Page 1
49 March 2023
he Finance Minister has presented a
phenomenal Budget with a difference.
It is in continuation of the reform
process through budgets presented in
the past, laying down the foundation and a clear
path for India@100 Amrit Kaal. The Minister has
rightly identified objectives, assigned priorities,
recognised constraints, technological innovations
in the world economy and the needs of Indians
& Indian Industry, incorporating the mission and
vision of the Prime Minister. The Budget is a
well-planned document which presents a clear-
cut roadmap for India’s tomorrow.
The budget has laid a foundation for catering
to the needs and aspirations of Millennials
and Generation Z in India@100. Given the
GDP growth of 7% in 2022-23 with controlled
inflation at 6.8% and Fiscal Deficit at 6.4%, India
has moved to a higher pedestal amongst top five
world economies in every sphere of its activity and
amongst the top three world economies on PPP
basis having GDP of over US$ 10 Trillion. This
budget would enhance global competitiveness
strengthening
the Financial sector T
The Budget 2023-24 laid a blueprint for India@100. The inclusive
Budget focussed on growth and employment generation besides boosting
infrastructure and development through self-reliance, transparency
and digitalisation. The budget proposals would empower youth, women,
farmers, scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, senior citizens, BPL families,
MSMEs, and people affected by the pandemic. It has used innovative
methods of financing various projects using PPP mode, which will all add to
the growth and help build the economy’s productive capacity and jobs.
and ensure a sound sustainable future for India
and the Indian industry on account of inducing
transparency, accountability and sustainability
through digital influx in all spheres of public and
private lives and livelihood.
Budget 2023 is growth oriented; employment
generating; infrastructure expanding budget with
a focus on development through Atmanirbharta,
transparency & digitalisation; repealing laws
towards ease of doing business; bringing
dynamism in tax structure with a portfolio
approach. The Budget, through reorienting
tax slabs, reducing surcharges to individuals,
corporates and associations provides more
liquidity to the middle class while targeting
to control evasion or avoidance of taxes. The
re-mention of RBI issuing Digital Currency in
2023-24 having test run initiated in November
2022 will help India increase productive
efficiency and global competitiveness of the
economy while containing inflation in medium
term, facilitating ease of doing business and ease
of living in tune with the latest technological
dr aman agarwal dr yamini agarwal Director & Professor of Finance, Indian Institute of Finance, Gr. Noida. Email: aa@iif.edu
Director & Professor of Economics & Finance, Bharati Vidyapeeth (Deemed-to-be-University), Institute of Management and
Research, Delhi. Email: yamini.agarwal@bharatividyapeeth.edu
49 MArCh 2023
Page 2
49 March 2023
he Finance Minister has presented a
phenomenal Budget with a difference.
It is in continuation of the reform
process through budgets presented in
the past, laying down the foundation and a clear
path for India@100 Amrit Kaal. The Minister has
rightly identified objectives, assigned priorities,
recognised constraints, technological innovations
in the world economy and the needs of Indians
& Indian Industry, incorporating the mission and
vision of the Prime Minister. The Budget is a
well-planned document which presents a clear-
cut roadmap for India’s tomorrow.
The budget has laid a foundation for catering
to the needs and aspirations of Millennials
and Generation Z in India@100. Given the
GDP growth of 7% in 2022-23 with controlled
inflation at 6.8% and Fiscal Deficit at 6.4%, India
has moved to a higher pedestal amongst top five
world economies in every sphere of its activity and
amongst the top three world economies on PPP
basis having GDP of over US$ 10 Trillion. This
budget would enhance global competitiveness
strengthening
the Financial sector T
The Budget 2023-24 laid a blueprint for India@100. The inclusive
Budget focussed on growth and employment generation besides boosting
infrastructure and development through self-reliance, transparency
and digitalisation. The budget proposals would empower youth, women,
farmers, scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, senior citizens, BPL families,
MSMEs, and people affected by the pandemic. It has used innovative
methods of financing various projects using PPP mode, which will all add to
the growth and help build the economy’s productive capacity and jobs.
and ensure a sound sustainable future for India
and the Indian industry on account of inducing
transparency, accountability and sustainability
through digital influx in all spheres of public and
private lives and livelihood.
Budget 2023 is growth oriented; employment
generating; infrastructure expanding budget with
a focus on development through Atmanirbharta,
transparency & digitalisation; repealing laws
towards ease of doing business; bringing
dynamism in tax structure with a portfolio
approach. The Budget, through reorienting
tax slabs, reducing surcharges to individuals,
corporates and associations provides more
liquidity to the middle class while targeting
to control evasion or avoidance of taxes. The
re-mention of RBI issuing Digital Currency in
2023-24 having test run initiated in November
2022 will help India increase productive
efficiency and global competitiveness of the
economy while containing inflation in medium
term, facilitating ease of doing business and ease
of living in tune with the latest technological
dr aman agarwal dr yamini agarwal Director & Professor of Finance, Indian Institute of Finance, Gr. Noida. Email: aa@iif.edu
Director & Professor of Economics & Finance, Bharati Vidyapeeth (Deemed-to-be-University), Institute of Management and
Research, Delhi. Email: yamini.agarwal@bharatividyapeeth.edu
49 MArCh 2023 50 March 2023
developments taking the economy to a higher
platform.
