Page 1
67 March 2023
he stable, consistent, inclusive and
gender-oriented budget reflected
india’s momentum and potential.
Several measures have been
announced in the budget to empower vulnerable
tribal groups, women, youth, and micro, small
and medium enterprises. in addition, the budget
considers the uncertainties prevailing in the global
macroeconomic outlook and provides a road map
for fostering resilience and accelerating growth as
the indian economy moves towards Amrit Kaal.
inclusive development ensures that all
marginalised and excluded groups are stakeholders
in development processes. india is an inexhaustible
engine of economic development and opportunities.
t he stable, consistent, inclusive and gender-oriented
budget reflected i ndia’s momentum and potential.
this year’s budget was remarkable for its clarity,
equity, simplicity and effectiveness.
empowering Women
gender Budgeting is a powerful tool for
achieving gender mainstreaming to ensure that
the development benefits reach women as much
saBKa saath saBKa viKas
throUgh Union BUdget
T
Focused on empowering women, developing the skills of the youth,
providing funds for developing tribal infrastructure and improving
employment opportunities – the budget has underlined the foremost
priorities of the government in terms of taking the development
benefits to the vulnerable sections.
dr shahin raZi naUshin raZi UGC Emeritus Fellow and Visiting Professor, Arka Jain University. Email: shahin.razi@gmail.com
Research Scholar. Email: naushin.razi.1@gmail.com
as men. the rationale for gender budgeting arises
from the recognition of the fact that national budget
impact men and women differently through the
pattern of resource allocation. Women constitute
48% of india’s population, but they lag behind men
on many social indicators like health, education,
economic opportunities, etc; thus, gender budgeting
is important.
Focused on empowering women, developing
the skills of the youth, providing funds for developing
tribal infrastructure and improving employment
opportunities – the budget did a lot to promote
the notion of equity and give every indian the
opportunity to reach their full potential. to upskill
the country’s youth for domestic and international
opportunities, 30 advanced skilling centres are
envisaged which will open new avenues for the
youth to get highly skilled jobs.
new Saving instruments
t he union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman
announced a new small savings scheme with a fixed
interest rate and fixed tenure to encourage more
savings among women and girls.
Page 2
67 March 2023
he stable, consistent, inclusive and
gender-oriented budget reflected
india’s momentum and potential.
Several measures have been
announced in the budget to empower vulnerable
tribal groups, women, youth, and micro, small
and medium enterprises. in addition, the budget
considers the uncertainties prevailing in the global
macroeconomic outlook and provides a road map
for fostering resilience and accelerating growth as
the indian economy moves towards Amrit Kaal.
inclusive development ensures that all
marginalised and excluded groups are stakeholders
in development processes. india is an inexhaustible
engine of economic development and opportunities.
t he stable, consistent, inclusive and gender-oriented
budget reflected i ndia’s momentum and potential.
this year’s budget was remarkable for its clarity,
equity, simplicity and effectiveness.
empowering Women
gender Budgeting is a powerful tool for
achieving gender mainstreaming to ensure that
the development benefits reach women as much
saBKa saath saBKa viKas
throUgh Union BUdget
T
Focused on empowering women, developing the skills of the youth,
providing funds for developing tribal infrastructure and improving
employment opportunities – the budget has underlined the foremost
priorities of the government in terms of taking the development
benefits to the vulnerable sections.
dr shahin raZi naUshin raZi UGC Emeritus Fellow and Visiting Professor, Arka Jain University. Email: shahin.razi@gmail.com
Research Scholar. Email: naushin.razi.1@gmail.com
as men. the rationale for gender budgeting arises
from the recognition of the fact that national budget
impact men and women differently through the
pattern of resource allocation. Women constitute
48% of india’s population, but they lag behind men
on many social indicators like health, education,
economic opportunities, etc; thus, gender budgeting
is important.
Focused on empowering women, developing
the skills of the youth, providing funds for developing
tribal infrastructure and improving employment
opportunities – the budget did a lot to promote
the notion of equity and give every indian the
opportunity to reach their full potential. to upskill
the country’s youth for domestic and international
opportunities, 30 advanced skilling centres are
envisaged which will open new avenues for the
youth to get highly skilled jobs.
new Saving instruments
t he union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman
announced a new small savings scheme with a fixed
interest rate and fixed tenure to encourage more
savings among women and girls.
68 March 2023
to commemorate Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav,
a one-time new small savings scheme, Mahila
Samman Savings Certificate, will be available for
two years up to March 2025. it will offer a deposit
facility of up to rs 2 lakh in the name of women or
girls for a tenure of 2 years at a fixed interest rate of
7.5 percent with a partial withdrawal option.
At present only Sukanya Samriddhi Scheme
allows a guardian to open the account of a girl
child with a maximum investment limit of rs 1.5
lakh in a financial year and an interest rate of 7.6
per cent per annum.
t he Finance Minister also announced changes
to the Senior Citizens Savings Scheme doubling
the maximum deposit limit under the scheme. t he
maximum deposit limit for Senior Citizen Savings
Scheme will be enhanced from rs 15 lakh to
rs 30 lakh.
An individual above 60 years of age or retired
civilian employees above 55 years can open an
account under SCSS Scheme can subject to the
condition that investment must be made within
one month of receipt of retirement benefits.
retired defence employees above 50 years but
below 60 years can also subscribe to SCSS subject
to the condition that investment must be made
within one month of receipt of retirement benefits.
SCSS has a tenure of 5 years and offers an interest
rate of 8 per cent per annum.
