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India budget calls for tough choices but lifts spending

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INDIA must make tough spending choices, Finance Minister P Chidambaram said on Thursday (February 28), even as he unveiled a bigger-than-expected outlay for the coming fiscal year in one of the most highly anticipated Indian budgets of recent years.

 

Total budget expenditure will hit 16.65 trillion rupees ($309bn/£203.64bn) in the fiscal year that begins on April 1, Chidambaram said, despite expectations for cuts from current year levels, which are on track to hit 14.3 trillion rupees ($264bn/£173.34bn), or 96 per cent of the budget target.

 

Indian bond yields rose slightly during the speech, reflecting investor disappointment over spending, with the 10-year yield up 3 basis points at 7.82 per cent from levels before he stood up in parliament at 0530 GMT.

 

“Faced with a huge fiscal deficit, I have no choice but to rationalise expenditure. We took a dose of bitter medicine. It seems to be working,” Chidambaram said in his speech, a balancing act to stave off a credit rating downgrade and meet demands for populist spending heading into an election year.

 

The 2013/14 budget caps an intensive campaign by the energetic finance minister since he was appointed last August to turn around the fortunes of Asia’s third-largest economy after years of policy drift and global economic turmoil.

 

India’s fiscal and current account deficits have alarmed investors and ratings agencies, triggering warnings that the country’s sovereign bonds could be downgraded to ‘junk’ status if urgent steps are not taken to rein in spending.

 

Investors were watching closely to see whether the three-times finance minister – seen as a possible candidate for prime minister in 2014 – fulfilled a promise of fiscal prudence or sowed the budget with vote-winning, but expensive, welfare handouts.

 

He had been expected to keep a lid on government spending in fiscal 2013/14, capping it at roughly the same level as the year ending next month despite fears that it would deepen India’s sharpest economic downturn in a decade.

 

Chidambaram was also under pressure to deliver credible assumptions on economic growth, revenue and expenditure, after recent Indian budgets proved optimistic.

 

Chidambaram has staked his reputation on hitting a fiscal deficit target of 5.3 per cent of GDP this year and 4.8 per cent in 2013/14. A no-nonsense, Harvard-educated, lawyer who commands both respect and fear in government, he has squelched opposition from cabinet colleagues worried that spending cuts could ignite a backlash among voters.

 

Chidambaram has focused on winning back foreign investors unnerved by proposals of his predecessor, Pranab Mukherjee, to tax merger deals retrospectively and clamp down on tax evasion. Since September, he has implemented a spate of investor-friendly reforms, including allowing entry of foreign supermarkets.

 

This year, however, a flagging economy has left him with little room for big-bang populist measures. The government estimates economic growth for fiscal 2012/13 will be 5 per cent, nearly half of what it was in 2007/08.

 

In its annual economic survey released on the eve of the budget, the finance ministry said the economic slowdown was a “wake-up call for increasing the pace of actions and reforms”. It projected growth in the coming year of 6.1-6.7 per cent.

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