The budget proposals would directly benefit
India, its youth, women, farmers, scheduled
castes, scheduled tribes, senior citizens, BPL
families, MSMEs, “have nots”, and those
suffering from the ill effects of the pandemic.
The meaning of money has changed from cash
to digital currency. The ease with which one can
transfer money 24X7 with the click of a button
from anywhere at low cost and affordable means
has empowered the common man. Financial
Inclusion through schemes like Pradhan Mantri
Jan Dhan Yojana; Aayushman Bharat; Pradhan
Mantri Jeeven Bima Yojana; Pradhan Mantri
Suraksha Bima Yojana; Pradhan Mantri Mudra
Yojana; Stand Up India; Crop Insurance;
Emergency Credit Guarantee Scheme and
others with Aadhaar as its backbone provides
security and authenticity. It thus enables the
poorest of the poor, women, farmers, youth,
senior citizens and the MSMEs to seek social
security and credit from the financial system
appreciated for its robustness and resilience
globally by institutions like the World Bank.
The Government has, in the long
drawn process of reforms strengthened the
ability of the last mile advantage through
a resilient financial system. It was much
needed that post pandemic recoveries are
supported by the government to ensure
that the poorest of the poor receive the
benefits of the continued economic
growth pegged at 7%. The setting up of
Post Office Banking as core banking in 1.5
lakh Post Offices and 75 Digital Banking
units (DBUs) in 75 districts by SCBs is
empowering the rural consumers with
financial liquidity and mobility via JAM
Trinity. Encouraging a Digital Payments
ecosystem that is economical and friendly
will ensure the formalisation of the
economy and industry. Digitalisation for
India@100 will help generate wealth,
bring ease of doing business, improve
livelihood through enhanced employment,
double farmer income through DBT at
MSP and induce efficiency in currency markets.
This process will help increase multi-fold the
productive capacity of the economy and general
employment at large scale at all levels.
The budget aims to provide the means to
strengthen the social safety net through Mahila
Samman Bachat Patra. It is an attempt to secure
the small savings of women who find no means
or instruments dedicated to their effort of small
savings which help them and their family in
difficult times. The attempt to reach the millions
of women, especially the less privileged, is
the most innovative and effective structure of
defining financial systems as means and ways
of reducing the gender gap in various financially
available systems. Savings of the women would
also potentially secure the financial system as
these savings are often used only in dire needs.
This would improve the saving rate in the
financial system and also make women at the
grassroots level incentivised to be part and parcel
of the economic development and prosperity
through interest earning.
Another key feature that touches the
common man, poor and vulnerable groups and
50 MArCh 2023
Page 3
49 March 2023
he Finance Minister has presented a
phenomenal Budget with a difference.
It is in continuation of the reform
process through budgets presented in
the past, laying down the foundation and a clear
path for India@100 Amrit Kaal. The Minister has
rightly identified objectives, assigned priorities,
recognised constraints, technological innovations
in the world economy and the needs of Indians
& Indian Industry, incorporating the mission and
vision of the Prime Minister. The Budget is a
well-planned document which presents a clear-
cut roadmap for India’s tomorrow.
The budget has laid a foundation for catering
to the needs and aspirations of Millennials
and Generation Z in India@100. Given the
GDP growth of 7% in 2022-23 with controlled
inflation at 6.8% and Fiscal Deficit at 6.4%, India
has moved to a higher pedestal amongst top five
world economies in every sphere of its activity and
amongst the top three world economies on PPP
basis having GDP of over US$ 10 Trillion. This
budget would enhance global competitiveness
strengthening
the Financial sector T
The Budget 2023-24 laid a blueprint for India@100. The inclusive
Budget focussed on growth and employment generation besides boosting
infrastructure and development through self-reliance, transparency
and digitalisation. The budget proposals would empower youth, women,
farmers, scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, senior citizens, BPL families,
MSMEs, and people affected by the pandemic. It has used innovative
methods of financing various projects using PPP mode, which will all add to
the growth and help build the economy’s productive capacity and jobs.
and ensure a sound sustainable future for India
and the Indian industry on account of inducing
transparency, accountability and sustainability
through digital influx in all spheres of public and
private lives and livelihood.
Budget 2023 is growth oriented; employment
generating; infrastructure expanding budget with
a focus on development through Atmanirbharta,
transparency & digitalisation; repealing laws
towards ease of doing business; bringing
dynamism in tax structure with a portfolio
approach. The Budget, through reorienting
tax slabs, reducing surcharges to individuals,
corporates and associations provides more
liquidity to the middle class while targeting
to control evasion or avoidance of taxes. The
re-mention of RBI issuing Digital Currency in
2023-24 having test run initiated in November
2022 will help India increase productive
efficiency and global competitiveness of the
economy while containing inflation in medium
term, facilitating ease of doing business and ease
of living in tune with the latest technological
dr aman agarwal dr yamini agarwal Director & Professor of Finance, Indian Institute of Finance, Gr. Noida. Email: aa@iif.edu
Director & Professor of Economics & Finance, Bharati Vidyapeeth (Deemed-to-be-University), Institute of Management and
Research, Delhi. Email: yamini.agarwal@bharatividyapeeth.edu
49 MArCh 2023 50 March 2023
developments taking the economy to a higher
platform.