While the investment limit has been doubled,
the tax exemption of rs 15 lakh available on SCSS
investment under section 80C remains unchanged.
increasing the limit of SCSS from rs 15 lakh to
rs 30 lakh is an important announcement to help
senior citizens and retired investors plan their
investments in safe instruments. the limit for the
monthly income account scheme has also been
enhanced. the maximum deposit limit for Monthly
income Account Scheme will be enhanced from rs
4.5 lakh to rs 9 lakh for a single account and from rs
9 lakh to rs 15 lakh for a joint account.
MiS account can be opened by a single individual
or jointly up to 3 adults or a guardian on behalf of
a minor. t he investments are in multiple of rs 1000
and the scheme offers an interest rate of 7.1 per cent
per annum payable monthly.
MiS is one of the most popular small savings
schemes with an outstanding amount of rs
234825 crore as of February 2022 and SCSS had an
outstanding of rs 117239 crore as of February 2022.
the total small savings outstanding as of February
2022 was rs 1426737 crore.
the budget has envisaged the world’s largest
food storage scheme within the co-operative sector.
the budget has also announced an ambitious
scheme to form new primary co-operatives. it will
expand the area of milk & fish production along with
agriculture, thus helping farmers, those engaged
in annual husbandry and fishermen and women
farmers to get better prices for their produce.
t he budget also promotes green growth, green
economy, green infrastructure and green jobs for a
sustainable future.
through this year’s budget, the indian
government has reaffirmed its commitment towards
inclusive development underlining the seven
priorities for the ‘Amrit Kaal’. the union Budget
focuses on empowering youth and reaching the last
mile through schemes like PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana
4.0, which aim to skilling lakhs of youth in new
courses like coding, Ai, robotics, 3D printing, etc.
Further, PM Vishwa Karma Kaushal Samman
package for helping traditional artisans and
craftspeople and PM PVtg (Particularly Vulnerable
tribal groups) programme to support the tribal
groups has been announced to enable economic
Page 3
67 March 2023
he stable, consistent, inclusive and
gender-oriented budget reflected
india’s momentum and potential.
Several measures have been
announced in the budget to empower vulnerable
tribal groups, women, youth, and micro, small
and medium enterprises. in addition, the budget
considers the uncertainties prevailing in the global
macroeconomic outlook and provides a road map
for fostering resilience and accelerating growth as
the indian economy moves towards Amrit Kaal.
inclusive development ensures that all
marginalised and excluded groups are stakeholders
in development processes. india is an inexhaustible
engine of economic development and opportunities.
t he stable, consistent, inclusive and gender-oriented
budget reflected i ndia’s momentum and potential.
this year’s budget was remarkable for its clarity,
equity, simplicity and effectiveness.
empowering Women
gender Budgeting is a powerful tool for
achieving gender mainstreaming to ensure that
the development benefits reach women as much
saBKa saath saBKa viKas
throUgh Union BUdget
T
Focused on empowering women, developing the skills of the youth,
providing funds for developing tribal infrastructure and improving
employment opportunities – the budget has underlined the foremost
priorities of the government in terms of taking the development
benefits to the vulnerable sections.
dr shahin raZi naUshin raZi UGC Emeritus Fellow and Visiting Professor, Arka Jain University. Email: shahin.razi@gmail.com
Research Scholar. Email: naushin.razi.1@gmail.com
as men. the rationale for gender budgeting arises
from the recognition of the fact that national budget
impact men and women differently through the
pattern of resource allocation. Women constitute
48% of india’s population, but they lag behind men
on many social indicators like health, education,
economic opportunities, etc; thus, gender budgeting
is important.
Focused on empowering women, developing
the skills of the youth, providing funds for developing
tribal infrastructure and improving employment
opportunities – the budget did a lot to promote
the notion of equity and give every indian the
opportunity to reach their full potential. to upskill
the country’s youth for domestic and international
opportunities, 30 advanced skilling centres are
envisaged which will open new avenues for the
youth to get highly skilled jobs.
new Saving instruments
t he union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman
announced a new small savings scheme with a fixed
interest rate and fixed tenure to encourage more
savings among women and girls.
68 March 2023
to commemorate Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav,
a one-time new small savings scheme, Mahila
Samman Savings Certificate, will be available for
two years up to March 2025. it will offer a deposit
facility of up to rs 2 lakh in the name of women or
girls for a tenure of 2 years at a fixed interest rate of
7.5 percent with a partial withdrawal option.
At present only Sukanya Samriddhi Scheme
allows a guardian to open the account of a girl
child with a maximum investment limit of rs 1.5
lakh in a financial year and an interest rate of 7.6
per cent per annum.
t he Finance Minister also announced changes
to the Senior Citizens Savings Scheme doubling
the maximum deposit limit under the scheme. t he
maximum deposit limit for Senior Citizen Savings
Scheme will be enhanced from rs 15 lakh to
rs 30 lakh.
An individual above 60 years of age or retired
civilian employees above 55 years can open an
account under SCSS Scheme can subject to the
condition that investment must be made within
one month of receipt of retirement benefits.
retired defence employees above 50 years but
below 60 years can also subscribe to SCSS subject
to the condition that investment must be made
within one month of receipt of retirement benefits.
SCSS has a tenure of 5 years and offers an interest
rate of 8 per cent per annum.
