Economics ยท Chapter 09

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Government Budget & Taxation

Union Budget, GST, fiscal deficit, direct and indirect tax.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ How Government Earns and Spends

The Union Budget is an annual statement of the Government of India's estimated receipts and expenditures for a financial year (April 1 to March 31). Presented by Finance Minister on February 1.

Budget receipts:
โ€ข Revenue receipts โ€” tax revenue (income tax, GST, customs) + non-tax (dividends, fees). Does NOT create liability.
โ€ข Capital receipts โ€” borrowings, disinvestment proceeds, loans recovered. Creates liability or reduces assets.

Budget expenditure:
โ€ข Revenue expenditure โ€” day-to-day running costs (salaries, interest payments, subsidies). Does NOT create assets.
โ€ข Capital expenditure โ€” creates assets (roads, bridges, dams, schools). Investment expenditure.

Key deficits:
โ€ข Revenue deficit = Revenue expenditure โˆ’ Revenue receipts
โ€ข Fiscal deficit = Total expenditure โˆ’ Total receipts excluding borrowings (most important!)
โ€ข Primary deficit = Fiscal deficit โˆ’ Interest payments

๐Ÿ’ฐ GST โ€” India's biggest tax reform

GST (Goods and Services Tax) โ€” implemented July 1, 2017. Replaced 17 central and state taxes with one unified tax.
โ€ข One Nation, One Tax, One Market โ€” eliminates cascading effect
โ€ข Four slabs: 5%, 12%, 18%, 28% (plus 0% for essentials like grains)
โ€ข CGST (Central GST) + SGST (State GST) = total GST collected
โ€ข IGST for inter-state trade
โ€ข Monthly GST collections: Rs 1.5-1.8 lakh crore (record highs in 2023-24)
โ€ข GST Council: chaired by Finance Minister, all states represented

Union Budget briefcase โ€” annual financial statement of India
Union Budget briefcase โ€” annual financial statement of IndiaWikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
GST โ€” Goods and Services Tax, unified indirect tax since 2017
GST โ€” Goods and Services Tax, unified indirect tax since 2017Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
๐Ÿ“Š Direct vs Indirect Tax โ€” exam critical

Direct Tax โ€” paid directly by the person on whom it is levied. Cannot be shifted to others. Progressive (higher income = higher rate). Examples: Income Tax, Corporate Tax, Capital Gains Tax, Wealth Tax (abolished), Securities Transaction Tax.
Indirect Tax โ€” paid by one person but burden shifted to others (consumers). Examples: GST, Customs Duty, Excise (now under GST), Service Tax (now under GST).
CBDT โ€” Central Board of Direct Taxes (Income Tax Dept)
CBIC โ€” Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (GST, Customs)

๐ŸŽฌ

Union Budget โ€” How it Works

Animation
UNION BUDGET STRUCTURE โ€” CLICK TO EXPLORE RECEIPTS (Income) Tax Revenue Income Tax, GST Customs Duty ~โ‚น33 lakh crore Non-Tax Revenue RBI dividend PSU dividends, fees ~โ‚น3.5 lakh crore Borrowings Fiscal deficit funded by market borrowing ~โ‚น17 lakh crore BUDGET 2024-25 EXPENDITURE (Spending) Revenue Expenditure Salaries, subsidies Interest payments ~โ‚น37 lakh crore Capital Expenditure Roads, railways Defence, hospitals ~โ‚น11 lakh crore FISCAL DEFICIT = Total Expenditure - Total Receipts (excl. borrowings) India Fiscal Deficit 2024-25: 4.9% of GDP (Target: 4.5% โ†’ 3% by 2025-26) FRBM Act 2003 โ€” Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Legal framework to control deficit. Target: Fiscal deficit below 3% of GDP. CLICK ANY BOX India Union Budget 2024-25 total size: ~Rs 48 lakh crore โ€” largest ever.

Fiscal deficit is the most-watched number in any budget โ€” it tells you how much government is borrowing.

๐Ÿ’น

Tax System Explorer

Interactive
Full nameGoods and Services Tax โ€” implemented July 1, 2017
Slabs0%, 5%, 12%, 18%, 28%
ComponentsCGST (Centre) + SGST (State) = GST | IGST for inter-state
Monthly collectionRs 1.5-1.8 lakh crore (FY2024)
Replaced17 central and state taxes (VAT, service tax, excise, etc.)
Practice (SSC/Banking): What is fiscal deficit? Why is it important? What happens when it is very high?
Fiscal Deficit = Total Government Expenditure - Total Government Receipts (excluding borrowings)

It equals the amount the government must borrow from the market to meet its expenditure needs.

Why important:
โ€ข It is the most comprehensive measure of government finances
โ€ข Indicates whether government is living within its means
โ€ข India targets fiscal deficit below 3% of GDP (FRBM Act)
โ€ข Current: 4.9% of GDP (2024-25)

Effects of very high fiscal deficit:
โ€ข Crowding out โ€” government borrows heavily from market, leaving less for private sector. Interest rates rise.
โ€ข Inflation โ€” if RBI prints money to finance deficit (monetization), prices rise
โ€ข Debt trap โ€” interest payments grow, leaving less for development spending
โ€ข Credit rating downgrade โ€” foreign investors lose confidence, capital outflows
โ€ข Currency depreciation โ€” rupee weakens against dollar

India paid Rs 11.1 lakh crore in interest payments alone in 2024-25 โ€” 20%+ of total expenditure just on interest!
Practice (SSC): What is GST? What were the taxes it replaced?
GST (Goods and Services Tax) was implemented on July 1, 2017. It is a comprehensive, multi-stage, destination-based indirect tax that replaced multiple central and state taxes.

One Nation, One Tax concept: Before GST, buying a product involved paying multiple taxes at different stages โ€” manufacturer paid excise, then VAT at state level, then service tax on services. This "cascading effect" made goods more expensive.

GST replaced 17 taxes:
Central taxes: Central Excise Duty, Service Tax, Countervailing Duty, Special Additional Duty of Customs, Central Sales Tax
State taxes: State VAT, Entertainment Tax, Luxury Tax, Octroi, Entry Tax, Purchase Tax, Advertisement Tax

GST structure:
โ€ข 0%: Essential items (grains, vegetables, health services, education)
โ€ข 5%: Mass consumption items (packed food, medicines)
โ€ข 12%: Items like processed food, computers
โ€ข 18%: Most items (electronics, hotel stays above Rs 2500, restaurants)
โ€ข 28%: Luxury/sin goods (cars, tobacco, aerated drinks) + cess

GST Council (chaired by Union Finance Minister) decides rates.
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