The budget proposals would directly benefit
India, its youth, women, farmers, scheduled
castes, scheduled tribes, senior citizens, BPL
families, MSMEs, “have nots”, and those
suffering from the ill effects of the pandemic.
The meaning of money has changed from cash
to digital currency. The ease with which one can
transfer money 24X7 with the click of a button
from anywhere at low cost and affordable means
has empowered the common man. Financial
Inclusion through schemes like Pradhan Mantri
Jan Dhan Yojana; Aayushman Bharat; Pradhan
Mantri Jeeven Bima Yojana; Pradhan Mantri
Suraksha Bima Yojana; Pradhan Mantri Mudra
Yojana; Stand Up India; Crop Insurance;
Emergency Credit Guarantee Scheme and
others with Aadhaar as its backbone provides
security and authenticity. It thus enables the
poorest of the poor, women, farmers, youth,
senior citizens and the MSMEs to seek social
security and credit from the financial system
appreciated for its robustness and resilience
globally by institutions like the World Bank.
The Government has, in the long
drawn process of reforms strengthened the
ability of the last mile advantage through
a resilient financial system. It was much
needed that post pandemic recoveries are
supported by the government to ensure
that the poorest of the poor receive the
benefits of the continued economic
growth pegged at 7%. The setting up of
Post Office Banking as core banking in 1.5
lakh Post Offices and 75 Digital Banking
units (DBUs) in 75 districts by SCBs is
empowering the rural consumers with
financial liquidity and mobility via JAM
Trinity. Encouraging a Digital Payments
ecosystem that is economical and friendly
will ensure the formalisation of the
economy and industry. Digitalisation for
India@100 will help generate wealth,
bring ease of doing business, improve
livelihood through enhanced employment,
double farmer income through DBT at
MSP and induce efficiency in currency markets.
This process will help increase multi-fold the
productive capacity of the economy and general
employment at large scale at all levels.
The budget aims to provide the means to
strengthen the social safety net through Mahila
Samman Bachat Patra. It is an attempt to secure
the small savings of women who find no means
or instruments dedicated to their effort of small
savings which help them and their family in
difficult times. The attempt to reach the millions
of women, especially the less privileged, is
the most innovative and effective structure of
defining financial systems as means and ways
of reducing the gender gap in various financially
available systems. Savings of the women would
also potentially secure the financial system as
these savings are often used only in dire needs.
This would improve the saving rate in the
financial system and also make women at the
grassroots level incentivised to be part and parcel
of the economic development and prosperity
through interest earning.
Another key feature that touches the
common man, poor and vulnerable groups and
50 MArCh 2023 51 March 2023
senior citizens whose only resources for other
incomes are their savings in Monthly Income
Schemes (MIS) or senior citizens for which
the saving limits have been enhanced keeping
in view the progress we have made in our
economic development and present needs of
people. In order to give people the ability to seek
other resources of income and take advantage
of the growing corporate world, it is a welcome
step to recognise that people’s participation can
be increased in the capital markets through the
education fostered under the umbrella of SEBI.
The more people are educated about the capital
markets, the more they can make it as another
source of income for themselves by participating
at affordable means. This would further ensure
that the corporates can also raise money through
deep capital markets as retail participation
would improve. Also, education would ensure
that speculation is converted into investments
that garner support for economic development.
The launching of Digital University, One-
Class-One-TV channel under PM e-Vidya 200
TV channels will supplement equitable right to
education in national and regional languages for
classes 1-12, setting up of 750 virtual labs in
science and mathematics along with 75 skilling
e-labs for simulate learning environment.
Development of high quality e-content in all
spoken languages for delivery via internet,
mobile, TV, radio will equip teachers with
digital tools of teaching and facilitating better
equitable learning outcomes throughout the
country for all irrespective of income or status.
NPAs continue to be a challenge, especially
with its legacy baggage of the world financial
crisis of 2007-08 and the post pandemic effect.
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Act (IBA)
provided for the strengthening of creditors’
rights has enabled the banking system to
exert their rights and protect the money of the
depositors. Yet the constant challenge for most
bankers is the inability to communicate any
defaults or delimit any individual or company
which has a default credit history. The veil of the
corporates protects and hides many borrowers
in terms of their capacity and ability to borrow.
The budget provides for meeting the need for
a National Financial Information Registry to
serve as the central repository of financial and
ancillary information. This would strengthen
the financial system and its intermediaries by
making borrowers more accountable for their
borrowings. The ability to serve the institutions
in terms of public data would continue to be
challenged by privacy issues and cyber attacks.