While the investment limit has been doubled,
the tax exemption of rs 15 lakh available on SCSS
investment under section 80C remains unchanged.
increasing the limit of SCSS from rs 15 lakh to
rs 30 lakh is an important announcement to help
senior citizens and retired investors plan their
investments in safe instruments. the limit for the
monthly income account scheme has also been
enhanced. the maximum deposit limit for Monthly
income Account Scheme will be enhanced from rs
4.5 lakh to rs 9 lakh for a single account and from rs
9 lakh to rs 15 lakh for a joint account.
MiS account can be opened by a single individual
or jointly up to 3 adults or a guardian on behalf of
a minor. t he investments are in multiple of rs 1000
and the scheme offers an interest rate of 7.1 per cent
per annum payable monthly.
MiS is one of the most popular small savings
schemes with an outstanding amount of rs
234825 crore as of February 2022 and SCSS had an
outstanding of rs 117239 crore as of February 2022.
the total small savings outstanding as of February
2022 was rs 1426737 crore.
the budget has envisaged the world’s largest
food storage scheme within the co-operative sector.
the budget has also announced an ambitious
scheme to form new primary co-operatives. it will
expand the area of milk & fish production along with
agriculture, thus helping farmers, those engaged
in annual husbandry and fishermen and women
farmers to get better prices for their produce.
t he budget also promotes green growth, green
economy, green infrastructure and green jobs for a
sustainable future.
through this year’s budget, the indian
government has reaffirmed its commitment towards
inclusive development underlining the seven
priorities for the ‘Amrit Kaal’. the union Budget
focuses on empowering youth and reaching the last
mile through schemes like PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana
4.0, which aim to skilling lakhs of youth in new
courses like coding, Ai, robotics, 3D printing, etc.
Further, PM Vishwa Karma Kaushal Samman
package for helping traditional artisans and
craftspeople and PM PVtg (Particularly Vulnerable
tribal groups) programme to support the tribal
groups has been announced to enable economic
69 March 2023
upliftment of backward and marginalized sections
of the population.
the Centre’s focus on green growth – to help
reduce india’s carbon intensity and generate large-
scale green jobs is bound to make the economy
future ready. Apart from the recently launched green
hydrogen mission, the government’s announcement
of customs duty exemption on importing machinery
required to manufacture electric vehicle batteries
will be a boon for green mobility. Further, to promote
green fuel, the government has announced central
excise duty exemption for blended compressed
natural gas, in addition to other measures for
promoting the circular economy, such as establishing
500 new waste-to-wealth plants.
At a time when the global economy is facing
headwinds, it is heartening to see that the
government has not shied away from supporting
domestic economic activity by maintaining the
capex support but has gone a step ahead and
revised the direct tax slabs to support consumption
activity, especially among the indian middle class.
this feat becomes even more commendable in
cognizance of the fact that the government has
adhered to its fiscal deficit target of 6.4% of gDP
for FY 23 and intends to reduce this to 5.9% in FY
24, thereby sticking to its path of fiscal prudence.
overall, with this pragmatic budget and its
strong fundamentals, the indian economy is well
established in a safe place and emerges as a ‘star’
among its global peers.
union Budget 2023-24 is bold in its ideas yet
conservative in its calculus, ambitious in its strategies
and firmly anchored in reality. i t successfully
captures the uncertainties enshrouding the global
macroeconomic outlook while providing a road map
for fostering resilience and accelerating growth as
the indian economy moves towards Amrit Kaal.
this budget is being hailed as a 'Budget for
All', along the lines of Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas
(with everyone, for the development of all), as it
has something to offer to all sections of society.
the focus of the budget has transitioned from
facilitating recovery of the Covid-affected economy
in the last two years to laying down both hard and
soft tracks for increasing economies of scale and
ensuring long-term growth.
the document provides a clear vision, as given
by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, of the kind of
society india aspires to be in 2047. india@100 will
rest on the pillars of inclusivity and prosperity,
where fruits of development reach all regions and
citizens, especially our youth, women, farmers,
other Backward Classes, Scheduled Castes, and
Scheduled tribes. As reflected through the first two
priorities of “inclusive development” and “reaching
the last mile” , the budget lays out several measures
for empowering vulnerable tribal groups, women,
youth, and micro, small and medium enterprises.
t he budget has a strong focus on empowering
individuals and local entrepreneurs by leveraging
technology, and, to a lesser extent, finance. i t lays
out policies for empowering our youth and helping
the Amrit Peedhi (the golden generation) unlock
their potential. it draws attention to the importance
of skilling for youth, women, craftspersons and self-
help groups (SHgs) to facilitate job creation at scale.
Special mention must be made of PM Vishwakarma
KAushal Samman (PM–ViKAS) for skilling traditional
artisans and craftspersons, the Agriculture
Accelerator Fund to encourage agri startups by
young entrepreneurs in rural areas, and sector-
specific skilling and entrepreneurship development
for the tourism sector under the Dekho Apna Desh
initiative.
t he budget for fiscal year (FY) 24 prioritises youth
power and modern skill development through the
PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana 4.0 and the Amrit Peedhi
programme. the scheme will equip young people
with skills in coding, Artificial i ntelligence, and
robotics, among others and provide stipends through
the National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme. t he
tourism sector will benefit from a skilled workforce
and young entrepreneurs will receive marketing
support through the proposed unity malls (through
the one District, one Product initiative). t hese are all
the force multipliers budget wishes to unleash over
time to compensate for external headwinds.
overall, Budget 2023-24 is anchored in reality,
transparency, and achievable goals. it is economically
smart, reflects political confidence , is fiscally credible
and emphasises gender equality and inclusiveness.
it is an Amrit Kaal road map for india to achieve
glory. t he Budget 2023-24 is truly an Amrit Budget-
A foundation for Vishwaguru Bharat. ?
