Union Budget — India’s Financial Blueprint
How India plans its annual finances — Revenue Receipts (tax + non-tax), Capital Receipts (borrowings + disinvestment), Revenue vs Capital Expenditure, and the 3 deficit concepts (Revenue, Fiscal, Primary).
Banky Reads India’s Biggest Bill! 💸
Every February 1, the Finance Minister presents India’s annual spending plan — the Union Budget. As a banker, EVERY budget announcement affects your bank: tax changes, PSL priorities, deposit schemes, and deficit financing.
Why Read This Chapter?
Budget announcements directly change your bank’s business
Exam Marks
2-4 questions — revenue vs capital receipts/expenditure, fiscal deficit formula, primary deficit (fiscal minus interest), FRBM Act. Definitions + formulas = guaranteed marks!
Career Growth
Senior bankers analyse budgets to set annual business plans. Understanding deficit and borrowing = understanding government bond markets
Real Life
You’ll understand every budget headline — why FM promises subsidies, what fiscal deficit means, and why it matters
How Will It Benefit You?
Real career advantages
What Is This Chapter About?
30-second summary
Key Definitions — Banky Asks, Mentor Explains
Every term explained like you’re 10
Banky’s Understanding: Presented by Union Finance Minister in Parliament. Changed from last working day of February to February 1 (since 2016) — to give government time to implement before April 1 (new financial year). Rail Budget merged with Union Budget since 2017. The budget has two parts: Receipts (income) and Expenditure (spending). When expenditure exceeds receipts → deficit → government must borrow.
Banky’s Understanding: Tax Revenue: Corporation tax, Income tax, GST (CGST + IGST + Compensation Cess), Customs, Excise Duties, Service Tax. Net Tax Revenue = Gross Tax Revenue – NCCD transferred to National Calamity Contingency Fund – States’ Share. Non-Tax Revenue: Interest receipts, Dividend & Profits (from PSUs like RBI, SBI), External grants, other receipts, UT receipts. Revenue receipts DON’T create any liability or reduce assets.
Banky’s Understanding: Capital receipts either create a liability (borrowings) or reduce an asset (disinvestment, loan recovery). Non-Debt Capital Receipts: Recovery of loans, Disinvestment receipts. Debt Capital Receipts: Market borrowings (G-sec + T-bills), Securities against small savings, State Provident Funds, External debt. Total Capital Receipts = Non-Debt + Debt receipts.
Banky’s Understanding: Spending that does NOT create assets or reduce liabilities. Includes: Interest payments (biggest chunk!), Defence (revenue component), Subsidies (fertiliser, food, petroleum), Grants to States, Pensions, Police, Social Services, Economic Services, Postal Deficit. This is money CONSUMED — not invested. It’s the government’s ‘running cost.’
Banky’s Understanding: Spending that creates assets (infrastructure, equipment) or reduces liabilities (repaying loans). Includes: Defence (capital — buying weapons, ships), Other capital outlay, Loans to Public Enterprises, Loans to State/UT Governments. Capital expenditure is productive — it adds to the country’s asset base. Government’s Effective Capital Expenditure = Capital Expenditure + Grants in Aid for creation of capital assets.
Banky’s Understanding: Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure – Revenue Receipts. When the government’s regular spending exceeds its regular income. This means the government is borrowing to meet day-to-day expenses — NOT good! Effective Revenue Deficit = Revenue Deficit – Grants in Aid for capital asset creation. ERD gives a truer picture by excluding grants that ultimately create assets.
Banky’s Understanding: Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure – (Revenue Receipts + Non-Debt Capital Receipts). Or simply: Total Expenditure – Total Revenue (excluding borrowings). This is THE most important budget number — it tells you how much the government needs to BORROW this year. FY 2022-23 Budget Estimate: fiscal deficit = 6.4% of GDP. FRBM Act targets reducing this to 3%.
Banky’s Understanding: Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments. Why subtract interest? Because interest payments are on OLD debt — not new spending decisions. Primary deficit shows how much NEW borrowing the government needs BEYOND servicing old debt. If primary deficit is zero, the government is only borrowing to pay interest on past loans — not for any new spending. Net fiscal deficit = Gross fiscal deficit – Net lending.
Chapter Explained in Simple Stories
So easy even Banky’s nephew understands
💰 Block 1: Where Does India’s Money Come From? — Receipts
The government’s income comes from two pockets:
👛 Pocket 1 — Revenue Receipts (Regular Income): Money the government EARNS regularly without creating debt or selling assets. This includes: Tax Revenue (income tax, corporate tax, GST, customs) and Non-Tax Revenue (interest received, RBI/PSU dividends, external grants). Revenue receipts are like your monthly salary — regular, predictable, no borrowing involved.
👜 Pocket 2 — Capital Receipts (Borrowings + Asset Sales): Money that creates a liability OR reduces an asset. This includes: Debt receipts (G-sec borrowings, small savings securities, external debt — this is the government taking LOANS) and Non-debt receipts (disinvestment — selling govt shares in PSUs, recovery of loans given earlier). Capital receipts are like selling your old bike or taking a personal loan — it brings cash but at a cost.
Total Receipts = Revenue Receipts + Capital Receipts
💸 Block 2: Where Does India’s Money Go? — Expenditure
The government spends from two accounts:
📋 Account 1 — Revenue Expenditure (Running Costs): Day-to-day expenses that DON’T create assets. Interest payments (biggest item — paying old debt!), subsidies (food, fertiliser, petroleum), defence salaries, pensions, grants to states, social services, police. This is money CONSUMED — like paying your electricity bill.