The system protects the creditor but can at the
same time make the borrower vulnerable to
financial whales who look for opportunities to
acquire assets at any defaults. A framework for
M&As or recoveries that protect the borrowers
would further be needed with a borrower
redressal mechanism that protects and supports
the borrowing process given the PM’s motto is
Atmanirbhar Bharat.
A business-friendly environment and
ecosystem is reflected in the provisions of the
Budget for Fintech along with other technology
to provide for a business-friendly environment
that is compliance-friendly with more than
39,000 compliances have been reduced and over
3,400 legal provisions have been decriminalised.
Several initiatives have been taken in GIFT IFSC
to make India a financial hub for international
transactions and promote international business
and trade. The bilateral trade talks; free trade
agreements; alliance in QUAD; neutral and
The Government has in the
long drawn process of reforms
strengthened the ability of the
last mile advantage through a
resilient financial system. It was
much needed that post pandemic
recoveries are supported by
the government to ensure that
the poorest of the poor receive
the benefits of the continued
economic growth pegged at 7%.
51 MArCh 2023
Page 4
49 March 2023
he Finance Minister has presented a
phenomenal Budget with a difference.
It is in continuation of the reform
process through budgets presented in
the past, laying down the foundation and a clear
path for India@100 Amrit Kaal. The Minister has
rightly identified objectives, assigned priorities,
recognised constraints, technological innovations
in the world economy and the needs of Indians
& Indian Industry, incorporating the mission and
vision of the Prime Minister. The Budget is a
well-planned document which presents a clear-
cut roadmap for India’s tomorrow.
The budget has laid a foundation for catering
to the needs and aspirations of Millennials
and Generation Z in India@100. Given the
GDP growth of 7% in 2022-23 with controlled
inflation at 6.8% and Fiscal Deficit at 6.4%, India
has moved to a higher pedestal amongst top five
world economies in every sphere of its activity and
amongst the top three world economies on PPP
basis having GDP of over US$ 10 Trillion. This
budget would enhance global competitiveness
strengthening
the Financial sector T
The Budget 2023-24 laid a blueprint for India@100. The inclusive
Budget focussed on growth and employment generation besides boosting
infrastructure and development through self-reliance, transparency
and digitalisation. The budget proposals would empower youth, women,
farmers, scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, senior citizens, BPL families,
MSMEs, and people affected by the pandemic. It has used innovative
methods of financing various projects using PPP mode, which will all add to
the growth and help build the economy’s productive capacity and jobs.
and ensure a sound sustainable future for India
and the Indian industry on account of inducing
transparency, accountability and sustainability
through digital influx in all spheres of public and
private lives and livelihood.
Budget 2023 is growth oriented; employment
generating; infrastructure expanding budget with
a focus on development through Atmanirbharta,
transparency & digitalisation; repealing laws
towards ease of doing business; bringing
dynamism in tax structure with a portfolio
approach. The Budget, through reorienting
tax slabs, reducing surcharges to individuals,
corporates and associations provides more
liquidity to the middle class while targeting
to control evasion or avoidance of taxes. The
re-mention of RBI issuing Digital Currency in
2023-24 having test run initiated in November
2022 will help India increase productive
efficiency and global competitiveness of the
economy while containing inflation in medium
term, facilitating ease of doing business and ease
of living in tune with the latest technological
dr aman agarwal dr yamini agarwal Director & Professor of Finance, Indian Institute of Finance, Gr. Noida. Email: aa@iif.edu
Director & Professor of Economics & Finance, Bharati Vidyapeeth (Deemed-to-be-University), Institute of Management and
Research, Delhi. Email: yamini.agarwal@bharatividyapeeth.edu
49 MArCh 2023 50 March 2023
developments taking the economy to a higher
platform.
The budget proposals would directly benefit
India, its youth, women, farmers, scheduled
castes, scheduled tribes, senior citizens, BPL
families, MSMEs, “have nots”, and those
suffering from the ill effects of the pandemic.
The meaning of money has changed from cash
to digital currency. The ease with which one can
transfer money 24X7 with the click of a button
from anywhere at low cost and affordable means
has empowered the common man. Financial
Inclusion through schemes like Pradhan Mantri
Jan Dhan Yojana; Aayushman Bharat; Pradhan
Mantri Jeeven Bima Yojana; Pradhan Mantri
Suraksha Bima Yojana; Pradhan Mantri Mudra
Yojana; Stand Up India; Crop Insurance;
Emergency Credit Guarantee Scheme and
others with Aadhaar as its backbone provides
security and authenticity. It thus enables the
poorest of the poor, women, farmers, youth,
senior citizens and the MSMEs to seek social
security and credit from the financial system
appreciated for its robustness and resilience
globally by institutions like the World Bank.
