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India’s budget likely to spur spending to support economic growth

India’s budget likely to spur spending to support economic growth
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi (C) addresses the media at the Parliament during the opening of the budget session in New Delhi on January 31, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 01 February 2022

India’s budget likely to spur spending to support economic growth

India’s budget likely to spur spending to support economic growth
  • The budget comes days before the start of elections in five states, including the most populous, Uttar Pradesh

NEW DELHI: India is likely to step up spending on infrastructure, health services and social programs in its annual budget on Tuesday, to try to set the economy on a firmer footing as it fights a spike in COVID-19 cases and rising inflationary pressure.
Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman is expected to announce more spending on roads, railways, besides higher subsidies for affordable housing amid growing public criticism over inadequate relief following the economic disruption after the outbreak of pandemic in 2020.
A government report on Tuesday warned that growing risks of global inflation led by rising crude oil prices could hit the economy, while projecting growth of 8 percent to 8.5 percent next fiscal year compared to 9.2 percent in current fiscal year and 6.6 percent contraction in the previous year.
The budget comes days before the start of elections in five states, including the most populous, Uttar Pradesh, which could spur Sitharaman to promise higher rural spending and subsidies on food and fertilizer, economists and officials said.
“The fiscal position appears much healthier than expected ahead of the (budget) announcement,” said Shilan Shah, economist at Capital Economics, Singapore in a note.
The strong revival in revenue receipts, which rose 67 percent during April-November period from a year earlier implied that the government has a “fiscal space to provide additional support if necessary,” Sanjeev Sanyal, principal economic adviser at the finance ministry told reporters on Monday.
Policymakers are worried that private consumption, which makes up nearly 55 percent of GDP, is still below pre-pandemic levels amid rising levels of household debt, while retail prices have increased by nearly 10 percent since the coronavirus outbreak began in early 2020.
But the government looks unlikely to offer any major relief measures to struggling consumers, focusing instead on beefing up spending on transport and health care networks, which analysts estimate could rise between 12 percent and 25 percent in the next fiscal year.
“We will focus on reviving the economy through higher investments, while individual and corporate taxes will be kept steady,” one government official, who sought anonymity, told Reuters, adding that reviving growth would be a priority.
To attract investments that create jobs and spur growth, Sitharaman could also boost incentives tied to production in more industries, the official said.
Food processing and exports are two areas that could see more production-linked incentives, two senior government officials said, adding no major budget changes were likely on individual and corporate taxes, in view of rising government debt and subdued private investments.