In the year
when 5 states go for election, the government announces a very uncommon budget in
India. Unlike the usual practice, the country has moved from pleasing the “common
man” to creating and implementing a vision for prolonged growth of the economy
for the next 25 years.
Consider
the relationship of a mother and a child. For how many years can a mother spoon-feed
her child? For how many years can she keep the child dependent on her? Wouldn’t
it be better if she educates the child on how to eat, cook, and finally earn
money to sustain himself/herself? Similarly, giving freebies, concessions,
subsidies, etc. is like spoon-feeding the economy and its population. They
solve important issues but are short term solutions. Whereas putting money in capital expenditure, making
structural reforms, promoting ease of doing business, etc. is equivalent to making
the economy self-sustaining. The very fact that the government is bold enough
to prefer giving a pro-growth budget and not a populist one even in an election
year speaks volumes about their commitment to boosting growth in the economy.
Now, let’s
go to the theory and understand how this budget is pro-growth.
Basics of economics states the GDP equation as
GDP=C+G+I+(X-M)
Where C
is consumption, G is government spending, I is private investment, X is Exports
& M is imports
When any of
the above factors increase, GDP increases. The budget has focused primarily on increasing
government spending (G) in order to propel private investment (I) while completely
disregarding direct focus on the increase in consumption (C) in the form of
subsidies or tax relief. The government has shifted focus to increasing exports
(X) and reducing imports (M) by the ‘indirect taxation and duties’ route i.e. increased
subsidies on production in India and increased duties on products imported.
In numbers:
There has been no increase or decrease in the taxation for individuals or corporates.
However, the government has proposed a 35% increase in capital expenditures
going to up to Rs. 7.5 trillion in FY23. This when combined with the capital
expenditure of the states can go up to Rs 10.7 trillion in FY23.
Why is government capital expenditure even important?
As per theories
in economics, when the government spends on capital expenditure then it triggers an increase in private spending which in turn creates jobs and increases consumption. Therefore,
the idea is that when the government spends Rs.1 on Capex then the increase in GDP will
be more than Rs. 1. This is called the fiscal multiplier or the multiplier effect. As
per the article “Fiscal Multipliers in India” by Sukanya Bose published in The
Journal of Applied Economic Research, the Capital expenditure multiplier in India
could be as high as 2.45. This means that for every rupee spent by the
government on Capex, India’s GDP could rise by Rs. 2.45 (given everything else
is constant). This concept of a multiplier effect makes Capex expenditure by the government a critical factor for the sustainable GDP growth of a country.
Key points to cheer in the budget
- India to announce the introduction of our own virtual digital currency (digital rupee) using blockchain technology. This currency will be introduced and regulated by the RBI.
- India to now recognize all other cryptocurrencies as a separate asset class (and not as a currency) and shall tax the transfer of such assets at 30%. Given that money from the equity market is taxed lower, the differential would mean some capital that went into crypto trading would now flow back to the equity markets.
- National Highways to increase by 25000 km by next year
- Starting of 5 new river linking projects across the country
- Formulation of new battery swapping policy. (No longer need to wait for the battery of your electric vehicle to charge. Simply give your uncharged battery, take a charged battery and leave, saving hours of wait period)
- Auction of 5G spectrum
- Focus on cleaner & greener energies such as EV, solar under the PLI scheme.
- 400 new Vande Bharat trains
- Rs 2.37 trillion for direct payments under MSP for farmers
- 68% of defence procurement to be done from domestic companies under Atmanirbhar Bharat
- Digitization of educational courses for schools and universities
- LTCG surcharge to be capped at 15%
- No tax increase for individuals or corporates despite ongoing and prolonged pandemic.
The
sectors that would directly benefit from the budget are those focused on clean
energy, infrastructure, cement, steel long products, EV infrastructure, MSME, drones,
defence equipment & Edu-tech.
The budget
has surely provided us with tax stability and fiscal stability along with major
reforms to ensure sustainable growth. It steers a path towards India becoming a
global manufacturing hub of sunrise sectors while helping the more traditional sectors to prosper. However, given that there is no
direct and immediate benefit to end consumers, it would be interesting to watch
whether the upcoming elections in states like UP can ensure political stability
in India. The biggest question now is will the people truly see the intent of the
government for the long term rather than feeling disappointed about not having
a rupee more in their pockets right now?
Good analysis of budget and providing details in very simple understandable language for non finance guys .
ReplyDeleteThank you😀
DeleteShruti, very good take on the Budget. I was mentioning to Arvind in the evening that Govt has taken a very big risk in avoiding the populist route. It has to be seen if the proposals are achieved as mostly targets are missed like the disinvestment target. No budgetary allocation for insurance sector
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteUnlike last year, most of the estimates this year be it tax revenue or gdp growth rate or divestment targets are all taken very conservatively. I believe they can achieve the targets next year. And yes, no allocation for insurance