The Government has, in the long
drawn process of reforms strengthened the
ability of the last mile advantage through
a resilient financial system. It was much
needed that post pandemic recoveries are
supported by the government to ensure
that the poorest of the poor receive the
benefits of the continued economic
growth pegged at 7%. The setting up of
Post Office Banking as core banking in 1.5
lakh Post Offices and 75 Digital Banking
units (DBUs) in 75 districts by SCBs is
empowering the rural consumers with
financial liquidity and mobility via JAM
Trinity. Encouraging a Digital Payments
ecosystem that is economical and friendly
will ensure the formalisation of the
economy and industry. Digitalisation for
India@100 will help generate wealth,
bring ease of doing business, improve
livelihood through enhanced employment,
double farmer income through DBT at
MSP and induce efficiency in currency markets.
This process will help increase multi-fold the
productive capacity of the economy and general
employment at large scale at all levels.
The budget aims to provide the means to
strengthen the social safety net through Mahila
Samman Bachat Patra. It is an attempt to secure
the small savings of women who find no means
or instruments dedicated to their effort of small
savings which help them and their family in
difficult times. The attempt to reach the millions
of women, especially the less privileged, is
the most innovative and effective structure of
defining financial systems as means and ways
of reducing the gender gap in various financially
available systems. Savings of the women would
also potentially secure the financial system as
these savings are often used only in dire needs.
This would improve the saving rate in the
financial system and also make women at the
grassroots level incentivised to be part and parcel
of the economic development and prosperity
through interest earning.
Another key feature that touches the
common man, poor and vulnerable groups and
50 MArCh 2023 51 March 2023
senior citizens whose only resources for other
incomes are their savings in Monthly Income
Schemes (MIS) or senior citizens for which
the saving limits have been enhanced keeping
in view the progress we have made in our
economic development and present needs of
people. In order to give people the ability to seek
other resources of income and take advantage
of the growing corporate world, it is a welcome
step to recognise that people’s participation can
be increased in the capital markets through the
education fostered under the umbrella of SEBI.
The more people are educated about the capital
markets, the more they can make it as another
source of income for themselves by participating
at affordable means. This would further ensure
that the corporates can also raise money through
deep capital markets as retail participation
would improve. Also, education would ensure
that speculation is converted into investments
that garner support for economic development.
The launching of Digital University, One-
Class-One-TV channel under PM e-Vidya 200
TV channels will supplement equitable right to
education in national and regional languages for
classes 1-12, setting up of 750 virtual labs in
science and mathematics along with 75 skilling
e-labs for simulate learning environment.
Development of high quality e-content in all
spoken languages for delivery via internet,
mobile, TV, radio will equip teachers with
digital tools of teaching and facilitating better
equitable learning outcomes throughout the
country for all irrespective of income or status.
NPAs continue to be a challenge, especially
with its legacy baggage of the world financial
crisis of 2007-08 and the post pandemic effect.
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Act (IBA)
provided for the strengthening of creditors’
rights has enabled the banking system to
exert their rights and protect the money of the
depositors. Yet the constant challenge for most
bankers is the inability to communicate any
defaults or delimit any individual or company
which has a default credit history. The veil of the
corporates protects and hides many borrowers
in terms of their capacity and ability to borrow.
The budget provides for meeting the need for
a National Financial Information Registry to
serve as the central repository of financial and
ancillary information. This would strengthen
the financial system and its intermediaries by
making borrowers more accountable for their
borrowings. The ability to serve the institutions
in terms of public data would continue to be
challenged by privacy issues and cyber attacks.
The system protects the creditor but can at the
same time make the borrower vulnerable to
financial whales who look for opportunities to
acquire assets at any defaults. A framework for
M&As or recoveries that protect the borrowers
would further be needed with a borrower
redressal mechanism that protects and supports
the borrowing process given the PM’s motto is
Atmanirbhar Bharat.
A business-friendly environment and
ecosystem is reflected in the provisions of the
Budget for Fintech along with other technology
to provide for a business-friendly environment
that is compliance-friendly with more than
39,000 compliances have been reduced and over
3,400 legal provisions have been decriminalised.
Several initiatives have been taken in GIFT IFSC
to make India a financial hub for international
transactions and promote international business
and trade. The bilateral trade talks; free trade
agreements; alliance in QUAD; neutral and
The Government has in the
long drawn process of reforms
strengthened the ability of the
last mile advantage through a
resilient financial system. It was
much needed that post pandemic
recoveries are supported by
the government to ensure that
the poorest of the poor receive
the benefits of the continued
economic growth pegged at 7%.
51 MArCh 2023 52 March 2023
peace initiatives in the Russia-Ukraine war;
G20 Presidency and Internationalisation/
Digitalisation of the Rupee have all put India in a
position to become a leader that recognises UN-
ESGs, continuous growth needs for its people
and sustainable development contributions to the
world economy.
The Budget proposals for the GIFT IFSC are
an essential step in the direction of strengthening
trade and open economy frameworks. Data
Embassies would further strengthen the
process of Transparency and Accountability.
The direction of the government from being
a regulator with Draconian laws has shifted to
being a facilitator of businesses to ensure that
they are job friendly, growth orientated and
enhancing the ability of the country’s potential
of demographic dividends towards GDP growth.
