New Delhi:Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s interim budget for the next year stood out for two crucial numbers, the government’s decision to increase the effective capital expenditure to a record Rs 15 lakh crore and yet at the same time follow the path of fiscal consolidation by reducing the amount of loans taken by it in a year.
In other words, the government will spend more money on creating capital assets such as constructing more roads and highways, laying more railway lines and building more airports and seaports that are necessary for maintaining the momentum for faster economic growth, but at the same time, it is not increasing its borrowings as it is following the path of fiscal prudence by reducing the number of loans it takes in a year to meet its expenditures.
This budget also shows that the government is moving in the direction of aligning the effective capital expenditure with the overall borrowings of the Central government. For example, the difference between the fiscal deficit for the next financial year, which has been estimated at over Rs 16.85 lakh crore and the effective capital expenditure has narrowed down to less than Rs 2 lakh crore. The fiscal deficit reflects the overall borrowing requirement of the Central government in a year. It means that the effective capital expenditure in the next year will be around 90 per cent of the total borrowing of the Centre.
Capex exceeds Rs 11 lakh crore
In the budget, the Finance Minister has allocated a record Rs 11.11 lakh crore for capital expenditure while the grants-in-aid for the creation of capital accounts have been estimated at over Rs 3.85 lakh crore, taking the effective capital expenditure to a record Rs 15 lakh crore.