Budget 2024: Fin Min may assume 10.5% nominal GDP growth for FY25 fiscal math.

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Budget 2024: Fin Min may assume 10.5% nominal GDP growth for FY25 fiscal math.

The finance ministry may assume a nominal GDP growth of 10.5 percent for 2024-25 in its interim budget calculations, according to a Moneycontrol poll of 15 economists.

The nominal GDP growth assumption is crucial to Budget calculations. For instance, the absolute fiscal deficit as a percentage of nominal GDP for next year is a key metric. A higher nominal GDP growth number – and, consequently, a higher nominal GDP – can make the fiscal deficit smaller as a percentage.

Fiscal consolidation in India has mostly been revenue-driven due to expenditure rigidities. Therefore, the economic growth has a strong bearing on tax collection and, in turn, on fiscal consolidation,” India Ratings and Research noted.

With wholesale inflation – which has a strong bearing on nominal GDP growth – expected to keep rising in the coming months after remaining sub-zero for the first seven months of 2023-24, India’s growth without adjusting for inflation is seen higher next year.

As per the statistics ministry’s first advance estimate of national income for 2023-24, India’s nominal GDP is seen growing by 8.9 percent this year to Rs 296.58 lakh crore. The finance ministry had assumed in its calculations in the Union Budget presented on February 1, 2023 that the nominal GDP would grow 10.5 percent this year to Rs 301.75 lakh crore.

Two years of very high nominal growth – thanks to high inflation and a favourable base – in 2021-22 and 2022-23 helped the Centre rapidly bring down its fiscal deficit to an expected 5.9 percent of GDP this year from 9.2 percent in 2020-21. But with the base effect normalising and the key Wholesale Price Index (WPI) inflation so far subdued, nominal growth has come off sharply from 16.1 percent in 2022-23 and 18.4 percent in 2021-22.

We expect the 2024-25 gross fiscal deficit-to-GDP ratio to be around 5.4 percent, with an assumption of nominal GDP of around 10.3 percent,” noted economists Madhavi Arora ansd Harshal Patel of Emkay Global Financial Services.

The Indian government is looking to cut its fiscal deficit to 4.5 percent of GDP by 2025-26.

Manjushree

Manjushree Sudheendra

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