The GEM Market framework and Central
Depository Processing Centre are also quick
operational response mechanisms developed by
the government to ensure ease of doing business
for companies.
The support for the MSME through
Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan 1, 2 and 3
continues to be further facilitated by the
government through the Credit guarantee for
MSME with revamped scheme from 1
st
April
2023. It receives an equity infusion of Rs 9,000
crores in the corpus and an additional collateral-
free guaranteed credit of Rs 2 lakh crore.
Further, the cost of the credit will be reduced by
about one per cent. The MSMEs’ timely receipt
of payments concern has been addressed by
allowing a deduction for expenditure incurred
on payments made to them only when payment
is actually made. This will support the millions
of people employed in the MSME sector which
is the largest employer after the government.
This is in addition to the 10 lakh jobs in the
government departments and subsidiaries as
announced by PM Narendra Modi in July 2022
towards various vacancies on account of lean
government and effective governance to be
filled before December 2023.
The Agriculture Credit; Green Credit; Unity
Mall and the Productive Linked Investment
Scheme in 14 Sectors, Solar and other schemes
in Sunrise Opportunities; Energy Transition and
Climate Action; Green Clearances; e-Passports;
Urban Planning & Development support to
States; Clean & Sustainable Mobility; Battery
Swapping Policy; Land Records Management;
IBC, accelerated corporate exit, modernising
Government procurement; payment of
75 per cent of government running bills
mandatorily within 10 days; setting up of
ways to improve AVGC sectors with a view
to generate employment and build domestic
capacity; rolling out of 5G Mobile services
for proliferation in rural areas and access to
e-services communication facilities will foster
job creation and eco-friendly growth in all
sections of society.
The Budget makes a progressive leap into
the financial sector through its reforms ensuring
social security for the poor, women, farmers,
senior citizens and MSMEs given the capital
investment outlay being increased steeply for 3
rd
year in a row by 33% to Rs 10 lakh Crore (3.3%
of GDP) with effective capital expenditure
being budgeted at Rs 13.7 lakh crore (4.5% of
GDP). The Budget strives to enrich states and
make them an integral part of the India’s Growth
Story through the 50 year interest-free loan
52 MArCh 2023
Page 5
49 March 2023
he Finance Minister has presented a
phenomenal Budget with a difference.
It is in continuation of the reform
process through budgets presented in
the past, laying down the foundation and a clear
path for India@100 Amrit Kaal. The Minister has
rightly identified objectives, assigned priorities,
recognised constraints, technological innovations
in the world economy and the needs of Indians
& Indian Industry, incorporating the mission and
vision of the Prime Minister. The Budget is a
well-planned document which presents a clear-
cut roadmap for India’s tomorrow.
The budget has laid a foundation for catering
to the needs and aspirations of Millennials
and Generation Z in India@100. Given the
GDP growth of 7% in 2022-23 with controlled
inflation at 6.8% and Fiscal Deficit at 6.4%, India
has moved to a higher pedestal amongst top five
world economies in every sphere of its activity and
amongst the top three world economies on PPP
basis having GDP of over US$ 10 Trillion. This
budget would enhance global competitiveness
strengthening
the Financial sector T
The Budget 2023-24 laid a blueprint for India@100. The inclusive
Budget focussed on growth and employment generation besides boosting
infrastructure and development through self-reliance, transparency
and digitalisation. The budget proposals would empower youth, women,
farmers, scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, senior citizens, BPL families,
MSMEs, and people affected by the pandemic. It has used innovative
methods of financing various projects using PPP mode, which will all add to
the growth and help build the economy’s productive capacity and jobs.
and ensure a sound sustainable future for India
and the Indian industry on account of inducing
transparency, accountability and sustainability
through digital influx in all spheres of public and
private lives and livelihood.
Budget 2023 is growth oriented; employment
generating; infrastructure expanding budget with
a focus on development through Atmanirbharta,
transparency & digitalisation; repealing laws
towards ease of doing business; bringing
dynamism in tax structure with a portfolio
approach. The Budget, through reorienting
tax slabs, reducing surcharges to individuals,
corporates and associations provides more
liquidity to the middle class while targeting
to control evasion or avoidance of taxes. The
re-mention of RBI issuing Digital Currency in
2023-24 having test run initiated in November
2022 will help India increase productive
efficiency and global competitiveness of the
economy while containing inflation in medium
term, facilitating ease of doing business and ease
of living in tune with the latest technological
dr aman agarwal dr yamini agarwal Director & Professor of Finance, Indian Institute of Finance, Gr. Noida. Email: aa@iif.edu
Director & Professor of Economics & Finance, Bharati Vidyapeeth (Deemed-to-be-University), Institute of Management and
Research, Delhi. Email: yamini.agarwal@bharatividyapeeth.edu
49 MArCh 2023 50 March 2023
developments taking the economy to a higher
platform.
The budget proposals would directly benefit
India, its youth, women, farmers, scheduled
castes, scheduled tribes, senior citizens, BPL
families, MSMEs, “have nots”, and those
suffering from the ill effects of the pandemic.
