HomeNewsOpinionDefence budget signals pursuit of gradual reforms

Defence budget signals pursuit of gradual reforms

The primary structural problem of salaries and pension squeezing fiscal space for capital acquisition remains. However, the pattern of allocation on armaments sends a clear signal that the domestic industrial complex is prioritised and will be encouraged

February 02, 2025 / 18:30 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
defence budget
Revenue expenditure is significantly higher in the 2025-26 defence budget and constitutes to 71.75 percent of the total.

In her eighth consecutive budget and the first full one in the Modi government’s third term, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced an increase in defence allocation, increasing it to Rs 6.8 lakh crore from Rs 6.21 lakh crores from the previous budget presented in July last year -  a jump of 9.5 percent.

However, if assessed as per the revised estimates the overall budgetary increase comes to around 6.3 percent. As has been the case with recent defence budgets, the current one also modestly increased the capital expenditure by 4.6 percent to Rs 1.8 lakh crore from the previous budget’s Rs 1.7 lakh crore, constituting 26.42 percent of the total defence budget.

Story continues below Advertisement

Problems with arms acquisition process

There seems to be a challenge with the capital outlay of the defence budget as the Ministry of Defence (MoD) returned Rs12,500 crore allocated as part of the capital outlay under the interim budget of July 2024 to the Ministry of Finance. Yet the non-expenditure of this money can be misleading, which the government will also need to address by accelerating acquisitions, that by all accounts the armed services need but cannot spend all the money under the capital head within the stipulated fiscal year due to procurement delays in the MoD.