) increase in India’s budgeted capital expenditur­e, without any heating-up of the economy. The sentiment resonates among economists and analysts. Aurodeep Nandi, India Economist, Nomura describes the commitment to

a significan­t FY25 capex spend of 3.4 per cent of GDP and a capex target of Rs 11.1 lakh crore with 11.1 per cent increase, as “very bold and forward looking step”. Demonstrat­ing the Government’s commitment to infrastruc­ture developmen­t

and aligned to the assistance for production and manufactur­e of electric mobility, Nandi says, “The capex outlay as positioned to continue its innings as one of the key drivers of growth.”

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 ?? ?? EMPHASIS ON CAPITAL EXPENDITUR­E DURING 2015-2024
EMPHASIS ON CAPITAL EXPENDITUR­E DURING 2015-2024

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