Data given in the Budget is 100% above board, Sitharaman said.
Finance
Minister Nirmala
Sitharaman on Wednesday said the government was committed to the
path of fiscal consolidation without compromising on public
expenditure. Sitharaman also said all the data mentioned in the
Budget
2019-20 was authentic, allaying the Opposition’s doubts about
the numbers.
Doubts
have cropped up because the Budget assumed 12 per cent economic
growth at current prices, while the Economic Survey, presented a day
earlier, implicitly pegged the growth at 11 per cent. All the key
numbers in the Budget — be it revenues or the fiscal deficit —
are based on the nominal GDP growth rate assumed for the year.
Replying
to the general discussion on the Budget, Sitharaman said the assumed
gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate for FY20 was on the basis of
the first advance estimates for national accounts released on January
7. However, the Economic Survey projected the growth rate based on
the first actual numbers released on May 31, she said.
“Data
given in the Budget is 100 per cent above board. I wish to assure the
entire house that there need not be any speculation on the figures
which have been given out. Every number is authentic,” Sitharman
said.
She
added she had given reasons why there were differences between one
number in the Economic Survey as opposed to what has appeared in the
Budget document. The Survey pegged the FY20 GDP growth at constant
prices at 7 per cent. If inflation, as mandated by the Reserve Bank
of India at 4 per cent, is taken into account, the growth at current
prices comes at about 11 per cent.
The
first advance estimates have pegged the GDP at current prices at Rs
190 trillion for FY19. However, it was Rs 188 trillion in the first
actual numbers, also called provisional numbers.
No comments:
Post a Comment