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Interim budget to see more focus on infrastructure

The Finance Minister, for 2023-24 (Apr-Mar), has increased the capital investment programme by 33% year-on-year to Rs. 10 lakh crore, and the same is expected to be increased further to Rs. 11 lakh crore – Rs. 12 lakh crore.
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Previous year’s budget had seen an investment of Rs.10 lakh Cr on infrastructure and this momentum in pushing more capital towards infrastructure development is expected to continue in the interim budget as well and is expected to be to the tune of Rs.13 lakh Cr.

The Finance Minister, for 2023-24 (Apr-Mar), has increased the capital investment programme by 33% year-on-year to Rs. 10 lakh crore, and the same is expected to be increased further to Rs. 11 lakh crore – Rs. 12 lakh crore, keeping in mind the huge impact and multiplier effect infrastructure development spending had on the economy, which have helped recovery post-pandemic. 

While ICRA expects the interim budget to target a gross capital expenditure at Rs.10.2 lakh crore in 2024-25, CareEdge Ratings anticipates an overall announcement between Rs. 11 lakh crore to Rs. 12 lakh crore, with continued focus on infrastructure.

“Considering this is an interim budget, it is quite unlikely that the government will make any major announcements. Having said that, with a strong multiplier effect that infra spending has on GDP at 2.5x, the focus on creating infrastructure is expected to remain as it has been for the last 4-5 years. The thrust is likely to remain on transportation and multi-modal logistics development,” said Rajashree Murkute, Senior Director at CareEdge Ratings.

“ICRA expects the GoI’s (Government of India) capex to undershoot the FY2024BE (Budget Estimates) (Rs 10 trillion or Rs. 10 lakh crore) by Rs 0.75 trillion (Rs. 75,000 crore), implying a robust 26% YoY growth, albeit lower than 35.9% growth in FY2024BE over FY2023 Prov (provisional),” said Chintan Dilip Lakhani, Vice President & Sector Head-Corporate Ratings at ICRA.

NATIONAL MONETISATION PIPELINE

The National Monetisation Pipeline was conceived on the philosophy of ‘Creation through Monetisation’. However, last year’s budget was mostly quiet on its progress. Analysts expect that the interim budget will have an update on its progress and will likely see extension of its time frame.

“With just over a year to go for the FY2025 timeline of the National Monetisation Plan, which is co-terminus with the NIP (National Infrastructure Pipeline), an announcement regarding the asset monetisation to raise the targeted Rs 6 lakh crore capital, including a likely extension, for achievement of the balance target, is expected,” said Lakhani.

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