Page 4
67 March 2023
he stable, consistent, inclusive and
gender-oriented budget reflected
india’s momentum and potential.
Several measures have been
announced in the budget to empower vulnerable
tribal groups, women, youth, and micro, small
and medium enterprises. in addition, the budget
considers the uncertainties prevailing in the global
macroeconomic outlook and provides a road map
for fostering resilience and accelerating growth as
the indian economy moves towards Amrit Kaal.
inclusive development ensures that all
marginalised and excluded groups are stakeholders
in development processes. india is an inexhaustible
engine of economic development and opportunities.
t he stable, consistent, inclusive and gender-oriented
budget reflected i ndia’s momentum and potential.
this year’s budget was remarkable for its clarity,
equity, simplicity and effectiveness.
empowering Women
gender Budgeting is a powerful tool for
achieving gender mainstreaming to ensure that
the development benefits reach women as much
saBKa saath saBKa viKas
throUgh Union BUdget
T
Focused on empowering women, developing the skills of the youth,
providing funds for developing tribal infrastructure and improving
employment opportunities – the budget has underlined the foremost
priorities of the government in terms of taking the development
benefits to the vulnerable sections.
dr shahin raZi naUshin raZi UGC Emeritus Fellow and Visiting Professor, Arka Jain University. Email: shahin.razi@gmail.com
Research Scholar. Email: naushin.razi.1@gmail.com
as men. the rationale for gender budgeting arises
from the recognition of the fact that national budget
impact men and women differently through the
pattern of resource allocation. Women constitute
48% of india’s population, but they lag behind men
on many social indicators like health, education,
economic opportunities, etc; thus, gender budgeting
is important.
Focused on empowering women, developing
the skills of the youth, providing funds for developing
tribal infrastructure and improving employment
opportunities – the budget did a lot to promote
the notion of equity and give every indian the
opportunity to reach their full potential. to upskill
the country’s youth for domestic and international
opportunities, 30 advanced skilling centres are
envisaged which will open new avenues for the
youth to get highly skilled jobs.
new Saving instruments
t he union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman
announced a new small savings scheme with a fixed
interest rate and fixed tenure to encourage more
savings among women and girls.
68 March 2023
to commemorate Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav,
a one-time new small savings scheme, Mahila
Samman Savings Certificate, will be available for
two years up to March 2025. it will offer a deposit
facility of up to rs 2 lakh in the name of women or
girls for a tenure of 2 years at a fixed interest rate of
7.5 percent with a partial withdrawal option.
At present only Sukanya Samriddhi Scheme
allows a guardian to open the account of a girl
child with a maximum investment limit of rs 1.5
lakh in a financial year and an interest rate of 7.6
per cent per annum.
t he Finance Minister also announced changes
to the Senior Citizens Savings Scheme doubling
the maximum deposit limit under the scheme. t he
maximum deposit limit for Senior Citizen Savings
Scheme will be enhanced from rs 15 lakh to
rs 30 lakh.
An individual above 60 years of age or retired
civilian employees above 55 years can open an
account under SCSS Scheme can subject to the
condition that investment must be made within
one month of receipt of retirement benefits.
retired defence employees above 50 years but
below 60 years can also subscribe to SCSS subject
to the condition that investment must be made
within one month of receipt of retirement benefits.
SCSS has a tenure of 5 years and offers an interest
rate of 8 per cent per annum.
While the investment limit has been doubled,
the tax exemption of rs 15 lakh available on SCSS
investment under section 80C remains unchanged.
increasing the limit of SCSS from rs 15 lakh to
rs 30 lakh is an important announcement to help
senior citizens and retired investors plan their
investments in safe instruments. the limit for the
monthly income account scheme has also been
enhanced. the maximum deposit limit for Monthly
income Account Scheme will be enhanced from rs
4.5 lakh to rs 9 lakh for a single account and from rs
9 lakh to rs 15 lakh for a joint account.
MiS account can be opened by a single individual
or jointly up to 3 adults or a guardian on behalf of
a minor. t he investments are in multiple of rs 1000
and the scheme offers an interest rate of 7.1 per cent
per annum payable monthly.
MiS is one of the most popular small savings
schemes with an outstanding amount of rs
234825 crore as of February 2022 and SCSS had an
outstanding of rs 117239 crore as of February 2022.
the total small savings outstanding as of February
2022 was rs 1426737 crore.
the budget has envisaged the world’s largest
food storage scheme within the co-operative sector.
the budget has also announced an ambitious
scheme to form new primary co-operatives. it will
expand the area of milk & fish production along with
agriculture, thus helping farmers, those engaged
in annual husbandry and fishermen and women
farmers to get better prices for their produce.
t he budget also promotes green growth, green
economy, green infrastructure and green jobs for a
sustainable future.
through this year’s budget, the indian
government has reaffirmed its commitment towards
inclusive development underlining the seven
priorities for the ‘Amrit Kaal’. the union Budget
focuses on empowering youth and reaching the last
mile through schemes like PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana
4.0, which aim to skilling lakhs of youth in new
courses like coding, Ai, robotics, 3D printing, etc.
