Fiscal Policy – Revenue, Expenditure & Deficit

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

 

🟠 Topic 57: Fiscal Policy – Revenue, Expenditure & Deficit


📌 Introduction

Fiscal policy is the government’s policy related to taxation, spending, and borrowing to influence the economy’s overall health. By controlling revenue collection and expenditure programs, fiscal policy plays a key role in economic development, inflation control, and employment generation. It complements monetary policy, which is managed by the RBI.


🔹 What is Fiscal Policy?

📖 Definition

Fiscal policy refers to the use of government spending, taxation, and borrowing to influence the economic activity, ensure macroeconomic stability, and promote economic growth.


Objectives of Fiscal Policy

Objective Explanation
Economic Growth Boost infrastructure, employment, and investment.
Price Stability Control inflation and deflation.
Equitable Distribution Promote inclusive growth via welfare schemes.
Fiscal Discipline Keep deficits within sustainable limits.
Resource Allocation Direct spending to productive sectors.

🔹 Components of Fiscal Policy


1️⃣ Revenue

Revenue comprises all receipts of the government, including tax and non-tax revenues.

Type Examples
Tax Revenue Income tax, corporate tax, GST, excise duty, customs duty
Non-Tax Revenue Dividends, spectrum auction fees, fines, penalties

2️⃣ Expenditure

Government spending on various sectors, classified into:

Type Examples
Revenue Expenditure Salaries, pensions, subsidies, interest payments
Capital Expenditure Infrastructure, machinery purchase, loan to states

3️⃣ Deficit

The shortfall between revenue and expenditure, necessitating borrowing.

Type Explanation
Fiscal Deficit Total Expenditure – Total Receipts (Excluding Borrowings)
Revenue Deficit Revenue Expenditure – Revenue Receipts
Primary Deficit Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments

Key Fiscal Indicators

Indicator Value (2023-24)
Fiscal Deficit Target 5.9% of GDP
Revenue Deficit ~3% of GDP
Gross Borrowings ~₹15 lakh crore

🔹 Tools of Fiscal Policy


1️⃣ Taxation

✔️ Direct Taxes (Income tax, corporate tax).
✔️ Indirect Taxes (GST, excise duty, customs duty).
✔️ Tax incentives for priority sectors (startups, infrastructure).
✔️ Progressive taxation to promote equity.


2️⃣ Public Expenditure

✔️ Welfare programs – MGNREGA, PMAY, PM Kisan.
✔️ Infrastructure spending – Highways, Railways, Digital India.
✔️ Social sector spending – Health, Education, Skilling.


3️⃣ Public Borrowing

✔️ Borrowing from domestic markets (G-Secs, T-Bills).
✔️ External borrowing from multilateral institutions (World Bank, ADB).
✔️ Issuance of sovereign bonds in select cases.


🔹 Types of Fiscal Policy


Type Description
Expansionary Fiscal Policy Higher spending, lower taxes to boost demand (in recession).
Contractionary Fiscal Policy Lower spending, higher taxes to reduce inflation (in boom).

Case Study – Fiscal Stimulus During COVID-19

  • Atmanirbhar Bharat Package involved: ✔️ Direct fiscal support to vulnerable sections. ✔️ Credit guarantees for MSMEs. ✔️ Infrastructure spending to boost economic recovery.
  • Resulted in higher fiscal deficit (9.2% in FY21), necessary for revival.

🔹 Types of Government Expenditure


1️⃣ Planned & Non-Planned Expenditure (Old Classification – Pre-2017)

Type Description
Planned Allocated under 5-year plans (social & economic development).
Non-Planned Interest, subsidies, defence, administrative costs.

2️⃣ Development & Non-Development Expenditure

Type Description
Development Expenditure Education, health, agriculture, infrastructure.
Non-Development Expenditure Interest, pensions, defence.

3️⃣ Productive & Unproductive Expenditure

Type Description
Productive Builds assets, raises income (irrigation, industry).
Unproductive Welfare programs, administrative costs.

🔹 Deficit Financing – Meaning & Risks

📖 Definition

When government expenditure exceeds revenue, it covers the gap by:

✔️ Borrowing from public (internal borrowing).
✔️ Borrowing from RBI (monetary financing).
✔️ External borrowing (from foreign markets or institutions).

Risks

Inflationary pressures.
Debt sustainability concerns.
Crowding out private investment if excessive borrowing raises interest rates.


🔹 Constitutional Provisions Governing Fiscal Policy

Article Description
Article 112 Presentation of Annual Financial Statement (Budget)
Article 114 Appropriation Bill – Approval for expenditure
Article 266 Consolidated Fund, Contingency Fund, Public Account
Article 280 Finance Commission – Distribution of resources

🔹 Role of Finance Commission

✔️ Recommends tax devolution to states.
✔️ Suggests grants for local bodies.
✔️ Advises on fiscal consolidation.


🔹 Fiscal Consolidation – Meaning & Measures

📖 Definition

Fiscal consolidation refers to efforts to reduce fiscal deficit and debt levels to ensure macroeconomic stability.

Measures Taken

✔️ Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act – sets fiscal deficit targets.
✔️ Promoting GST for efficient revenue collection.
✔️ Reducing non-essential subsidies.
✔️ Disinvestment and asset monetisation.


Case Study – FRBM Act

  • Introduced in 2003 to ensure fiscal discipline.
  • Target: Fiscal deficit at 3% of GDP.
  • Post-COVID flexibility: Allowed higher fiscal deficit temporarily.

🔹 Role of Fiscal Policy in Economic Development

✔️ Directs resources to priority sectors – health, education, infrastructure.
✔️ Ensures inclusive growth through targeted welfare schemes.
✔️ Provides counter-cyclical support during downturns.
✔️ Encourages private investment via tax incentives and ease of doing business.


Example – Budget 2023-24

  • Record capital expenditure of ₹10 lakh crore.
  • Focus on: ✔️ Green Energy Transition.
    ✔️ Skill India 2.0.
    ✔️ Digital Public Infrastructure.

📚 Practice MCQ


1️⃣ Consider the following statements about fiscal deficit:

  1. It is the difference between total expenditure and total revenue (excluding borrowings).
  2. A high fiscal deficit always leads to inflation.
  3. Fiscal deficit can be financed by borrowing from the market.

Which of the above statements are correct?

Options:
(a) 1 and 3 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1, 2, and 3
(d) 1 only

Tap here for Answer
Answer: (a) 1 and 3 only
Explanation: High fiscal deficit may lead to inflation, but not always. Other factors (supply side) matter too.

2️⃣ Which of the following are capital receipts for the government?

  1. Disinvestment proceeds
  2. GST revenue
  3. Borrowing from RBI
  4. Interest earned on loans to states

Options:
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 1 and 3 only
(c) 2 and 4 only
(d) 1, 3, and 4

Tap here for Answer
Answer: (d) 1, 3, and 4
Explanation: GST is revenue receipt, others are capital.

You may also like...

error: Content is protected !!