ADVERTISEMENT
No tax on personal income up to Rs 7 lakh

Union Budget 2023 Live Updates: Sitharaman unveils 'blueprint for India@100'

Nirmala Sitharaman is the sixth minister in independent India to present five consecutive budgets, she presented the Budget in a paperless format for the third consecutive year

Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman with Ministers of State Bhagwat Kishanrao Karad and Pankaj Chaudhary and officials poses for photographs outside the Finance Ministry at North Block, in New Delhi, Wednesday, ahead of the presentation of the Union Budget 2023-24. Sitharaman will be presenting her fifth Union Budget in Parliament. PTI Photo

Our Web Desk
Published 01.02.23, 10:45 AM

Finance Minister Niramala Sitharaman is presenting the Union Budget in Parliament on Wednesday, the last full-fledged budget exercise for the current government ahead of the Lok Sabha elections in early 2024.

ADVERTISEMENT

Union Budget 2023-24 is widely expected to boost spending towards policies that create jobs, leave more money in hands of the common man and boost manufacturing while increasing tax revenues. "India’s Budget will not only try to fulfil the hopes and dreams of the common man of India, but the ray of hope which the world is seeing, will shine more brightly,” Prime Minister Modi said on Tuesday.

Sitharaman is the sixth minister in independent India to present five consecutive budgets, joining a select league of senior leaders like Manmohan Singh, Arun Jaitley and P Chidambaram. Her budget for the fiscal year starting April 2023 is her fifth straight since 2019.

Other ministers who have presented five straight annual financial statements include Arun Jaitley, P Chidambaram, Yashwant Sinha, Manmohan Singh and Morarji Desai.

On Wednesday, she posed for the traditional 'briefcase' picture outside her office along with her team of officials before heading to meet the President. She, however, was holding a digital tablet instead of a briefcase. With the tablet carefully kept inside a red cover with a golden-coloured national emblem embossed on it, she went straight to Parliament after meeting President Droupadi Murmu at Rashtrapati Bhawan.

She will be presenting the Union Budget 2023-24 in a paperless format just like the previous two years. Here are the key numbers to watch for in Budget 2023-24

Baseline GDP growth rate

The Economic Survey tabled in Parliament on Tuesday forecast a baseline GDP growth rate of 6.5 per cent for 2023-24, which is lower than the 7 per cent growth expected in the current financial year.

In its projections, the Survey said the growth next fiscal could be in the range of 6 per cent to 6.8 per cent, depending on global developments. Analysts described the projections as optimistic as data suggests the growth rate is losing its momentum as the current fiscal comes to an end.

The Survey projected headline inflation at 6.8 per cent in FY23, outside its comfort zone of 2 per cent to 6 per cent. It also noted that poor global growth may widen India’s trade deficit and make the rupee depreciate.

The nominal GDP growth, which is the basis for calculating the fiscal deficit, has been forecast at 11 per cent for the next fiscal. India’s chief economic adviser V.A. Nageswaran, who prepared the report, said inflation was likely to be “well behaved” in the next fiscal, barring headwinds.

Ray of hope

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the Budget would not only try to fulfil the hopes and dreams of the common man but also be a ray of hope for the world. Addressing reporters before the first day of the Budget Session of Parliament, the Prime Minister said, "In today’s global situation, not only India’s but the whole world’s attention is on India’s Budget. In the unstable economic situation of the world, India’s Budget will not only try to fulfil the hopes and dreams of the common man of India, but the ray of hope which the world is seeing, will shine more brightly.”

Budget Union Budget 2023-24 Nirmala Sitharaman Parliament
Follow us on:
ADVERTISEMENT