Recognising that this is an unusual year, borrowing has been kept at levels so that the government can quickly put the money back in projects, Sitharman said.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Tuesday said the Union Budget for 2021-22 would have emphasis on sustaining high public expenditure on infrastructure to revive the economy which contracted in the first two quarters of the current financial year.
“Something that certainly
will feature is we shall definitely sustain the momentum on public spending on
infrastructure because that is the one way we are sure that multipliers will
work and the economic revival will be sustainable,” she told industry at a
virtual event with Assocham.
Recognising that this is an
unusual year, borrowing has been kept at levels so that the government can
quickly put the money back in projects, Nirmala
Sitharman said. “This emphasis that the public infrastructure spending
should have to be kept up has been fully recognised,” she said.
The finance minister said
capex provisioning allotment for capital expenditure couldn't be undertaken in
the first two quarters of the current fiscal year due to lockdown and absence
of migrant workers. But during the ongoing third quarter, many of them were
made up for.
She said the government had
raised the borrowing target in the current fiscal year so that expenditure
doesn't suffer. As of date, the government borrowed Rs 9.05 trillion from the
market (68 per cent higher than what it borrowed in the same period a year
ago). The total borrowing provision for FY21 is Rs 12 trillion.
Sitharaman said she
conceded that there were still some economic difficulties now. “But likely
vaccines give us more confidence that the pandemic is behind us,” she said.
Other than public spending
on infrastructure, the minister said the National Investment and Infrastructure
Fund (NIIF) is also doing its best to attract foreign money, particularly
sovereign funds that have been showing keen interest. Besides, the national
infrastructure pipeline, NIPs which are spread across the states have been
given priority.
No comments:
Post a Comment