Union Budget under Article 112, revenue and capital accounts, the full deficit family (revenue, fiscal, primary, effective revenue, budget), the FRBM Act 2003 and the N. K. Singh debt anchor, the three government funds (Articles 266 and 267), Money Bills (Article 110), Budget passage in Parliament, fiscal-policy stances, and the defence-budget link for CAPF Paper I
The Union Budget is the Government's annual statement of estimated receipts and expenditure for a financial year, presented under Article 112 of the Constitution as the "Annual Financial Statement". It is presented by the Finance Minister, by convention on 1 February (advanced from end-February in 2017). Fiscal policy is the use of government taxation and spending to influence the economy. CAPF tests the budget structure, the constitutional basis, the full family of deficits (the single highest-yield economy block), the FRBM Act, the three government funds and their Articles, and the budget passage in Parliament. The standard references are the Constitution (Articles 110 to 117, 266, 267, 112), the Budget documents themselves (the Budget at a Glance and the FRBM statements), the Economic Survey, and Ramesh Singh's "Indian Economy".
The Annual Financial Statement separates the Government's transactions into two accounts:
Capital expenditure is treated as more "productive" than revenue expenditure because it builds assets and adds to future capacity, which is why the "capex push" is a recurring Budget theme.
| Side | Revenue account | Capital account |
|---|---|---|
| Receipts | Tax revenue, non-tax revenue (interest, dividends, fees) | Borrowings, recovery of loans, disinvestment |
| Expenditure | Salaries, pensions, subsidies, interest, grants | Infrastructure, machinery, defence capital, loan repayment |
The largest sources of central revenue are taxes (GST, income tax, corporate tax, customs and excise, see taxation and gst); the largest revenue-expenditure items in many years are interest payments, defence revenue spending, subsidies, and transfers to States. Borrowings are the largest capital receipt and equal the fiscal deficit.
Memory chain: the fiscal deficit is the broadest borrowing measure; subtract interest payments to get the primary deficit; the revenue deficit is the part of the gap that funds consumption rather than asset creation.
The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act, 2003 commits the Centre to fiscal discipline:
| Item | Value or definition |
|---|---|
| Constitutional basis of the Budget | Article 112, the Annual Financial Statement |
| Presented by | Finance Minister (Union) |
| Presentation date | 1 February (advanced in 2017 from end-February) |
| Railway Budget | Merged into the Union Budget from 2017 |
| Fiscal deficit | Total expenditure minus total receipts excluding borrowings |
| Revenue deficit | Revenue expenditure minus revenue receipts |
| Primary deficit | Fiscal deficit minus interest payments |
| Effective revenue deficit | Revenue deficit minus grants for capital-asset creation |
| Largest single revenue expenditure item | Interest payments (in many years) |
| Demand for Grants | Estimates of expenditure requiring a Lok Sabha vote |
| Money Bill | Article 110; certified by the Speaker |
| FRBM Act | Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act, 2003 |
| FRBM review committee | N. K. Singh Committee (debt-to-GDP anchor) |
| Consolidated Fund of India | Article 266; all revenues and loans; needs Parliament's authorisation to spend |
| Contingency Fund of India | Article 267; for urgent unforeseen spending; at the President's disposal |
| Public Account | Article 266; funds where the Government acts as a banker |
| Auditor of government accounts | Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG), Article 148 |
| Deficit | Formula | What it signals |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue deficit | Revenue expenditure minus revenue receipts | Borrowing for consumption (unhealthy) |
| Fiscal deficit | Total expenditure minus total receipts (excluding borrowings) | Total borrowing requirement (the headline) |
| Primary deficit | Fiscal deficit minus interest payments | New borrowing need, past interest aside |
| Effective revenue deficit | Revenue deficit minus capital-asset grants | Consumption gap after adjusting asset-creating grants |
| Fund | Article | Purpose | Spending needs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consolidated Fund of India | 266 | All revenues, loans raised, and loan recoveries | Parliamentary authorisation (Appropriation Act) |
| Contingency Fund of India | 267 | Urgent, unforeseen expenditure | At the President's disposal; recouped later from the CFI |
| Public Account of India | 266 | Funds where the Government is a banker (provident funds, small savings) | No separate parliamentary appropriation needed |
CAPF occasionally tests budget classifications:
The divisible pool of central taxes is shared with the States on the recommendation of the Finance Commission (a constitutional body under Article 280, appointed every five years), which decides the vertical and horizontal devolution. Cesses and surcharges are kept outside this pool (see taxation and gst).