The meaning of money has changed from cash
to digital currency. The ease with which one can
transfer money 24X7 with the click of a button
from anywhere at low cost and affordable means
has empowered the common man. Financial
Inclusion through schemes like Pradhan Mantri
Jan Dhan Yojana; Aayushman Bharat; Pradhan
Mantri Jeeven Bima Yojana; Pradhan Mantri
Suraksha Bima Yojana; Pradhan Mantri Mudra
Yojana; Stand Up India; Crop Insurance;
Emergency Credit Guarantee Scheme and
others with Aadhaar as its backbone provides
security and authenticity. It thus enables the
poorest of the poor, women, farmers, youth,
senior citizens and the MSMEs to seek social
security and credit from the financial system
appreciated for its robustness and resilience
globally by institutions like the World Bank.
The Government has, in the long
drawn process of reforms strengthened the
ability of the last mile advantage through
a resilient financial system. It was much
needed that post pandemic recoveries are
supported by the government to ensure
that the poorest of the poor receive the
benefits of the continued economic
growth pegged at 7%. The setting up of
Post Office Banking as core banking in 1.5
lakh Post Offices and 75 Digital Banking
units (DBUs) in 75 districts by SCBs is
empowering the rural consumers with
financial liquidity and mobility via JAM
Trinity. Encouraging a Digital Payments
ecosystem that is economical and friendly
will ensure the formalisation of the
economy and industry. Digitalisation for
India@100 will help generate wealth,
bring ease of doing business, improve
livelihood through enhanced employment,
double farmer income through DBT at
MSP and induce efficiency in currency markets.
This process will help increase multi-fold the
productive capacity of the economy and general
employment at large scale at all levels.
The budget aims to provide the means to
strengthen the social safety net through Mahila
Samman Bachat Patra. It is an attempt to secure
the small savings of women who find no means
or instruments dedicated to their effort of small
savings which help them and their family in
difficult times. The attempt to reach the millions
of women, especially the less privileged, is
the most innovative and effective structure of
defining financial systems as means and ways
of reducing the gender gap in various financially
available systems. Savings of the women would
also potentially secure the financial system as
these savings are often used only in dire needs.
This would improve the saving rate in the
financial system and also make women at the
grassroots level incentivised to be part and parcel
of the economic development and prosperity
through interest earning.
Another key feature that touches the
common man, poor and vulnerable groups and
50 MArCh 2023 51 March 2023
senior citizens whose only resources for other
incomes are their savings in Monthly Income
Schemes (MIS) or senior citizens for which
the saving limits have been enhanced keeping
in view the progress we have made in our
economic development and present needs of
people. In order to give people the ability to seek
other resources of income and take advantage
of the growing corporate world, it is a welcome
step to recognise that people’s participation can
be increased in the capital markets through the
education fostered under the umbrella of SEBI.
The more people are educated about the capital
markets, the more they can make it as another
source of income for themselves by participating
at affordable means. This would further ensure
that the corporates can also raise money through
deep capital markets as retail participation
would improve. Also, education would ensure
that speculation is converted into investments
that garner support for economic development.
The launching of Digital University, One-
Class-One-TV channel under PM e-Vidya 200
TV channels will supplement equitable right to
education in national and regional languages for
classes 1-12, setting up of 750 virtual labs in
science and mathematics along with 75 skilling
e-labs for simulate learning environment.
Development of high quality e-content in all
spoken languages for delivery via internet,
mobile, TV, radio will equip teachers with
digital tools of teaching and facilitating better
equitable learning outcomes throughout the
country for all irrespective of income or status.
NPAs continue to be a challenge, especially
with its legacy baggage of the world financial
crisis of 2007-08 and the post pandemic effect.
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Act (IBA)
provided for the strengthening of creditors’
rights has enabled the banking system to
exert their rights and protect the money of the
depositors. Yet the constant challenge for most
bankers is the inability to communicate any
defaults or delimit any individual or company
which has a default credit history. The veil of the
corporates protects and hides many borrowers
in terms of their capacity and ability to borrow.
The budget provides for meeting the need for
a National Financial Information Registry to
serve as the central repository of financial and
ancillary information. This would strengthen
the financial system and its intermediaries by
making borrowers more accountable for their
borrowings. The ability to serve the institutions
in terms of public data would continue to be
challenged by privacy issues and cyber attacks.
The system protects the creditor but can at the
same time make the borrower vulnerable to
financial whales who look for opportunities to
acquire assets at any defaults. A framework for
M&As or recoveries that protect the borrowers
would further be needed with a borrower
redressal mechanism that protects and supports
the borrowing process given the PM’s motto is
Atmanirbhar Bharat.
A business-friendly environment and
ecosystem is reflected in the provisions of the
Budget for Fintech along with other technology
to provide for a business-friendly environment
that is compliance-friendly with more than
39,000 compliances have been reduced and over
3,400 legal provisions have been decriminalised.
