7 Q&As About Budget Including Impact Of Notes Ban
Some 100 bureaucrats have been locked away in a basement in
New Delhi, a single desk phone among them, planning the generation and expenditure
of $300 billion. India's budget day is approaching, and the officials
responsible will have huddled in isolation for two weeks by the time Finance
Minister Arun Jaitley delivers his Feb. 1 speech. In a process steeped in
tradition, the task of guiding India's economy begins with a sugary Indian dish
and culminates in a speech laden with literary references. For all the
tradition, there's a lot that's different this year.
1. What's different?
There's a new U.S. president making protectionist noises, plus the dramatic
clampdown on cash in India. Economists are still gauging the impact of Prime
Minister Narendra Modi's November order to remove 86 percent of currency in
circulation in a bid to tackle corruption. Then there's budget day itself, which
has been moved forward by about a month to allow businesses more time to
prepare for the new financial year, starting April 1. There's also a break with
colonial-era tradition by merging the railway and federal budgets for the first
time since 1924 and ditching the post-independence practice of classifying
expenditure in Soviet-style five-year plans. Some are speculating about a
change in the financial year, though that's unlikely this time.
2. Why so much fuss over an annual budget?
India's "annual financial statement" allows investors to assess the
nation's fiscal health and policy shifts. For instance, a proposal in 2012 to
tax certain transactions retroactively to 1962 -- hidden in the dregs of the
budget document -- triggered swings in equities and scared off some foreign
investors. The state's allocation of funds to various sectors helps identify
economic winners and losers. India's budget has set the direction of the
nation's financial planning since its inception in 1860 when India was a key revenue
earner for the British Empire.
3. What can we expect?
The Statistics Office forecasts gross domestic product through the end of March
to grow at its slowest pace in three years -- 7.1 percent, still among the
fastest in the world. Economists say this makes narrowing India's budget
deficit, the widest in Asia, more difficult and heightens the risk of market
volatility before the rollout of a landmark national sales tax by September.
The current year's deficit target of 3.5 percent of GDP will most likely be
met, backed by a surge in tax receipts as the cash ban and amnesty programs
lure people out of India's vast shadow economy. Budget day will also likely see
the release of recommendations from a government-appointed panel on public
finances, which Jaitley has vowed to improve.
4. What is the panel likely to say?
The five-member committee on fiscal responsibility and budget management may
suggest easing next year's goal of a 3 percent deficit. That's because the
government may need to stimulate consumption in the wake of the currency
crackdown. Sweeteners may come in the form of tax breaks or even a universal
basic income, according to some media reports.
5. What was the impact of the currency crackdown?
Several analysts say it may be too early for Jaitley to make
informed decisions as the resulting economic shock is still playing out, with
cash shortages expected to continue through May.
6. What about that sugary Indian dish?
It's called Halwa. This popular dessert, made of semolina, sugar and clarified
butter, is the centerpiece of the quirky traditions surrounding the budget. In
a high-profile ceremony, the finance minister symbolically stirs a giant pan of
the syrupy mixture. The delicacy is then served to his officials before they
get banished to the basement for their two weeks of work. On the day of the
budget, the finance minister is photographed on the steps of parliament
carrying a briefcase, an echo of the British budget-day tradition.
7. And those literary references?
The finance minister's speech is typically peppered with
couplets from revered Indian poets as well as Shakespeare and even dialogues
from Bollywood. For a flavor, how about this snippet from Jaitley's first full
budget, translated into English: "Some of our flowers have blossomed, and
some are yet to bud. The concern is that predecessors have left us a thorny
garden."
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