Further, PM Vishwa Karma Kaushal Samman
package for helping traditional artisans and
craftspeople and PM PVtg (Particularly Vulnerable
tribal groups) programme to support the tribal
groups has been announced to enable economic
69 March 2023
upliftment of backward and marginalized sections
of the population.
the Centre’s focus on green growth – to help
reduce india’s carbon intensity and generate large-
scale green jobs is bound to make the economy
future ready. Apart from the recently launched green
hydrogen mission, the government’s announcement
of customs duty exemption on importing machinery
required to manufacture electric vehicle batteries
will be a boon for green mobility. Further, to promote
green fuel, the government has announced central
excise duty exemption for blended compressed
natural gas, in addition to other measures for
promoting the circular economy, such as establishing
500 new waste-to-wealth plants.
At a time when the global economy is facing
headwinds, it is heartening to see that the
government has not shied away from supporting
domestic economic activity by maintaining the
capex support but has gone a step ahead and
revised the direct tax slabs to support consumption
activity, especially among the indian middle class.
this feat becomes even more commendable in
cognizance of the fact that the government has
adhered to its fiscal deficit target of 6.4% of gDP
for FY 23 and intends to reduce this to 5.9% in FY
24, thereby sticking to its path of fiscal prudence.
overall, with this pragmatic budget and its
strong fundamentals, the indian economy is well
established in a safe place and emerges as a ‘star’
among its global peers.
union Budget 2023-24 is bold in its ideas yet
conservative in its calculus, ambitious in its strategies
and firmly anchored in reality. i t successfully
captures the uncertainties enshrouding the global
macroeconomic outlook while providing a road map
for fostering resilience and accelerating growth as
the indian economy moves towards Amrit Kaal.
this budget is being hailed as a 'Budget for
All', along the lines of Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas
(with everyone, for the development of all), as it
has something to offer to all sections of society.
the focus of the budget has transitioned from
facilitating recovery of the Covid-affected economy
in the last two years to laying down both hard and
soft tracks for increasing economies of scale and
ensuring long-term growth.
the document provides a clear vision, as given
by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, of the kind of
society india aspires to be in 2047. india@100 will
rest on the pillars of inclusivity and prosperity,
where fruits of development reach all regions and
citizens, especially our youth, women, farmers,
other Backward Classes, Scheduled Castes, and
Scheduled tribes. As reflected through the first two
priorities of “inclusive development” and “reaching
the last mile” , the budget lays out several measures
for empowering vulnerable tribal groups, women,
youth, and micro, small and medium enterprises.
t he budget has a strong focus on empowering
individuals and local entrepreneurs by leveraging
technology, and, to a lesser extent, finance. i t lays
out policies for empowering our youth and helping
the Amrit Peedhi (the golden generation) unlock
their potential. it draws attention to the importance
of skilling for youth, women, craftspersons and self-
help groups (SHgs) to facilitate job creation at scale.
Special mention must be made of PM Vishwakarma
KAushal Samman (PM–ViKAS) for skilling traditional
artisans and craftspersons, the Agriculture
Accelerator Fund to encourage agri startups by
young entrepreneurs in rural areas, and sector-
specific skilling and entrepreneurship development
for the tourism sector under the Dekho Apna Desh
initiative.
t he budget for fiscal year (FY) 24 prioritises youth
power and modern skill development through the
PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana 4.0 and the Amrit Peedhi
programme. the scheme will equip young people
with skills in coding, Artificial i ntelligence, and
robotics, among others and provide stipends through
the National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme. t he
tourism sector will benefit from a skilled workforce
and young entrepreneurs will receive marketing
support through the proposed unity malls (through
the one District, one Product initiative). t hese are all
the force multipliers budget wishes to unleash over
time to compensate for external headwinds.
overall, Budget 2023-24 is anchored in reality,
transparency, and achievable goals. it is economically
smart, reflects political confidence , is fiscally credible
and emphasises gender equality and inclusiveness.
it is an Amrit Kaal road map for india to achieve
glory. t he Budget 2023-24 is truly an Amrit Budget-
A foundation for Vishwaguru Bharat. ?
71 March 2023
he budget plays an important role in
the overall development and socio-
economic transformation of the
country. the impact of the budget
should not be understood on the basis of the
amount of fund/total fund allocated to various
sectors and departments, rather needs to be
evaluated how a particular expenditure would
affect the country’s long-term growth in terms of
inclusive and sustainable development. From an
economic perspective, the impact of the budget
must be reviewed from the viewpoint of fiscal
deficit and capital expenditure. the development
of our nation depends upon fiscal discipline and
fiscal consolidation.
Fiscal deficit and a nalysis
Fiscal deficit indicates the total borrowing
requirements of a country during a fiscal year.
It is used as an instrument to measure fiscal
discipline and sets the fiscal roadmap of the
country in terms of its current needs and future
liabilities. t his furnishes a more holistic view of
the government’s funding situation in terms of
borrowings.
Fiscal deFicit policy shiFt
and sUstainaBle development T
A country’s budget is not just a government’s receipts-expenditure
statement but a potent tool that determines the country’s destiny and sets
the roadmap for fiscal sustainability. The success of a budget is measured
by the outcome and its impact on the economy as a whole, not just by
the total outlay. Over the years, due to global uncertainty and internal
economic upheavals, especially post-Covid, fiscal policy intervention has
become inevitable to ascertain a sustainable growth trajectory.
