HomeNewsOpinionQuick Take | Govt faces tough choice ahead of polls - fiscal deficit or growth

Quick Take | Govt faces tough choice ahead of polls - fiscal deficit or growth

If the government wants to stick to its fiscal deficit target it will have to slash expenditure

January 03, 2019 / 18:36 IST
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Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (R) listens to Finance Minister Arun Jaitley during the Global Business Summit in New Delhi January 16, 2015 REUTERS/Anindito Mukherjee
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (R) listens to Finance Minister Arun Jaitley during the Global Business Summit in New Delhi January 16, 2015 REUTERS/Anindito Mukherjee

Manas Chakravarty Moneycontrol News

The fiscal problem the central government faces is that while total receipts till November were 49.3% of the budgeted amount for the full fiscal year, total expenditure was 66.1% of that budgeted. The upshot: the fiscal deficit was 114.8% of the budgeted deficit.

Why are receipts so low? The increase in gross tax revenue during the April-November period was just 7.1% of the amount collected over the same period last year. The Union Budget had assumed gross tax revenue would rise 16.7% for the full year.

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Direct tax collections have been good; the problem lies in indirect taxes, specifically the Goods & Services Tax. As a recent research report by Kotak Economic Research’s Suvodeep Rakshit, Upasna Bhardwaj and Avijit Puri points out, the increase in total indirect taxes collected till November is a mere 1.9% more than the amount collected in the same period last year.

With the November GST collections coming in at Rs 947 billion, the total collections are now well short of the target. The Kotak report estimates that the final shortfall to the centre could be as much as Rs 1 trillion.