The Budget moves through a fixed sequence:
Money Bills (Article 110) can be introduced only in the Lok Sabha, on the President's recommendation, and are certified by the Speaker. The Rajya Sabha can only make recommendations, which the Lok Sabha may accept or reject, and must return the bill within 14 days. The Appropriation Bill and the Finance Bill are Money Bills.
The fiscal deficit is financed mainly by borrowing:
Persistent deficits raise the debt-to-GDP ratio, the focus of the N. K. Singh Committee's debt anchor. High interest payments then crowd out productive spending, which is why fiscal consolidation matters. The RBI, as the Government's debt manager, conducts the borrowing programme (see money and banking and the rbi).
The defence budget is the single largest functional head of central expenditure in many years and is allocated through the Budget; defence pensions and capital acquisitions are recurring items. Spending on the central armed police forces, border infrastructure, and intelligence flows through the same budget process, financed from the Consolidated Fund of India and authorised by the Appropriation Act. The FRBM escape clause explicitly recognises national security and calamity as grounds for relaxing fiscal targets, which is the formal link between fiscal policy and security. Sound public finance is itself a strategic asset: a credible, sustainable fiscal position keeps the cost of sovereign borrowing low and preserves the fiscal room to respond to a war, disaster, or downturn.
| Article | Provision |
|---|---|
| Article 110 | Definition of a Money Bill |
| Article 112 | Annual Financial Statement (the Budget) |
| Article 113 | Demands for Grants |
| Article 114 | Appropriation Bill |
| Article 148 | Comptroller and Auditor General |
| Article 266 | Consolidated Fund and Public Account |
| Article 267 | Contingency Fund |
| Article 280 | Finance Commission |
The fiscal deficit is defined as: a) revenue expenditure minus revenue receipts b) total expenditure minus total receipts excluding borrowings c) fiscal deficit minus interest payments d) total expenditure minus total receipts including borrowings Answer: b. The fiscal deficit is the Government's total borrowing requirement.
The primary deficit equals: a) fiscal deficit plus interest payments b) fiscal deficit minus interest payments c) revenue deficit minus interest payments d) revenue deficit plus interest payments Answer: b. Primary deficit = fiscal deficit minus interest payments.
The Contingency Fund of India is provided for under: a) Article 112 b) Article 110 c) Article 266 d) Article 267 Answer: d. Article 267; it is at the President's disposal for urgent unforeseen spending.
The Annual Financial Statement is laid before Parliament under: a) Article 110 b) Article 112 c) Article 266 d) Article 148 Answer: b. Article 112; the Money Bill definition is in Article 110.
The escape clause of the FRBM Act may be invoked on grounds including: a) only inflation b) only an election year c) national security and calamity d) any policy preference of the Government Answer: c. National security, calamity, and a sharp output downturn are recognised grounds.
The Finance Commission, which recommends the sharing of central taxes with the States, is constituted under: a) Article 112 b) Article 280 c) Article 266 d) Article 360 Answer: b. Article 280; it is appointed every five years.
The bill that authorises withdrawal of money from the Consolidated Fund of India is the: a) Finance Bill b) Appropriation Bill c) Money Bill on taxes d) Contingency Bill Answer: b. The Appropriation Bill authorises withdrawal; the Finance Bill enacts tax proposals.
"Fiscal is the Full borrowing; take out Interest to get Primary; Revenue deficit funds Routine running costs." Funds: "26-6 holds everything (Consolidated and Public), 26-7 is the emergency (Contingency)."
The fiscal-deficit target as a percentage of GDP is set afresh each year in the Budget, with a glide path toward consolidation. The Centre has been aiming to bring the fiscal deficit down over a multi-year path; treat the exact percentage and the latest target as currency-sensitive and verify against the most recent Union Budget. The capital-expenditure push, disinvestment targets, and the debt-to-GDP ratio are recurring Budget hooks.