The Modi government may be able to keep the fiscal deficit for
fiscal 2017-18 below the revised budget estimate, by up to 10 basis
points.
Flash government account numbers for fiscal 2017-18 are
lower than the revised estimate numbers for both expenditure and
revenue, but the reduction is accounted for more by a squeeze in
expenditure.
Flash numbers show total expenditure at
Rs.21.32 lakh crore and revenue at
Rs.15.59 lakh crore. This means the fiscal deficit is around
Rs.5.73 lakh crore, or about 3.4 per cent of GDP," a senior government official told
Businessline on
condition of anonymity. He also clarified that the final figure may be
slightly different from these as "some reconciliations are still going
on".
The government had initially set the fiscal deficit target at 3.2
per cent of GDP (Gross Domestic Product) for the financial year
2017-18. However, this was was raised to 3.5 per cent of GDP after it
was clear that revenue from GST would come in for only nine months of FY
2018 (July 2017-March 2018). Now, the final picture will emerge when
the Controller General of Accounts (CGA) posts the account for the
entire fiscal (2017-18) by this month-end.
Tax collection
The official mentioned that the gross tax collection was around Rs.12.51 lakh crore. This is higher than the budget estimate of Rs.12.27 lakh crore but lower than the revised estimate of Rs.12.69
lakh crore. However, the real problem was on the non- tax revenue front
(which includes government fees and charges beside others), where the
total collection was just Rs.1.92 lakh crore, against the budget estimate of Rs.2.88 lakh crore and the revised estimate of Rs.2.36 lakh crore. Better performance on the disinvestment front helped the government mobilise Rs.1.15 lakh crore through non-debt capital receipts, which is higher than the budget estimate of Rs.0.84 lakh crore and close to the revised estimate of Rs.1.17 lakh crore.
As
for expenditure, the official said that many departments were asked to
stick to the budget estimate last fiscal as "the revenue position was
tight." This was one of the reasons for the expenditure being lower than
the revised estimate.
Commenting on the flash figures, Devendra
Pant, Chief Economist and Head of Public Finance with India Ratings,
said these numbers suggest that the fiscal slippage from budgeted
numbers mainly originated from a shortfall in budgeted revenue. Without
an expenditure cut, the fiscal deficit have been much larger.
Now,
the question is what will happen to the fiscal deficit target during
FY19? The government has set of a target of 3.3 per cent (Rs.6.24 lakh crore) for this fiscal.
Pant
believes that higher crude prices, the MSP increase and the expenditure
for Ayushman Bharat will impact the fiscal deficit. However, "the e-way
bill is likely to improve GST collection. Industrial production is
likely to be better than in FY18; along with expectation of a normal
monsoon, this will likely lead to favourable revenue collections," he
said.