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A brief about Budget..!!

Circa, 1760, the chancellor in England would carry the statement of government finances to the
House of Commons in a leather bag. The French word for such a leather bag is bougette
which became budget in English. Thus the Chancellor would present the budget in house of
commons.
In India, it is the finance minister who presents the Union Budget in parliament on the last
working day of February. The fiscal year begins on April 1 and ends on March 31. The
government has to operationalize the budget from April 1. However, before that happens, it has
to get the budget approved by Parliament. The Railway Budget is presented separately.
The speech of finance minister in parliament consists of two parts. In part A, the minister
presents the Economic Survey of fiscal year gone by. This is the ministrys view on annual
economic development of country and it forms the backdrop for presentation on budget for new
fiscal year in part B of speech. One can accessEconomic Survey and the Budget documents at
Government of Indias website at http://indiabudget.nic.in .
The finance minister also submits thee annual final statement which consists of estimated
reciptsan spending, which are operated through three separate accounts:

The Consolidated Fund

The Contingency Fund

The Public Account

Consolidated Fund : All revenues and loans raised and recovered from part of consolidated
fund, of which no amount can be spent without the approval of parliament.
Contingency Fund : It is an imprest that is available to president of India to meet unforeseen
expenditures, such as, expenditure to tackle natural disasters or accidents.
Post-facto approval of such expenditure is sought from parliament, and an equivalent amount is
drawn from the consolidated fund.
The current corpus of this Contingency fund is Rs 500 Crore. (not sure if it is still the same)
Public Account : It holds amounts which are held by the government in trust. These include
items such as Employees Provident Fund and Small savings.
No parliamentary approval needed for such payments, except when the amounts are withdrawn
from consolidated funds and kept in public account for specific expenditures (for example, road
construction)
One popular and useful measure of size of an economy is called GDP. When we express the
size of economy, that tells us how big or small government participation is in the economy.
TYPES OF EXPENDITURES AND REVENUES

Revenue Expenditure: All the expenditures incurred on the functioning of the judiciary,
maintaining law and order , routine administration, salaries, subsidies, pension for administrative
stff and payments on past debts are classified as revenue expenditure.
Capital Expenditures: These include asset creating expenditures for providing public goods
such as, dams, bridges & roads, and plants & machineries built for use in Govt. sector.
Revenue Receipts: These include tax receipts and non-tax receipts, such as, stamp duties,
fees, &dividends , if any, from public sector undertakings.
Capital Receipts: include grants received and loans recovered by the Govt. and occasional
disinvestment proceeds earned by selling PSUs. These are called non-debt capital receipts.
Generally the non-debt capital receipts are low, and this means that the Govt. has to borrow to
cover the deficit amount. Therefore, borrowing is a capital receipt, albeit a debt creating capital
receipt.
The Govt. has three choices for generating debt capital receipts: Borrowing domestically from
the public; borrowing from external financial institutions; or , under extreme conditions,
borrowing from Central Bank of the country.
TYPE OF DEFICIT:
Revenue Deficit : It measure the difference between revenue expenditure and revenue
receipts. It shows that the Govt. has to borrow money to finance administrative activities which
do not lead to the creation of any assets.
Fiscal deficit: It is the difference between Governmentstotal expenditure and the total non-debt
receipts. It shows the total debt generated by the Govt. to finance the total budget expenditure.
Such a deficit is justified as long as the expenditures are being incurred to finance activities
leading to the creation of National Assets.
Primary deficit: The difference between the fiscal deficit and the interest payment on debts
incurred in earlier years. The incumbent Govt. uses this static to show that the interest
payments on previous debt are not of its making. If resultant deficit turns out to be very small, it
proves the prudent management of the budget by incumbent Govt.
International Monetary Fund has been recommending that the fiscal deficit should not be more
than 3% of GDP.
The revenue deficit as a percentage of fiscal deficit has been extremely high in the recent past
averaging about 75% . Such a high percentage is worrisome, for it tells us that most of the debt
that the Govt. is incurring is being used for routine administrative expenses and will not lead to
any asset creation.
When the Governments fiscal deficit is large, it implies that the Govt. has to borrow heavily. This
means that the demand for loans will rise in the market, causing interest rates to go up. As
interest rates rise, the cost of borrowing for private firms goes up. As the cost of borrowing rises,
firms find that fewer and fewer investment projects are economically viable. Therefore, private
firms borrow less and do not invest in new projects. The fall in private investments naturally has
an adverse impact on employment generation and income.

Read more: http://www.bankersadda.com/2015/02/a-brief-about-budget.html#ixzz3TDYxrbPe

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