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Revision: Public Finance >> Government Budget Economics ISC (Commerce) Class 12 CISCE

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Definitions [3]

Definition: Budget
  1. "It is a document containing a preliminary approved plan of public revenue and expenditure." – Prof. Rene Stourn
  2. "The budget has come to mean the financial arrangements of a given period, with the usual implication that they have been submitted to the legislature for approval." – Prof. Bastable
  3. "A Govt. budget is a financial plan concluding outlay and receipt of the Govt." Richard Good

Define the following concept:

Budget

According to Prof. Johnson, “A state budget is a statement of the states estimated income and expenditure in a commencing period usually one year.”

According to Prof. Dimock, “Balanced estimate of expenditure and receipt for the given period of time.” 

Definition: Public Debt
  • According to Prof. Findlay Shirras, "National Debt is a debt which a state owes to its subjects or to the nationals of other countries."
  • Prof. P.E. Taylor defines, "The debt is the form of promises by the Treasury to pay to the holders of these promises a principal sum and in most instances interest on that principal. Borrowings is resorted to in order to provide funds for financing a current deficit."
  • According to Prof. Carl S. Shoup, public debt or government borrowings are, "The receipts from the sale of financial instruments by the government to individuals or firms in the private sector to induce the private sector to release manpower and real resources and to finance the purchases of those resources or to make welfare payments or subsidies."

Formulae [3]

Formula: Revenue Deficit

Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure − Revenue Receipts

Formula: Fiscal Deficit

Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure − (Revenue Receipts + Capital Receipts excluding borrowings)

Formula: Primary Deficit

Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit − Interest Payments

Key Points

Key Points: Types of Budget
  • Balanced budget: Government receipts = government expenditure.
  • Surplus budget: Receipts > expenditure; mainly used to control inflation.
  • Deficit budget: Receipts < expenditure; used to raise spending, jobs and growth, common in developing countries.
Key Points: Government Budget

Government budget = annual financial plan of the government showing estimated receipts and proposed expenditure for the coming financial year (1 April–31 March in India).

  • It is an official financial statement of how the government plans to raise money (taxes, borrowings, other receipts) and how it will spend it (on defence, welfare, development, etc.).
  • It is a constitutional requirement (Article 112) and is presented every year in Parliament as the central government’s budget.
Key Points: Need and Importance of Government Budget
  • Planning: Estimates income & expenditure for smooth governance
  • Fiscal Integration: Coordinates tax, spending & borrowing decisions
  • Economic Impact: Influences production, investment & income distribution
  • Policy Tool: Promotes growth, stability, equity & BOP balance
  • Performance Indicator: Reflects efficiency and priorities of government
  • Public Accountability: Ensures control & transparency via Parliament
  • Resource Allocation: Directs resources as per social & economic goals
Key Points: Types of Government Budget in India
  • Union Budget: Prepared by Central Government for the whole country (Railway Budget merged with it since 2017–18).
  • State Budget: Prepared by each State Government; local bodies also have their own budgets.
  • Performance Budget: Shows targets, achievements, costs and performance of government programmes.
  • Supplementary Budget: Presented to meet unforeseen or additional expenditure (e.g. war, disasters).
 
Key Points: Components (Structure) of the Government Budget
  • Revenue Budget: Regular income & daily expenses (no asset creation).
  • Capital Budget: Loans, investments & asset creation.
 
Key Points: Modern Classification of Budget

Economic & Functional Budget

  • Economic Budget: Classifies expenditure by nature (wages, salaries, borrowing, investment).
  • Functional Budget: Classifies expenditure by functions (defence, education, health, transport).

Planning & Programme Budgeting System (PPBS)

  • Links long-term planning with budgeting.
  • Uses cost–benefit and systems analysis to relate inputs with outputs.

Performance Budget

  • Focuses on functions, activities, and projects.
  • Shows results and achievements, not just spending.
Key Points: Classification of Receipts
  • Revenue receipts: Do not create liability; include tax and non-tax revenues.
  • Tax revenue: Direct taxes (income tax, corporation tax) and indirect taxes (excise, customs, GST).
  • Non-tax revenue: Interest, dividends, fees, profits, grants.
  • Capital receipts: Create liability or reduce assets (loans, PSU disinvestment).
  • Finance Bill explains tax changes; GST introduced in 2017.
Key Points: Balanced Budget Vs Unbalanced Budget
  • Balanced: Receipts = Expenditure
  • Deficit: Expenditure > Receipts → boosts growth & jobs
  • Surplus: Receipts > Expenditure → controls inflation
 
Key Points: Zero-Base Budgeting (ZBB)
  • Meaning: Budget starts from zero; every programme must be fully justified each year.
  • Key Features: Decision units, decision packages, review & ranking of programmes.
  • Benefits: Removes waste, improves efficiency, better priority-based allocation.
  • Limitations: Time-consuming, costly, difficult cost-benefit analysis for non-financial items.
 
