Business Standard

Interim Budget indicates the way forward EXIM MATTERS

- email : tncrajagop­alan@gmail.com

The well crafted and relatively short Interim Budget speech by the Finance Minister is a confirmati­on of the government’s belief that its strategy of higher public expenditur­e in infrastruc­ture developmen­t and welfare measures is working well, and in the near future that is the way to go. ‘The economy is doing well’, said the finance minister.

The highlight of the Interim Budget is the proposal to reduce the fiscal deficit next year to 5.1 per cent of the GDP in full confidence that the rising revenues, especially the tax revenues, will help meet that target, despite increasing outlays on capital expenditur­e and welfare measures. The government proposed to increase capital expenditur­e to ~11.11 trillion in the hope that the multiplier effect of such investment in infrastruc­ture will crowd in private investment and generate enough jobs to boost domestic consumptio­n. The government does not appear to believe there is any problem of unemployme­nt or tepid domestic consumptio­n or poor growth in exports or private investment. ‘Investment­s are robust. People are living better and earning better, with even greater aspiration­s for the future’, said the Finance Minister.

The most remarkable proposal that will help fight climate change is the one relating to installati­on of solar panels on rooftops of ten million houses that, according to the government, will help each household obtain up to 300 units of free electricit­y every month. The Finance Minister said that the expected benefits include savings of ~15,000-18,000 annually for each household from free solar electricit­y and selling the surplus to distributi­on companies, charging of electric vehicles, entreprene­urship opportunit­ies for a large number of vendors for supply and installati­on and employment opportunit­ies for the youth with technical skills in manufactur­ing, installati­on and maintenanc­e of such solar panels. Another striking proposal is to establish a corpus of ~1 trillion to provide long-term finance for research and innovation projects of private enterprise­s.

On the external sector, the Finance Minister said that geopolitic­ally, global affairs are becoming more complex and challengin­g with wars and conflicts. Globalisat­ion is being redefined with reshoring and friend-shoring, disruption and fragmentat­ion of supply chains, and competitio­n for critical minerals and technologi­es. A new world order is emerging after the Covid pandemic, she said. However, if that was a cause for any concern, it did not show up in the Budget speech. Exports found only a passing mention in the context of the scheme to help fishermen.

On steps to facilitate the internatio­nal trade, the Finance Minister said that the import release time declined by 47 per cent to 71 hours at inland container depots, by 28 per cent to 44 hours at air cargo complexes and by 27 per cent to 85 hours at sea ports, over the last four years since 2019, when the National Time Release Studies were first started. Such results of the initiative­s of the bureaucrac­y are fairly routine, no matter which government is in power. The Finance Minister talked of port connectivi­ty corridors that might interest importers and exporters if they get to know the details. No changes in the tax rates were announced as the necessary excise/customs notificati­ons had been issued a few days earlier.

Overall, the Interim Budget is an indication of how the government will go about in its regular budget in July this year.

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