dr amiya KUmar mohapatra The author is Professor, Jaipuria Institute of Management, Indore. He has co-authored five books and published
twenty-five edited books. He has also published more than 100 articles/research papers in various indexed
journals/magazines/books/newspapers of repute. Email: amiyacademics@gmail.com
the extent and magnitude of fiscal deficit is
determined by two components: revenue deficit
and capital expenditure. in the Budget 2023-24,
the proposed fiscal deficit is 5.9 per cent of gDP
while it is 6.4 per cent for FY 2022-23. Considering
the post-Covid impact, global headwinds, russia-
ukraine war, and other geopolitical tensions,
trading on a fiscal deficit of 5.9 per cent is not too
high, yet will remain a cause for concern. However,
the government has to ensure that it does not
deviate from the estimated deficit, otherwise it may
escalate the economic crisis, leading to inflation and
other fiscal disturbances. Further the government
must spend on investment and welfare schemes
to foster faster income, output and employment in
the path of fiscal sustainability. only then would the
higher fiscal deficit provision be justified, which is
over and above 3 per cent of gDP as prescribed by
FrBMA-2003.
the seriousness of achieving fiscal discipline
rests on how to address the gap between the
estimated and the actual fiscal deficit so as to get
the desired result. Despite of all the effort and trade-
offs, adherence to a high fiscal deficit over a period
Page 5
67 March 2023
he stable, consistent, inclusive and
gender-oriented budget reflected
india’s momentum and potential.
Several measures have been
announced in the budget to empower vulnerable
tribal groups, women, youth, and micro, small
and medium enterprises. in addition, the budget
considers the uncertainties prevailing in the global
macroeconomic outlook and provides a road map
for fostering resilience and accelerating growth as
the indian economy moves towards Amrit Kaal.
inclusive development ensures that all
marginalised and excluded groups are stakeholders
in development processes. india is an inexhaustible
engine of economic development and opportunities.
t he stable, consistent, inclusive and gender-oriented
budget reflected i ndia’s momentum and potential.
this year’s budget was remarkable for its clarity,
equity, simplicity and effectiveness.
empowering Women
gender Budgeting is a powerful tool for
achieving gender mainstreaming to ensure that
the development benefits reach women as much
saBKa saath saBKa viKas
throUgh Union BUdget
T
Focused on empowering women, developing the skills of the youth,
providing funds for developing tribal infrastructure and improving
employment opportunities – the budget has underlined the foremost
priorities of the government in terms of taking the development
benefits to the vulnerable sections.
dr shahin raZi naUshin raZi UGC Emeritus Fellow and Visiting Professor, Arka Jain University. Email: shahin.razi@gmail.com
Research Scholar. Email: naushin.razi.1@gmail.com
as men. the rationale for gender budgeting arises
from the recognition of the fact that national budget
impact men and women differently through the
pattern of resource allocation. Women constitute
48% of india’s population, but they lag behind men
on many social indicators like health, education,
economic opportunities, etc; thus, gender budgeting
is important.
Focused on empowering women, developing
the skills of the youth, providing funds for developing
tribal infrastructure and improving employment
opportunities – the budget did a lot to promote
the notion of equity and give every indian the
opportunity to reach their full potential. to upskill
the country’s youth for domestic and international
opportunities, 30 advanced skilling centres are
envisaged which will open new avenues for the
youth to get highly skilled jobs.
new Saving instruments
t he union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman
announced a new small savings scheme with a fixed
interest rate and fixed tenure to encourage more
savings among women and girls.
68 March 2023
to commemorate Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav,
a one-time new small savings scheme, Mahila
Samman Savings Certificate, will be available for
two years up to March 2025. it will offer a deposit
facility of up to rs 2 lakh in the name of women or
girls for a tenure of 2 years at a fixed interest rate of
7.5 percent with a partial withdrawal option.
At present only Sukanya Samriddhi Scheme
allows a guardian to open the account of a girl
child with a maximum investment limit of rs 1.5
lakh in a financial year and an interest rate of 7.6
per cent per annum.
t he Finance Minister also announced changes
to the Senior Citizens Savings Scheme doubling
the maximum deposit limit under the scheme. t he
maximum deposit limit for Senior Citizen Savings
Scheme will be enhanced from rs 15 lakh to
rs 30 lakh.
An individual above 60 years of age or retired
civilian employees above 55 years can open an
account under SCSS Scheme can subject to the
condition that investment must be made within
one month of receipt of retirement benefits.
retired defence employees above 50 years but
below 60 years can also subscribe to SCSS subject
to the condition that investment must be made
within one month of receipt of retirement benefits.
SCSS has a tenure of 5 years and offers an interest
rate of 8 per cent per annum.
While the investment limit has been doubled,
the tax exemption of rs 15 lakh available on SCSS
investment under section 80C remains unchanged.
increasing the limit of SCSS from rs 15 lakh to
rs 30 lakh is an important announcement to help
senior citizens and retired investors plan their
investments in safe instruments. the limit for the
monthly income account scheme has also been
enhanced. the maximum deposit limit for Monthly
income Account Scheme will be enhanced from rs
4.5 lakh to rs 9 lakh for a single account and from rs
9 lakh to rs 15 lakh for a joint account.
MiS account can be opened by a single individual
or jointly up to 3 adults or a guardian on behalf of
a minor. t he investments are in multiple of rs 1000
and the scheme offers an interest rate of 7.1 per cent
per annum payable monthly.
