fiscal deficit: Centre’s fiscal deficit up to August rises to almost 36% of FY24 target

2023-09-29 11:29:40

The Central government’s fiscal deficit in the first five months of this fiscal year hit 36% of the annual target, up from 32.6% a year before, as the pace of spending slowed a tad in August from the previous month but it still remained higher than the previous year, showed the official data released on Friday.

In absolute terms, the fiscal deficit touched Rs 6.43 lakh crore between April and August, compared with Rs 5.42 lakh crore a year earlier. Until July, the Centre’s fiscal deficit had touched 33.9% of the annual target, sharply higher than 20.5% a year earlier.

Capital spending jumped 48% between April and August from a year earlier to Rs 3.74 lakh crore, higher than the budgeted annual rise of regarding 36%, as the government kept pushing such productive expenditure to spur economic growth.

Revenue expenditure rose 14.1% year on year until August this fiscal year to Rs 12.98 lakh crore, way above the targeted annual increase of 1.5%. Overall expenditure increased 20.3% to Rs 16.72 lakh crore, higher than the annual budgeted rise of 7.5%.

Senior finance ministry officials have already asserted that the FY24 fiscal deficit target of 5.9% of gross domestic product (or Rs 17.87 lakh crore) will be strictly adhered to even though the spending under a few schemes might vary from the budgetary outlays.

Meanwhile, net tax revenues for the Centre rose 14.8% until August this fiscal to Rs 8.04 lakh crore, reversing a drop until July. The net tax revenue improved in August, thanks to lower devolution to states following the front-loading of such transfers earlier this fiscal year.

Non-tax revenues surged 79% to almost Rs 2.1 lakh crore, driven by handsome dividends by the Reserve Bank of India.

Total receipts dropped to Rs 10.3 lakh crore between April and August, down 21.3% from a year before and compared with the targeted annual increase of 10.6%.

ICRA chief economist Aditi Nayar said: “A year-on-year dip in the amount of tax devolution to the states in August 2023 helped to narrow the wedge in the fiscal deficit in April-August FY24 relative to the year-ago levels, and also contained the monthly increment in the fiscal deficit to a low Rs 372 billion.”

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