Several initiatives have been taken in GIFT IFSC
to make India a financial hub for international
transactions and promote international business
and trade. The bilateral trade talks; free trade
agreements; alliance in QUAD; neutral and
The Government has in the
long drawn process of reforms
strengthened the ability of the
last mile advantage through a
resilient financial system. It was
much needed that post pandemic
recoveries are supported by
the government to ensure that
the poorest of the poor receive
the benefits of the continued
economic growth pegged at 7%.
51 MArCh 2023 52 March 2023
peace initiatives in the Russia-Ukraine war;
G20 Presidency and Internationalisation/
Digitalisation of the Rupee have all put India in a
position to become a leader that recognises UN-
ESGs, continuous growth needs for its people
and sustainable development contributions to the
world economy.
The Budget proposals for the GIFT IFSC are
an essential step in the direction of strengthening
trade and open economy frameworks. Data
Embassies would further strengthen the
process of Transparency and Accountability.
The direction of the government from being
a regulator with Draconian laws has shifted to
being a facilitator of businesses to ensure that
they are job friendly, growth orientated and
enhancing the ability of the country’s potential
of demographic dividends towards GDP growth.
The GEM Market framework and Central
Depository Processing Centre are also quick
operational response mechanisms developed by
the government to ensure ease of doing business
for companies.
The support for the MSME through
Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan 1, 2 and 3
continues to be further facilitated by the
government through the Credit guarantee for
MSME with revamped scheme from 1
st
April
2023. It receives an equity infusion of Rs 9,000
crores in the corpus and an additional collateral-
free guaranteed credit of Rs 2 lakh crore.
Further, the cost of the credit will be reduced by
about one per cent. The MSMEs’ timely receipt
of payments concern has been addressed by
allowing a deduction for expenditure incurred
on payments made to them only when payment
is actually made. This will support the millions
of people employed in the MSME sector which
is the largest employer after the government.
This is in addition to the 10 lakh jobs in the
government departments and subsidiaries as
announced by PM Narendra Modi in July 2022
towards various vacancies on account of lean
government and effective governance to be
filled before December 2023.
The Agriculture Credit; Green Credit; Unity
Mall and the Productive Linked Investment
Scheme in 14 Sectors, Solar and other schemes
in Sunrise Opportunities; Energy Transition and
Climate Action; Green Clearances; e-Passports;
Urban Planning & Development support to
States; Clean & Sustainable Mobility; Battery
Swapping Policy; Land Records Management;
IBC, accelerated corporate exit, modernising
Government procurement; payment of
75 per cent of government running bills
mandatorily within 10 days; setting up of
ways to improve AVGC sectors with a view
to generate employment and build domestic
capacity; rolling out of 5G Mobile services
for proliferation in rural areas and access to
e-services communication facilities will foster
job creation and eco-friendly growth in all
sections of society.
The Budget makes a progressive leap into
the financial sector through its reforms ensuring
social security for the poor, women, farmers,
senior citizens and MSMEs given the capital
investment outlay being increased steeply for 3
rd
year in a row by 33% to Rs 10 lakh Crore (3.3%
of GDP) with effective capital expenditure
being budgeted at Rs 13.7 lakh crore (4.5% of
GDP). The Budget strives to enrich states and
make them an integral part of the India’s Growth
Story through the 50 year interest-free loan
52 MArCh 2023 53 March 2023
to the state government to spur infrastructure,
healthcare and socio-economic development.
Financial intermediation is a strong engine for
growth with capital expenditure increasing by
Rs 7.3 Lakh crores shall give impetus to the
economy to sustain itself as the fastest growing
economy inducing jobs and social security for
the poor and vulnerable. The borrowing of the
government shall be from small savings which
will give an avenue for the small saver, usually
the poor, a safe investment alternative.
Fiscal consolidation and tap on fiscal deficit
are often strongly preached ignoring the role of
high leverage facilitates faster economic growth
provided it is used for investment in productive
capital assets. A country gains tremendously
when the Return on Investment, ROI (both social
benefits and private benefits) from a project is
higher than the cost of such funds invested in
various projects (capital assets). Restricting
fiscal deficit to a low level, say at about 4%,
is against the interest of the nation as it will
throttle growth and equitable development.
For a developing economy own funds are
never adequate for development and building
up productive assets of the economy. Fixing
low deficit targets also indicates restricting
the government in its spending capabilities to
induce growth, investment for India@100 and
jobs for youth. The Foreign Exchange Reserves
for India is US$ 563 Billion (excluding more
than US$ 50 billion as loans to neighbouring
countries) with over US$ 7 billion FDI being
received monthly is clearly an indication of
India being one of the Most Favoured Nations
for Investment. Globally despite the effect of
Covid-19 & US increased interest rates helps
India have leverage on Fiscal Spending for
long term growth projects. The Budget 2023-
24 has used innovative methods of financing
various projects using PPP mode which will all
add to the growth and help build the productive
capacity of the economy and jobs. Thus, the
budget is growth- oriented, with a target growth
of 8-8.5%. It is the budget of the common man
and middle class with a motto of “Sabka Saath
Sabka Vikas”. ?
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