UNION BUDGET 2011-12 – THE BALANCING ACT Amit Rajani Welingkar Institute of Management (Mumbai)
T
he Finance Minister was expected to address three key macroeconomic concerns in this
year’s budget viz., high inflation, high current account deficit and fiscal consolidation. It was also expected that the government would resume the process of reforms. The
Finance Minister has made an attempt to focus on all these issues although through small steps.
The Budget is in sync with RBI’s monetary policy which has raised key rates eight times since
March 2010 to tame the persistently high rate of inflation. The government aims to bring down the
fiscal deficit in 2011-12 to 4.6%, below the 13th Finance Commission’s target of 4.8%. However, considering the fact that the growth in FY12 may be subdued, tax revenues lower and absence of one-time gains like 3G auction, the government may find it difficult to achieve its target.
India’s Current Account Deficit {CAD} touched 4.1% in the second quarter of this fiscal, the
highest since 1991. India needs long term foreign inflows to bridge the CAD. The move to raise the limit on foreign investment in the corporate bond market by $20 billion is a welcome step as
it will improve the composition of foreign inflows besides attracting much needed funds into the infrastructure sector.
The Budget also placed due emphasis on resolving the supply chain blockages in the
agricultural sector which required serious attention besides considerably stepping up credit flow to the farmers from Rs. 3750 bn to Rs. 4750 bn.
The IT industry was caught off-guard when the Finance Minister decided to levy MAT on IT
companies which are operating in SEZs, from FY12. It is expected to significantly impact IT
companies which had exemptions from MAT under the SEZ scheme. The introduction of service tax on hotels, air conditioned restaurants as well as increasing the same on air travel is bound to have an adverse impact on the hospitality sector.
Despite four major state elections due, the government has refrained from a populist budget
and kept its commitment on fiscal consolidation. While the emphasis of the budget on active consideration of a new fertiliser policy for urea, efforts to direct transfer of cash subsidy for better delivery of kerosene to BPL families and fertiliser to farmers, further liberalisation of the FDI policy, et al is definitely positive, how these proposals fare on the implementation front remains to be seen.