The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

‘ Budget may retain fiscal deficit target at 5.1%’

- FULL REPORT ON www. indianexpr­ess. com ENS ECONOMIC BUREAU

US INVESTMENT bank Morgan Stanley has said the central government is likely to retain fiscal deficit target at 5.1 per cent of GDP in FY25, in line with the interim budget. Fiscal prudence, capital expenditur­e spending to help create jobs and targeted social sector spending are likely to be key themes of the Budget, it said. The government will unveil the Union Budget on July 23.

The fiscal deficit target which was 5.6 per cent of GDP in F24 is expected to be on track to attain the target of 4.5 per cent of GDP by FY26, Morgan Stanley report

said. “The fiscal headroom has improved with a larger- than- expected transfer of surplus from the RBI, which in our view will help to maintain the momentum on capex expenditur­e and increase targeted welfare spending,” it said. Morgan Stanley said it expects the possibilit­y of a slightly lower fiscal deficit target ( tad below 5.1 per cent of GDP) given the support from tax and non- tax revenues. According to the report, job creation supported through capex, targeted social sector spending and focus on ‘ Viksit Bharat’ plan are likely to be the themes in the budget. “With fiscal prudence guiding the overall fiscal policy stance, we expect the focus to remain on capex expenditur­e over revenue expenditur­e and targeted social sector spending with focus on improving access to physical, social and digital infrastruc­ture,” Morgan Stanley said.

“We also expect the budget to provide focus on the government’s road- map for ‘ Viksit Bharat’ ( developed nation) by 2047. In addition, the budget could also give a road- map for a medium- term plan for fiscal consolidat­ion beyond FY26, it said.

It said the impact of the budget on the market has been on a secular decline, albeit actual performanc­e is a function of pre- budget expectatio­ns ( as measured by market performanc­e ahead of the budget). As of now, the market seems to be approachin­g the budget with exuberance and could be dealing with both volatility and a correction post budget, if history is a guide, Morgan Stanley said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India