NEW DELHI:To give or not to give … William Shakespeare may be turning in his grave but it is nothing less than Hamlet's famous dilemmatic narrative explained so well in the classic soliloquy for the determiners of India’s defence outlay this time. Perhaps only a few times in the past the mandarins in the national capital’s North Block housing the finance ministry would have been so challenged while framing the defence budget as this year. As the finance minister presents the 2022-23 Union Budget in Parliament on Tuesday, the Budget may not even reveal a wee bit of the travails the mandarins would have encountered.
With the coronavirus pandemic continuing its global rampage, along with the rest of the world, the Indian economy too has taken a battering. Although the green shoots of an economic recovery seem to be there, with the sole exception of China, most dominant economies are still to recover from the deep red. With the main thrust of the governmental effort having diverted towards the health and social sectors, defence needs would indeed have to be deprioritised. But the question is while most other countries may still be able to do it, India may not be able to afford the luxury.
With China being considered the prime adversary in the backdrop of the ongoing crisis that sprang from a border brawl between soldiers of the two militaries to a full-fledged huge military mobilization and deployment along the difficult border straddling the Himalayas, India may have to look at its immediate defence spending keeping the China factor in mind. To face the China threat will require enhanced outlays for three of the four major heads of defence spending—revenue expenditure (for regular expenses, maintenance and spares), capital expenditure (for new acquisition of weaponry, platforms and systems), and miscellaneous (administrative costs, which will also see a spike because of huge spending on logistics).
Also read: Exclusive: Here is what agriculture sector expects from Budget 2022-23
Only the pensions head would perhaps remain roughly at equal levels. Additionally, India will have to look at the border infrastructure more carefully than ever before because of rapid Chinese constructions and infra build-ups including roads, air bases, and bridges along the border not to speak of the mushrooming of about 628 new and modern ‘Xiaokang’ villages that will be populated by about 62,160 families totaling 2,41,835 people.