Concepts

Twin Deficit

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectEconomy

Definition

The situation where a country runs both a fiscal deficit (government spending exceeds receipts) and a current account deficit (external payments exceed receipts) at the same time, the two being seen as linked.

Key points

  • The "twin deficit hypothesis" holds that a large fiscal deficit can spill into the external sector by raising domestic demand and imports, widening the current account deficit.
  • The two deficits are distinct in origin: one is an internal government-budget gap, the other an external balance-of-payments gap; see concept fiscal deficit and concept current account deficit.
  • A simultaneous widening of both raises macroeconomic vulnerability, pressuring the rupee, inflation, and borrowing costs.
  • India watches the twin-deficit risk especially when global oil prices rise (widening the CAD) alongside higher government spending.
  • It is a recurring theme in the Economic Survey's macro-stability discussion; verify the latest figures.

Why it matters for CAPF

The definition (fiscal plus current account deficit together), the linkage idea, and the vulnerability it signals are testable macro-stability facts.

Common confusion

The twin deficit is the fiscal deficit plus the current account deficit, not the revenue plus fiscal deficit; the two are an internal and an external gap, conceptually different but seen as connected.

One-line recall

Fiscal deficit and current account deficit occurring together; a large budget gap can widen the external gap.

Parent note

external sector trade and bop

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