Union Budget
The annual financial statement of India. Revenue receipts vs capital receipts, tax vs non-tax revenue, plan vs non-plan expenditure, and the four deficit concepts — revenue deficit, effective revenue deficit, fiscal deficit and primary deficit — explained clearly with formulas and PYQs.
Banky hears the Finance Minister on TV — and understands nothing! 📺
Every February 1st, the Finance Minister says: “fiscal deficit will be 5.9% of GDP.” Banky’s customers ask: “What does that mean? Is it good or bad?” After Chapter 19, Banky will know exactly what every budget term means — and can explain it to customers!
What Is the Union Budget?
Annual financial statement of the Government of India
The annual budget of the country is called the Union Budget. It is presented by the Union Finance Minister in Parliament. It was presented on the last working day of February until 2016. Since 2017, it is presented on 1st February — so the government gets time to implement it from 1st April when the new financial year starts. The Rail Budget, which was earlier presented separately by the Union Railways Minister, has been merged with the Union Budget from 2017.
Union Budget has two sides: Receipts (Revenue + Capital) and Expenditure (Revenue + Capital). Fiscal deficit = Total expenditure minus total receipts excluding borrowings.
Receipts — Revenue and Capital in Detail
Tax vs Non-tax revenue | Debt vs Non-debt capital receipts
TOTAL RECEIPTS of Government of India
Total Revenue Receipts + Capital Receipts + Drawdown of Cash Balance
A. Revenue Receipts
- Tax Revenue (Gross):
- Corporation Tax
- Income Tax
- Wealth Tax
- GST (CGST + IGST + GST Compensation Cess)
- Customs
- Union Excise Duties (largely replaced by GST)
- Service Tax
- Taxes of Union Territories
- Net Tax Revenue = Gross Tax Revenue (−) NCCD transferred to NCCF (−) States’ Share
- Non-Tax Revenue:
- Interest Receipts (Q2 PYQ — odd one out among tax items)
- Dividend and Profits
- External Grants
- Other Non-Tax Revenue
- Receipts of Union Territories
B. Capital Receipts
- Non-Debt Receipts:
- Recoveries of Loans & Advances (Q3 PYQ — odd one out among debt items)
- Disinvestment Receipts
- Debt Receipts:
- Market Borrowings (G-Sec + T-Bills)
- Securities against Small Savings
- State Provident Funds
- Other Receipts (Internal Debts + Public Account)
- External Debt
- Capital Receipts = Non-debt Receipts + Debt Receipts
- Financing of Fiscal Deficit = Debt Receipts + Drawdown of Cash Balance
What is NCCD? (Q1 PYQ)
NCCD = National Calamity Contingent Duty. It is a duty levied on certain goods (petroleum products, polyester yarn, etc.) — the revenue from which is transferred to the National Calamity Contingency Fund (NCCF) (also called National Disaster Response Fund — NDRF). This amount is deducted from Gross Tax Revenue to arrive at Net Tax Revenue. Q1 PYQ answer: (a) — “National Calamity Contingent Duty” — note: the PDF says “National council on Crime and Delinquency” is option (a) but the official NCCD expansion in budget documents is National Calamity Contingent Duty. Since the PYQ answer is (d) “None of the above,” the options given are all wrong and NCCD = National Calamity Contingent Duty.
Expenditure — Non-Plan and Plan
What the Government spends money on
Non-Plan Revenue Expenditure
- Interest Payments and Prepayment Premium
- Defence
- Subsidies (fertiliser, food, petroleum)
- Grants to State and U.T. Governments
- Pensions (Q4 PYQ: odd one out from capital expenditure list)
- Police
- Assistance to States from NCCF
- Economic Services (Agriculture, Industry, Power, Transport, etc.)
- Other General Services (Tax Collection, External Affairs, etc.)
- Social Services (Education, Health, Broadcasting)
- Postal Deficit
- Expenditure of Union Territories without Legislature
- Grants to Foreign Governments
Non-Plan Capital Expenditure
- Defence
- Other Non-plan Capital Outlay
- Loans to Public Enterprises (Q4 PYQ: odd one out)
- Loans to State and U.T. Governments
- Loans to Foreign Governments
- Others
- Non-plan Expenditure = Revenue Non-Plan + Capital Non-Plan
- Plan Expenditure (Revenue + Capital):
- Central Plan
- Central Assistance for State and U.T. Plans
- Total Expenditure = Non-Plan Expenditure + Plan Expenditure
Deficit Concepts — The Four Deficits
Revenue deficit → Effective Revenue deficit → Fiscal deficit → Primary deficit
1. Revenue Deficit
Excess of revenue expenditure over revenue receipts. Indicates the government is spending more on day-to-day operations than it earns from recurring sources. A revenue deficit means the government is borrowing to fund its current (non-asset creating) expenses — which is considered fiscally unsound. All revenue deficit is bad because it means NO assets are being created with the borrowed money.
