The Sun (Malaysia)

India plans expansive budget despite growth, revenue worries

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NEW DELHI: India’s finance minister is likely to borrow more than originally planned when he presents the budget on Feb 1, senior aides and officials said, despite counting on revenues from a national sales tax whose launch date is still unknown.

Arun Jaitley is looking at how to fund giveaways to taxpayers and higher public investment to help nurse Asia’s third-largest economy back to health after the government’s shock decision in November to abolish highvalue banknotes.

That is raising concern among some economists and investors that the government will take too many fiscal risks.

Yet officials say that, given the choice, they would choose growth sustained by state investment over a fiscal straitjack­et.

“Some degree of flexibilit­y on fiscal discipline should not be seen as irresponsi­ble fiscal management,” one senior government official told Reuters, requesting anonymity due to the sensitivit­y of the matter.

A fiscal advisory panel, which includes central bank head Urjit Patel, has advocated widening the budget deficit to “slightly over” 3% of gross domestic product to free up funds for road, railway and irrigation projects.

“It is not possible to keep up the pace of capital expenditur­e without increasing the fiscal deficit beyond 3% of GDP,” another official, briefed on the committee’s findings, added.

New Delhi earlier aimed to cut the federal deficit to 3% of GDP over the next two fiscal years, compared with 3.5% in the year now drawing to a close.

Independen­t economists are also pencilling in a higher federal deficit in the coming fiscal year, at 3.3-3.4% of GDP, creating room for the government to invest an extra US$6 billion (RM26.6 billion).

That has drawn a warning from ratings agency Standard & Poor’s, which says that slowing the pace of fiscal consolidat­ion could delay India’s chances of an upgrade due to its high and rising debt levels.

Jaitley’s team forecasts a recovery in nominal GDP growth, the key driver of tax revenues, to around 12% in 2017/18.

And the economy is still getting over the shock of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision in November to scrap 86% of cash in circulatio­n in a bid to purge the economy of illicit “black money”. – Reuters

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