Around 60% of economists, 21 of 37, who answered an additional question about the focus of the budget said it would be more on fiscal expansion than prudence.
Budget
2019 : Indian government will turn on the fiscal taps in the
federal budget on Friday and revise its borrowing target slightly
higher for this year and next, prompted by a slowing economy and weak
jobs growth, a Reuters poll of economists showed.
After
winning a second term by a landslide a little over a month ago, Prime
Minister Narendra Modi's government's first budget since then is
forecast to echo an interim budget from February in borrowing to
spend more on social welfare.
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The
median forecast in the series from the June 28-July 2 poll of over 45
economists showed the government will revise its fiscal deficit
target up to 3.5% of gross domestic product (GDP) for the current
fiscal year and 3.3% for 2020-21.
That
is up from 3.4% and 3.0%, respectively, projected in the interim
budget.
However,
the most common reply provided by forecasters for fiscal 2019-20 was
3.4%, followed by the highest forecast of 3.6%, suggesting scope for
some surprise when newly-appointed Finance Minister Nirmala
Sitharaman tables her budget on Friday.
"Our
view is that Sitharaman will announce loosening measures and relax
the deficit targets for this year and next," said Shilan Shah,
senior India economist at Capital Economics.
"With
government debt levels already high, by emerging market standards,
that might cause bond yields to rise slightly.
But
this would be a better outcome than making revenue assumptions that
lack credibility and force the finance ministry to relax the deficit
targets further down the line." In recent years, India has
managed to rein in the budget deficit, mostly through higher fuel
taxes and subsidy cuts. But the concern now is how Sitharaman will
maintain fiscal prudence when tax revenues have shrunk more than
previously expected.
The
fiscal deficit is already over half the budgeted target for the
current fiscal year, which started only two months ago, and the
implementation of pre-election promises is set to widen it further.
Around
60% of economists, 21 of 37, who answered an additional question
about the focus of the budget said it would be more on fiscal
expansion than prudence.
But
when asked if the government will also try to limit borrowing to the
7.1 trillion rupees ($103.1 billion) pegged in the February interim
budget, a two-thirds majority, 25 of 38, said yes.
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