2. Effective Revenue Deficit
Introduced to correct for the fact that some “grants” — though classified as revenue expenditure — are actually used to create capital assets (like grants to states for building roads/infrastructure). By subtracting these grants, the Effective Revenue Deficit gives a truer picture of the deficit that funds genuinely non-asset-creating expenses. Always lower than Revenue Deficit.
3. Fiscal Deficit
Excess of total expenditure over total receipts excluding borrowings. In other words: Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure − Total Revenue (excluding borrowings). This is the most widely used deficit measure. It shows the government’s total borrowing requirement for the year. It is financed by Debt Receipts + Drawdown of Cash Balance. The FRBM Act targets fiscal deficit as % of GDP.
4. Primary Deficit (Q5 PYQ)
The primary deficit removes interest payments from fiscal deficit. This is because interest payments are the result of past borrowings — not current policy decisions. Primary deficit shows the deficit that the current government’s policies are creating, independent of interest burden from the past. If primary deficit = 0, it means the government is borrowing only to pay interest on old debt. Net Primary Deficit = Gross Fiscal Deficit − Net Interest Payments (Q5 PYQ: answer = c).
⚖️ FRBM Act — Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act
All Formulas at a Glance
Quick-reference table for all budget calculations
| Term | Formula / Definition | PYQ Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Tax Revenue | Corporation Tax + Income Tax + Wealth Tax + GST + Customs + Union Excise Duties + Service Tax + Taxes of UTs | Q2 PYQ: Interest Receipts is NOT tax revenue — it’s Non-Tax Revenue |
| Net Tax Revenue | Gross Tax Revenue (−) NCCD transferred to NCCF (−) States’ Share | Q1 PYQ: NCCD = National Calamity Contingent Duty |
| Total Revenue Receipts | Net Tax Revenue + Total Non-Tax Revenue | — |
| Capital Receipts | Non-debt Receipts (Disinvestment + Loan Recovery) + Debt Receipts (Borrowings) | Q3 PYQ: Recoveries of Loans = Non-debt; Securities against Small Savings, State Provident Funds, Other Receipts = Debt |
| Total Receipts | Total Revenue Receipts + Capital Receipts + Drawdown of Cash Balance | — |
| Financing of Fiscal Deficit | Debt Receipts + Drawdown of Cash Balance | — |
| Revenue Deficit | Revenue Expenditure − Revenue Receipts | — |
| Effective Revenue Deficit (ERD) | Revenue Deficit − Grants in Aid for creation of capital assets | — |
| Fiscal Deficit | Total Expenditure − (Revenue Receipts + Non-debt Capital Receipts) = Total Expenditure − Total Revenue excluding borrowings | Key FRBM target: 3% of GDP |
| Primary Deficit | Fiscal Deficit − Interest Payments | Q5 PYQ: Net primary deficit = Gross fiscal deficit − Net interest payments (answer = c) |
| Effective Capital Expenditure | Capital Expenditure + Grants in Aid for capital assets | Broader measure of govt capital spending |
| Net RBI Credit to Central Govt | Increase in RBI’s holdings of: (i) Treasury Bills + (ii) GoI dated securities + (iii) Rupee coins + (iv) Loans from RBI to Central Govt since April 1, 1997 — adjusted for changes in Centre’s cash balances with RBI | — |
Exam Angle Points and PYQs
All 5 PYQ answers + critical budget facts
✅ Must-Know Union Budget Facts
- NCCD = National Calamity Contingent Duty (Q1 PYQ: answer = d “None of the above” since the options given are wrong | correct expansion = National Calamity Contingent Duty, transferred to NCCF/NDRF)
- Interest Receipts = Non-Tax Revenue (Q2 PYQ: odd one out from tax items — answer = c | Customs, Service Tax, Income Tax are tax revenues; Interest Receipts = non-tax revenue)
- Recoveries of Loans & Advances = Non-Debt Capital Receipt (Q3 PYQ: odd one out = b | Securities against Small Savings, State Provident Funds, Other Receipts are all DEBT receipts; Recoveries of Loans = non-debt receipt)
- Loans to Public Enterprises = Capital Expenditure (Q4 PYQ: odd one out = a | Pensions, Subsidies, Police are revenue expenditure; Loans to Public Enterprises = capital expenditure)
- Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit − Net Lending (Q5 PYQ: answer = c “gross fiscal deficit and net lending” | Primary deficit = fiscal deficit − interest payments; Net primary deficit = gross fiscal deficit − net interest payments)
- Union Budget presentation date: Changed from last working day of February to 1st February (from 2017)
- Rail Budget merged with Union Budget: From 2017
- FRBM Act: Enacted 2003, in force 5 July 2004 | Fiscal deficit target: 3% of GDP
- Revenue Receipts are recurring and create NO liability (taxes, dividends) | Capital Receipts are non-recurring and either reduce assets or create liabilities
- Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure − Revenue Receipts | Government borrowing to fund current expenses — considered unsound
- Effective Revenue Deficit (ERD) = Revenue Deficit − Grants in Aid for capital assets | Always lower than Revenue Deficit
- Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure − (Revenue Receipts + Non-debt Capital Receipts) | Financed by Debt Receipts + Drawdown of Cash Balance
- Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit − Interest Payments | Shows current policy-driven deficit, stripped of past debt burden
- Non-Tax Revenue includes: Interest Receipts, Dividend and Profits, External Grants — these are NOT taxes
- Non-Debt Capital Receipts: Disinvestment receipts + Recoveries of Loans and Advances
- Debt Capital Receipts: Market borrowings (G-Sec + T-Bills), Securities against Small Savings, State Provident Funds, External Debt
- Fiscal Deficit is financed by: Debt Receipts + Drawdown of Cash Balance
- NK Singh Committee (2017): FRBM Review Committee | Recommended debt-GDP ratio of 60% as fiscal anchor | Centre 40% + States 20%
📝 All 5 PYQ Answers from PDF
Memory Tricks
Trick 1 — Revenue vs Capital Receipts
Trick 2 — The Four Deficits Chain
Trick 3 — Revenue Expenditure vs Capital Expenditure
Trick 4 — Budget Presentation Changes
Flash Cards and Summary
⚡ Chapter 19 Complete — Union Budget
- Union Budget = annual financial statement | Presented by Finance Minister | Presentation date: 1st February (from 2017) | Rail Budget merged from 2017
- Total Receipts = Revenue Receipts + Capital Receipts + Drawdown of Cash Balance
- Revenue Receipts = Net Tax Revenue + Non-Tax Revenue | Net Tax Revenue = Gross Tax Revenue − NCCD − States’ Share
- Tax Revenue: Corporation Tax, Income Tax, Wealth Tax, GST, Customs, Union Excise Duties, Service Tax | Non-Tax Revenue: Interest Receipts, Dividends, External Grants (Q2 PYQ: Interest Receipts = Non-Tax)
- Capital Receipts = Non-Debt (Disinvestment + Loan Recovery) + Debt (Market Borrowings, Small Savings, Provident Funds, External Debt)
- Recoveries of Loans = Non-Debt Capital Receipt (Q3 PYQ) | Small Savings, Provident Funds, Other Receipts = Debt Capital Receipts
- Revenue Expenditure = does NOT create assets (Pensions, Subsidies, Police, Interest Payments) | Capital Expenditure = creates assets or loans (Loans to Public Enterprises, Defence capital) | Q4 PYQ: Loans to Public Enterprises = Capital (odd one out)
- Total Expenditure = Non-Plan Expenditure + Plan Expenditure
- Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure − Revenue Receipts | Effective RD = RD − Grants for capital assets | Always: ERD < RD
- Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure − (Revenue Receipts + Non-debt Capital Receipts) | Financed by Debt Receipts + Drawdown of Cash Balance | FRBM target = 3% of GDP
- Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit − Interest Payments | Shows current year policy deficit, excludes past debt interest burden (Q5 PYQ)
- NCCD = National Calamity Contingent Duty (Q1 PYQ: answer = d, all given options wrong) | Transferred to NCCF/NDRF
- FRBM Act 2003 (in force 5 July 2004) | 3% GDP fiscal deficit target | NK Singh Committee 2017: debt-GDP ratio 60% anchor
Banky says: “Now when the Finance Minister says ‘fiscal deficit is 5.9% of GDP’ on TV — I know EXACTLY what that means!” 📺📊
All 5 PYQs answered | Revenue vs Capital clear | All 4 deficit formulas locked | Module B now 100% COMPLETE! 🎉💪