MiS is one of the most popular small savings
schemes with an outstanding amount of rs
234825 crore as of February 2022 and SCSS had an
outstanding of rs 117239 crore as of February 2022.
the total small savings outstanding as of February
2022 was rs 1426737 crore.
the budget has envisaged the world’s largest
food storage scheme within the co-operative sector.
the budget has also announced an ambitious
scheme to form new primary co-operatives. it will
expand the area of milk & fish production along with
agriculture, thus helping farmers, those engaged
in annual husbandry and fishermen and women
farmers to get better prices for their produce.
t he budget also promotes green growth, green
economy, green infrastructure and green jobs for a
sustainable future.
through this year’s budget, the indian
government has reaffirmed its commitment towards
inclusive development underlining the seven
priorities for the ‘Amrit Kaal’. the union Budget
focuses on empowering youth and reaching the last
mile through schemes like PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana
4.0, which aim to skilling lakhs of youth in new
courses like coding, Ai, robotics, 3D printing, etc.
Further, PM Vishwa Karma Kaushal Samman
package for helping traditional artisans and
craftspeople and PM PVtg (Particularly Vulnerable
tribal groups) programme to support the tribal
groups has been announced to enable economic
69 March 2023
upliftment of backward and marginalized sections
of the population.
the Centre’s focus on green growth – to help
reduce india’s carbon intensity and generate large-
scale green jobs is bound to make the economy
future ready. Apart from the recently launched green
hydrogen mission, the government’s announcement
of customs duty exemption on importing machinery
required to manufacture electric vehicle batteries
will be a boon for green mobility. Further, to promote
green fuel, the government has announced central
excise duty exemption for blended compressed
natural gas, in addition to other measures for
promoting the circular economy, such as establishing
500 new waste-to-wealth plants.
At a time when the global economy is facing
headwinds, it is heartening to see that the
government has not shied away from supporting
domestic economic activity by maintaining the
capex support but has gone a step ahead and
revised the direct tax slabs to support consumption
activity, especially among the indian middle class.
this feat becomes even more commendable in
cognizance of the fact that the government has
adhered to its fiscal deficit target of 6.4% of gDP
for FY 23 and intends to reduce this to 5.9% in FY
24, thereby sticking to its path of fiscal prudence.
overall, with this pragmatic budget and its
strong fundamentals, the indian economy is well
established in a safe place and emerges as a ‘star’
among its global peers.
union Budget 2023-24 is bold in its ideas yet
conservative in its calculus, ambitious in its strategies
and firmly anchored in reality. i t successfully
captures the uncertainties enshrouding the global
macroeconomic outlook while providing a road map
for fostering resilience and accelerating growth as
the indian economy moves towards Amrit Kaal.
this budget is being hailed as a 'Budget for
All', along the lines of Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas
(with everyone, for the development of all), as it
has something to offer to all sections of society.
the focus of the budget has transitioned from
facilitating recovery of the Covid-affected economy
in the last two years to laying down both hard and
soft tracks for increasing economies of scale and
ensuring long-term growth.
the document provides a clear vision, as given
by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, of the kind of
society india aspires to be in 2047. india@100 will
rest on the pillars of inclusivity and prosperity,
where fruits of development reach all regions and
citizens, especially our youth, women, farmers,
other Backward Classes, Scheduled Castes, and
Scheduled tribes. As reflected through the first two
priorities of “inclusive development” and “reaching
the last mile” , the budget lays out several measures
for empowering vulnerable tribal groups, women,
youth, and micro, small and medium enterprises.
t he budget has a strong focus on empowering
individuals and local entrepreneurs by leveraging
technology, and, to a lesser extent, finance. i t lays
out policies for empowering our youth and helping
the Amrit Peedhi (the golden generation) unlock
their potential. it draws attention to the importance
of skilling for youth, women, craftspersons and self-
help groups (SHgs) to facilitate job creation at scale.
Special mention must be made of PM Vishwakarma
KAushal Samman (PM–ViKAS) for skilling traditional
artisans and craftspersons, the Agriculture
Accelerator Fund to encourage agri startups by
young entrepreneurs in rural areas, and sector-
specific skilling and entrepreneurship development
for the tourism sector under the Dekho Apna Desh
initiative.
t he budget for fiscal year (FY) 24 prioritises youth
power and modern skill development through the
PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana 4.0 and the Amrit Peedhi
programme. the scheme will equip young people
with skills in coding, Artificial i ntelligence, and
robotics, among others and provide stipends through
the National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme. t he
tourism sector will benefit from a skilled workforce
and young entrepreneurs will receive marketing
support through the proposed unity malls (through
the one District, one Product initiative). t hese are all
the force multipliers budget wishes to unleash over
time to compensate for external headwinds.
overall, Budget 2023-24 is anchored in reality,
transparency, and achievable goals. it is economically
smart, reflects political confidence , is fiscally credible
and emphasises gender equality and inclusiveness.
it is an Amrit Kaal road map for india to achieve
glory. t he Budget 2023-24 is truly an Amrit Budget-
A foundation for Vishwaguru Bharat. ?
71 March 2023
he budget plays an important role in
the overall development and socio-
economic transformation of the
country. the impact of the budget
should not be understood on the basis of the
amount of fund/total fund allocated to various
sectors and departments, rather needs to be
evaluated how a particular expenditure would
affect the country’s long-term growth in terms of
inclusive and sustainable development. From an
economic perspective, the impact of the budget
must be reviewed from the viewpoint of fiscal
deficit and capital expenditure. the development
of our nation depends upon fiscal discipline and
fiscal consolidation.
Fiscal deficit and a nalysis
Fiscal deficit indicates the total borrowing
requirements of a country during a fiscal year.
It is used as an instrument to measure fiscal
discipline and sets the fiscal roadmap of the
country in terms of its current needs and future
liabilities. t his furnishes a more holistic view of
the government’s funding situation in terms of
borrowings.
