Government Budgeting – Process & Components

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🟠 Topic 56: Government Budgeting – Process & Components


📌 Introduction

The Union Budget is a constitutional and financial document presented annually, detailing the government’s estimated receipts and expenditures for the upcoming financial year. Beyond being an accounting exercise, the budget serves as a policy tool to direct the country’s economic development, address social inequalities, and manage fiscal health.


🔹 Constitutional Provisions Related to Budgeting

Article Provision
Article 112 Presentation of Annual Financial Statement (Union Budget)
Article 113 Procedure for Demand for Grants
Article 114 Appropriation Bill for withdrawal from Consolidated Fund
Article 266 Definition of Consolidated Fund, Contingency Fund, Public Account
Article 280 Role of Finance Commission in revenue sharing

🔹 Definition of Budget

📖 Definition

The Union Budget is the annual financial statement that presents government’s revenue and expenditure estimates for the next financial year.

  • Covers the period from 1st April to 31st March.
  • Presented by the Finance Minister in Parliament.

🔹 Objectives of Government Budget

✔️ Economic Growth – Channel government spending into productive sectors.
✔️ Redistribution – Address socio-economic inequalities through welfare spending.
✔️ Fiscal Stability – Maintain fiscal deficit within sustainable limits.
✔️ Employment Generation – Boost job creation through investment incentives.
✔️ Price Stability – Manage inflation via fiscal measures.


🔹 Components of Union Budget


1️⃣ Revenue Budget

Covers all receipts and expenditures of the government that do not lead to asset creation.

Component Description
Revenue Receipts Tax & Non-tax revenues
Revenue Expenditure Salaries, subsidies, interest payments, defence revenue expenditure

Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure – Revenue Receipts


2️⃣ Capital Budget

Covers receipts and expenditures that lead to asset creation or liability reduction.

Component Description
Capital Receipts Borrowings, disinvestment proceeds, loan recoveries
Capital Expenditure Infrastructure investment, loan repayments

Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure – Total Receipts (Excluding Borrowings)


3️⃣ Fiscal Indicators Explained

Indicator Meaning
Fiscal Deficit Excess of total expenditure over total revenue (excl. borrowings)
Revenue Deficit Excess of revenue expenditure over revenue receipts
Primary Deficit Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments

🔹 Sources of Revenue


1️⃣ Tax Revenue

Type Examples
Direct Taxes Income tax, corporate tax
Indirect Taxes GST, excise, customs duty

2️⃣ Non-Tax Revenue

Type Examples
Fees & Charges Spectrum auction, passport fees
Dividends & Profits PSU profits, RBI surplus
Interest Receipts Loans to states, PSUs

🔹 Types of Expenditure


1️⃣ Revenue Expenditure

  • Day-to-day operational expenses.
  • Includes: ✔️ Salaries, pensions.
    ✔️ Interest payments.
    ✔️ Subsidies (food, fertilizer, fuel).
    ✔️ Grants to states.

2️⃣ Capital Expenditure

  • Spending on asset creation and long-term investments.
  • Includes: ✔️ Highways, railways, ports.
    ✔️ Defence equipment procurement.
    ✔️ Loans to PSUs, state governments.

3️⃣ Development & Non-Development Expenditure

Type Examples
Development Expenditure Social welfare, infrastructure, health, education
Non-Development Expenditure Interest payments, defence, pensions, administrative expenses

🔹 Budget Preparation Process


📖 Stages of Budgeting Process

Stage Description
Formulation Ministry of Finance collects proposals from ministries, estimates receipts and expenditures
Approval Presented in Parliament – Debate and vote
Implementation Funds released, spending monitored
Audit & Review CAG audits, PAC reviews compliance

Key Timeline

Month Activity
August – September Ministries submit proposals
December – January Pre-budget consultations
February 1 Budget presentation
March 31 Approval before financial year begins

🔹 Budget Documents Presented in Parliament

Document Purpose
Annual Financial Statement Summary of revenues and expenditures
Demand for Grants Spending request for each ministry
Finance Bill Proposes taxation changes
Appropriation Bill Authorises withdrawal from Consolidated Fund
Expenditure Budget Details of departmental spending
Receipts Budget Details of tax and non-tax revenues

🔹 Types of Budgets

Type Explanation
Balanced Budget Receipts = Expenditure
Surplus Budget Receipts > Expenditure
Deficit Budget Expenditure > Receipts

🔹 Role of Budget in Economic Development

✔️ Guides allocation of resources.
✔️ Promotes infrastructure development.
✔️ Supports welfare programs (health, education, poverty alleviation).
✔️ Encourages private sector participation through incentives.


Case Study – Union Budget 2023-24

  • Capex allocation: ₹10 lakh crore (highest ever).
  • Focus on: ✔️ Infrastructure (roads, railways).
    ✔️ Green Growth (energy transition, solar, EV).
    ✔️ Agriculture (digital agri platforms, natural farming).
    ✔️ Financial Inclusion (PMJDY, digital payments).

📚 Practice MCQ


1️⃣ Consider the following statements regarding the Union Budget:

  1. The Finance Bill contains details of taxation proposals.
  2. Revenue expenditure includes construction of national highways.
  3. The Appropriation Bill seeks parliamentary approval for withdrawals from the Consolidated Fund.

Which of the above statements are correct?

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

Tap here for Answer
Answer: (b) 1 and 3 only
Explanation: Revenue expenditure does not include capital items like highways; it covers recurring expenses like salaries and subsidies.

2️⃣ Which of the following is part of capital receipts in the Union Budget?

Options:
(a) GST revenue
(b) Disinvestment proceeds
(c) Interest payments
(d) Food subsidy

Tap here for Answer
Answer: (b) Disinvestment proceeds
Explanation: Disinvestment proceeds contribute to capital receipts, not tax revenue.

3️⃣ What does the Fiscal Deficit indicate?

Options:
(a) Total revenue minus total expenditure
(b) Excess of revenue receipts over revenue expenditure
(c) Excess of total expenditure over total revenue (excluding borrowings)
(d) Excess of tax revenue over non-tax revenue

Tap here for Answer
Answer: (c) Excess of total expenditure over total revenue (excluding borrowings)
Explanation: Fiscal deficit reflects the government’s total borrowing requirement.

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