Key Points: Zero Base Budgeting in India

Adoption in India

  • Introduced in 1987 by the Central Government
  • Applied to development & non-development expenditure
  • Aim: Control wasteful public spending

Requirements for Success

  • Review of all programmes
  • Expert support & staff training
  • Better MIS and awareness

Problems in India

  • Bureaucratic resistance
  • Complex decision-making
  • Poor communication systems
  • Corruption & lack of professional approach

Result

  • Effective if properly planned; helps cut unproductive expenditure

Key Points: Concepts Related to Budget Deficits
  • Budget Deficit: Total Expenditure > Total Receipts
  • Revenue Deficit: Revenue Expenditure > Revenue Receipts
  • Fiscal Deficit: Total Expenditure − (Receipts excluding borrowings)
  • Primary Deficit: Fiscal Deficit − Interest Payment
Key Points: Constituents of budget /Structure of the budget
  • Public Revenue: Income of the government from taxes, fees, borrowing, grants, etc.
    Includes Revenue Receipts (tax & non-tax) and Capital Receipts (loans, foreign grants, provident funds).
  • Public Expenditure: Spending by the government for administration, protection, and economic & social welfare of people.
Key Points: Public Expenditure
  • Public expenditure is government spending by central, state and local bodies for public welfare and development.
  • It includes spending on defence, administration, health, education, roads and social welfare schemes.
  • Revenue expenditure covers day‑to‑day running costs like salaries, pensions and routine services.
  • Capital expenditure creates assets and development, e.g. infrastructure projects and loans.
  • Developmental expenditure is productive and raises employment, output and welfare (health, education, industry, R&D).
  • Non‑developmental expenditure is mainly compulsory and less productive, such as defence and general administration.
  • Public expenditure is rising due to more government welfare functions, population growth, urbanisation and higher defence and administration costs.
Key Points: Revenue Expenditure and Capital Expenditure
  • Revenue Expenditure: Recurring expenses for day-to-day government functioning; do not create assets.
    Examples: salaries, pensions, interest payments, subsidies, defence, education, health.
  • Capital Expenditure: Non-recurring expenses that create assets or reduce liabilities.
    Examples: purchase of land, buildings, machinery, shares, and loans to states or public enterprises.
 
Key Points: Developmental and Non-developmental Expenditure
  • Developmental Expenditure: Spending that promotes economic and social development.
    Examples: agriculture, industry, education, health, and development grants/loans to states.
  • Non-Developmental Expenditure: Spending on general administrative and essential services.
    Examples: defence, administration, interest payments, pensions, and non-development loans/grants.
Key Points: Tax Revenue
  • Tax: Compulsory payment to government without direct return.
  • Direct Tax: Paid by same person (income tax).
  • Indirect Tax: Burden shifted (GST).
  • Proportional Tax: Same rate for all incomes.
  • Progressive Tax: Higher income → higher tax rate.
  • Regressive Tax: Higher income → lower tax rate.
  • Degressive Tax: Rate rises up to a limit, then constant.
  • Single Tax: One main tax.
  • Multiple Tax: Many taxes (most suitable).
  • Specific Tax: Based on quantity.
  • Ad-valorem Tax: Based on value (fairer).
Key Points: Non-Tax Revenue
  • Non-tax revenue is government income from sources other than taxes, such as fees, prices, fines, gifts and borrowings.
  • Fees: Paid for specific government services, e.g. education fee, registration fee.
  • Prices of public goods/services: Paid for services sold by government, e.g. railway fares, postal charges.
  • Special assessment: Extra charge on people in an area that gets special facilities like better roads or streetlights.
  • Fines and penalties: Amounts paid for breaking laws, e.g. traffic fines.
  • Gifts, grants and donations: Voluntary payments or foreign aid given to the government.
  • Special levies: High duties on harmful goods like alcohol or other intoxicants to reduce their use.
  • Borrowings: Money raised through loans, bonds and deposits from people and institutions at home and abroad.
Key Points: Objectives of Budget
  • Planning: Sets clear plans and programmes for the financial year.
  • Resource Mobilisation: Arranges funds through taxes, borrowings, etc.
  • Efficiency: Ensures efficient collection of revenue and proper use of expenditure.
  • Economic Stability: Controls inflation and deflation using surplus or deficit budget.
  • Future Development: Helps plan future programmes based on past performance.
  • Public Accountability: Ensures control, audit, and responsibility of government spending.
 
Key Points: Significance of Budget
  • Policy Tool: Budget helps in implementing government policies and goals.
  • Role in Development: Shows government’s role in economic and social development.
  • Legal Control: Ensures lawful use and control of public funds.
  • Public Information: Provides information about past, present, and future plans.
  • Economic Instrument: Used to promote growth, stability, and reduce inequalities.
  • Financial Picture: Gives a complete view of government revenue, expenditure, and borrowing.
 
Key Points: Types of Budget Deficit
Type of Deficit Meaning (In Short) Key Implications
Revenue Deficit Revenue expenditure exceeds revenue receipts Government dissaving, borrowings, inflation, burden on future generations
Fiscal Deficit Total expenditure exceeds government’s own receipts Total borrowing requirement, debt trap, inflation
Primary Deficit Fiscal deficit excluding interest payments Shows real fiscal position, indicates fiscal discipline
Key Points: Budgetary Procedure

The budgetary process in India has four main stages:

  1. Preparation:
    Finance Ministry prepares the budget using estimates from all ministries; approved by Cabinet and President.
  2. Enactment (Legislation):
    Budget is presented in Parliament, discussed, and passed through Finance Bill and Appropriation Bill.
  3. Execution:
    After approval, government collects revenue and spends as per budget; accounts are audited by CAG.
  4. Parliamentary Control:
    Parliament ensures proper use of funds through committees like PAC, Estimates Committee, and COPU.
 
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