Fiscal Consolidation
- Definition: Fiscal consolidation refers to policies aimed at reducing government deficits and debt accumulation to ensure long-term economic stability.
- Objectives:
- Reduce fiscal deficits.
- Maintain sustainable public debt levels.
- Enhance macroeconomic stability.
- Methods:
- Reducing Expenditure: Cutting non-essential government spending, subsidies, and wasteful expenditures.
- Increasing Revenue: Enhancing tax collection, introducing new taxes, or broadening the tax base.
- Improving Efficiency: Promoting transparency, reducing corruption, and optimizing public sector operations.
Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act, 2003
- Objective: Ensure fiscal discipline and reduce fiscal and revenue deficits to promote macroeconomic stability.
- Fiscal Targets:
- Fiscal deficit: Reduce to 3% of GDP.
- Revenue deficit: Eliminate (later replaced with debt-to-GDP targets).
- Transparency: Mandates the government to present a medium-term fiscal policy, strategy, and risk disclosures to Parliament.
- Borrowing Limits: Restricts government borrowing to ensure sustainable debt levels.
- Escape Clause: Allows temporary deviation from targets during national emergencies, severe economic shocks, or natural disasters.
- Amendments (2018):
- Set debt-to-GDP targets:
- Central government: 40% by 2024-25.
- General government: 60% by 2024-25.
- Flexibility of 0.5% in fiscal deficit under special circumstances.
- Set debt-to-GDP targets:
- Importance: Promotes fiscal responsibility, controls public debt, and builds investor confidence.