Fiscal deFicit policy shiFt
and sUstainaBle development T
A country’s budget is not just a government’s receipts-expenditure
statement but a potent tool that determines the country’s destiny and sets
the roadmap for fiscal sustainability. The success of a budget is measured
by the outcome and its impact on the economy as a whole, not just by
the total outlay. Over the years, due to global uncertainty and internal
economic upheavals, especially post-Covid, fiscal policy intervention has
become inevitable to ascertain a sustainable growth trajectory.
dr amiya KUmar mohapatra The author is Professor, Jaipuria Institute of Management, Indore. He has co-authored five books and published
twenty-five edited books. He has also published more than 100 articles/research papers in various indexed
journals/magazines/books/newspapers of repute. Email: amiyacademics@gmail.com
the extent and magnitude of fiscal deficit is
determined by two components: revenue deficit
and capital expenditure. in the Budget 2023-24,
the proposed fiscal deficit is 5.9 per cent of gDP
while it is 6.4 per cent for FY 2022-23. Considering
the post-Covid impact, global headwinds, russia-
ukraine war, and other geopolitical tensions,
trading on a fiscal deficit of 5.9 per cent is not too
high, yet will remain a cause for concern. However,
the government has to ensure that it does not
deviate from the estimated deficit, otherwise it may
escalate the economic crisis, leading to inflation and
other fiscal disturbances. Further the government
must spend on investment and welfare schemes
to foster faster income, output and employment in
the path of fiscal sustainability. only then would the
higher fiscal deficit provision be justified, which is
over and above 3 per cent of gDP as prescribed by
FrBMA-2003.
the seriousness of achieving fiscal discipline
rests on how to address the gap between the
estimated and the actual fiscal deficit so as to get
the desired result. Despite of all the effort and trade-
offs, adherence to a high fiscal deficit over a period
72 March 2023
of time reflects the fiscal distress of an economy.
Fiscal deficit and c apital expenditure t rade-off
in spite of the well-placed FrBMA-2003,
recommended fiscal deficit of 3.0 per cent of gDP
is still a target even after 20 years. it may be due
to a lack of seriousness or various macroeconomic
disturbances and economic instabilities. However,
to reduce its ill effects, government has found an
alternative of higher capital expenditure in recent
years. to lessen the negative impact of the fiscal
deficit, the government has planned for higher
capital expenditure of rs 10 lakh crore, which is
33 per cent higher than last year’s figure and 3.3
per cent of gDP. this will be almost three times
the outlay in 2019-20. t he overall ‘effective Capital
expenditure’ of the Centre is budgeted at rs 13.7
lakh crore, which will be 4.5 per cent of gDP .
in the current context, a need for higher public
spending is believed to be crucial for providing the
required impetus to economic growth. A sustained
increase in investment will strengthen infrastructure
including power, transport and railways and
contribute to higher gDP/employment/output
through its multiplier effects and crowd-in private
investments, and provide a cushion against global
headwinds. it will enhance the long-term supply-
side productive capacity and will promote exports.
this is further justified in terms of including path
breaking policies, PM gatiShaki, National Logistics
Policy, PLi Schemes and also help strengthen
manufacturing infra-base and value-chain
efficiency. i n this Budget, more fiscal freedom has
been given to all the states and accordingly each
state has been allowed to have the leverage of a
fiscal deficit of 3.5 percent of their SgDP .
revenue deficit and Sustainable Path
Revenue deficit reflects the excess of revenue
expenditure over revenue receipts of the
government. A higher revenue deficit compels
the government to adhere to borrowings to
meet the revenue shortfall. the government has
proposed a tight revenue deficit of 2.9 per cent for
FY 2023-24 compared to 3.8 per cent in FY 2022-
23, despite various pressing needs of social sectors,
welfare schemes, food and fertiliser subsidies, etc.
t he sustained decrease in revenue deficit over the
recent years is undoubtedly a welcome step for
fiscal stability and consolidation.
Although the mark/target per cent of revenue
deficit is neither clearly spelt-out nor binding by
any fiscal and regulatory framework/act, yet played
a decisive role in setting the fiscal deficit and the
road for fiscal prudence and fiscal sustainability.
therefore, fiscal prudence depends on how the
government manages the revenue deficit in
particular, and especially the revenue expenditure.
r evenue deficit can be reduced by higher revenue
mobilisation through tax buoyancy & wider tax
base and with quality tax administration and by
reprioritising expenditure through expenditure
t able 1: estimated Fiscal deficit (Fd ) as per cent of gdP
year (Be)
2004-05
2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
2010-11
2011-12
2012-13
2013-14
2014-15
2015-16
2016-17
2017-18
2018-19
2019-20
2020-21
2021-22
2022-23
2023-24
Fiscal Deficit (%)
4.4
4.3
3.8
3.3
2.5
6.8
5.5
4.6
5.1
4.8
4.1
3.9
3.5
3.2
3.3
3.3
3.5
6.8
6.4
5.9
Source: Author’s Compilation from Budget Documents of GoI
t able 2: estimated revenue deficit (rd ) as per cent of gdP
year (Be)
2004-05
2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
2010-11
2011-12
2012-13
2013-14
2014-15
2015-16
2016-17
2017-18
2018-19
2019-20
2020-21
2021-22
2022-23
2023-24
r evenue Deficit (%)
2.5
2.7
2.1
1.5
1.0
4.8
4.0
3.4
3.4
3.3
2.9
2.8
2.3
1.9
2.2
2.3
2.7
5.1
3.8
2.9
Source: Author’s Compilation from Budget Document of GoI
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