🏗️ Account 2 — Capital Expenditure (Investment): Spending that CREATES assets or REDUCES liabilities. Defence equipment purchases, infrastructure projects, loans to PSUs and states. This is money INVESTED — like buying a house. Capital expenditure builds India’s future.
Total Expenditure = Revenue Expenditure + Capital Expenditure
Key insight: India’s biggest revenue expenditure item is interest payments — paying for past borrowings! This is why fiscal discipline (FRBM Act) matters.
📊 Block 3: The 3 Deficits — Revenue, Fiscal, Primary
When the government spends MORE than it earns → DEFICIT. Three types:
🔴 Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure – Revenue Receipts: Are we spending more on daily expenses than we earn? If yes, we’re borrowing to eat — BAD sign. Effective Revenue Deficit = Revenue Deficit minus Grants for capital assets.
🟠 Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure – Total Revenue (excluding borrowings): THE most watched number! Shows total borrowing need. FY23 Budget: 6.4% of GDP (₹16.61 lakh crore). FRBM Act targets reducing to 3%.
🟡 Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments: Strips out old debt servicing. Shows how much government borrows for NEW purposes. If primary deficit = 0, government is only borrowing to pay old interest — no new debt!
Relationship: Revenue Deficit ⊂ Fiscal Deficit ⊃ Primary Deficit. Fiscal deficit is always the LARGEST of the three.
Exam Angle — Every Testable Point
All facts, numbers, definitions JAIIB tests
✅ Must-Know Facts — Highest Probability
- Union Budget: presented February 1 (changed from last working day of Feb, since 2016)
- Rail Budget merged with Union Budget since 2017
- Revenue Receipts: Tax Revenue (net) + Non-Tax Revenue — does NOT create liability or reduce assets
- Net Tax Revenue = Gross Tax Revenue – NCCD (National Calamity Contingency Fund) – States’ Share
- Non-Tax Revenue: interest receipts, dividend & profits (PSUs), external grants, UT receipts
- Capital Receipts: Non-Debt (recovery of loans + disinvestment) + Debt (borrowings)
- Revenue Expenditure: interest payments, defence revenue, subsidies, pensions, grants — DOES NOT create assets
- Capital Expenditure: defence capital, loans to PSEs, infrastructure — CREATES assets or REDUCES liabilities
- Total Receipts = Revenue Receipts + Capital Receipts
- Total Expenditure = Revenue Expenditure + Capital Expenditure (also: Non-Plan + Plan)
- Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure – Revenue Receipts
- Effective Revenue Deficit = Revenue Deficit – Grants in Aid for capital asset creation
- Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure – (Revenue Receipts + Non-Debt Capital Receipts) = how much to BORROW
- Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments — shows NEW borrowing need (excluding old debt service)
- Net Fiscal Deficit = Gross Fiscal Deficit – Net Lending
- FY 2022-23 Budget: Fiscal Deficit = 6.4% of GDP
- FRBM Act 2003 — fiscal discipline — targets reducing fiscal deficit to 3% of GDP
- N.K. Singh Committee on FRBM: recommended debt-to-GDP ratio of 60% (centre 40% + states 20%) by 2023
- Interest Receipts is NON-TAX revenue (odd one out among customs, service tax, income tax)
- Loans to Public Enterprises is CAPITAL expenditure (odd one out among pensions, subsidies, police)
- NCCD = National Council on Crime and Delinquency is the CORRECT full form (tricky!)
📝 Previous Year Questions
Memory Tricks That STICK
Lock every fact permanently
🧠 Trick 1 — Budget Date Change
🧠 Trick 2 — Revenue vs Capital
🧠 Trick 3 — 3 Deficits
🧠 Trick 4 — Fiscal Deficit Formula
🧠 Trick 5 — Primary = Fiscal – Interest
🧠 Trick 6 — Interest Receipts Trap
🧠 Trick 7 — Loans to PSEs = Capital
🧠 Trick 8 — NCCD Trap
Visual Summary — Chapter Map
Entire chapter in one diagram
Flash Revision — Last-Minute Cards
Read these 10 minutes before exam
⚡ Chapter 19 Complete — Union Budget
- Union Budget: February 1 (since 2016) | Rail Budget merged since 2017
- Revenue Receipts: Tax (net) + Non-Tax — regular income, no debt created
- Capital Receipts: Debt (borrowings) + Non-Debt (disinvestment + loan recovery) — creates liability or reduces assets
- Revenue Expenditure: interest, subsidies, pensions — running costs, NO asset creation
- Capital Expenditure: defence capital, loans, infra — CREATES assets, investment spending
- Revenue Deficit: Rev Exp – Rev Rec | Fiscal Deficit: Total Exp – Total Rev (excl borrowing) = borrowing need
- Primary Deficit: Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments — shows NEW borrowing after old debt service
- FY23 Fiscal Deficit: 6.4% of GDP | FRBM Act 2003 targets 3%
- MODULE B COMPLETE! 8 chapters from Economics fundamentals to Union Budget — all done! 🎉
Banky says: “MODULE B COMPLETE! 8 chapters, economics fundamentals to Union Budget — I OWN this subject!” 🎉🏆
You’ve mastered everything from Adam Smith’s definition to GDP formulas to Union Budget deficits! Module B = CONQUERED. That’s 19 of 45 IE&IFS chapters done. On to Module C — Indian Financial Architecture (RBI, Banking Laws, NBFCs, Insurance)! 💪🔥🇮🇳