Unenviable choice

I now have sufficient grounded facts from Tier 1 sources. Here is the full UPSC study note.


Unenviable Choice: Capital Expenditure vs. Fiscal Consolidation


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Figure / Detail Source
Fiscal deficit target FY2026 4.4% of GDP [S1][S5]
Fiscal deficit FY2025 (RE) 4.8% of GDP [S5]
Central Capex Budget FY2026 ₹11.21 lakh crore (3.1% of GDP) [S2][S5]
Capex Apr–Nov 2025 (actual) ₹6.58 lakh crore (+28% YoY) [S4]
Revenue expenditure growth (same period) +2.1% YoY (much slower) [S4]
Total tax revenue (Apr–Nov 2025) ₹13.9 lakh crore (−3.4% YoY) [S4]
GST collection — November 2025 ₹1.70 lakh crore [S4]
GST collection — December 2025 ₹1.74 lakh crore [S4]
Income-tax revenue foregone (rebate ≤₹12L) ≈₹1 lakh crore [S3]
New IT rebate threshold (salaried) ₹12.75 lakh (with ₹75k std. deduction) [S3]
Scheme: State Capex loans 50-year interest-free loans to States [S6]
Revenue deficit FY2026 0.8% of GDP (lowest since FY2009) [S1]
Nominal GDP growth target FY2026 ~10.1% (real GDP 7.4%, nominal 8%) [S1]
Revenue expenditure growth FY2026 (BE) +6.7% over RE FY2025 [S5]
Capex growth FY2026 (BE) +10.1% over RE FY2025 [S5]

Key definitions: - Capital Expenditure: Spending that creates durable assets (roads, railways, defence hardware); has a higher fiscal multiplier than revenue expenditure. [S6] - Revenue Expenditure: Recurring spending (salaries, pensions, interest payments, subsidies); largely non-discretionary. - Fiscal Deficit: Excess of total expenditure over total receipts (excluding borrowings); financed by market borrowings. - Fiscal Consolidation: Deliberate reduction of fiscal deficit-to-GDP ratio over time. - GST multiplier lag: Rate cuts boost consumption with a medium-term lag; households first increase savings/reduce debt before lifting expenditure. [S4]

Implementing ministries: - Ministry of Finance (Dept. of Economic Affairs — budget, Capex; CBDT — income tax; CBIC — GST) - GST Council (Constitutional body under Article 279A, inserted by 101st Constitutional Amendment, 2016)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative

Social

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. GST was introduced via the 101st Constitutional Amendment, 2016, inserting Article 246A, 269A, and 279A into the Constitution. [S7]
  2. The GST Council recommends GST rates; decisions require a three-fourths majority of weighted votes (Centre = 1/3, States = 2/3). [S7]
  3. India's fiscal deficit target for FY2026 is 4.4% of GDP — down from 4.8% in FY2025. [S1][S5]
  4. Central Capex in Budget FY2026: ₹11.21 lakh crore, representing 3.1% of GDP. [S5]
  5. Revenue foregone from income-tax rebate for earners up to ₹12 lakh: approximately ₹1 lakh crore. [S3]
  6. Income-tax rebate of up to ₹12 lakh (₹12.75 lakh for salaried) operates under Section 87A of the Income-tax Act, 1961. [S3]
  7. GST December 2025 collections: ₹1.74 lakh crore (reflects November economic activity due to one-month lag). [S4]
  8. Revenue expenditure is dominated by salaries, pensions, and interest payments — largely non-discretionary. [S4]
  9. The Centre provides 50-year interest-free loans to States under the Special Assistance for Capital Expenditure Scheme, recognising Capex's higher multiplier. [S6]
  10. Revenue deficit in FY2026 stands at 0.8% of GDP — the lowest since FY2009. [S1]
  11. FRBM Act, 2003 governs India's fiscal consolidation path; Section 4A permits deviation in exceptional circumstances. [S5]
  12. Total tax revenue April–November 2025: ₹13.9 lakh crore — 3.4% lower than the same period of 2024-25. [S4]
  13. Capex April–November 2025: ₹6.58 lakh crore — 28% higher YoY — reflecting deliberate front-loading. [S4]
  14. The New Income Tax Act, 2025 is to come into force from 1 April 2026, replacing the Income-tax Act, 1961. [S8]
  15. The fiscal multiplier of capital expenditure is higher than that of revenue expenditure; Capex also crowds in private investment. [S6]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III (Indian Economy — Government Budgeting, Fiscal Policy, Mobilisation of Resources) Secondary link: GS-II (Government Policies and Interventions for Development)

Specific syllabus headings: - Mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment - Government Budgeting — deficit, debt, fiscal consolidation - Effects of liberalisation on the economy

Plausible Mains question stems:

  1. "The Indian government's simultaneous pursuit of fiscal consolidation and expansion of capital expenditure presents an unenviable trade-off. Critically examine the tensions involved and suggest how they can be resolved." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "GST rate rationalisation and income-tax relief, while necessary for demand stimulation, have narrowed the government's fiscal space in the short run. Discuss the implications for India's fiscal consolidation roadmap." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  3. "The FRBM Act sets a ceiling, but growth imperatives demand a floor on capital expenditure. How should India balance these two imperatives in a period of global uncertainty?" (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
FRBM Act, 2003 and its amendments Legal framework governing fiscal targets — directly governs the "consolidation" side of the dilemma
GST Council and rate structure Institutional mechanism for indirect tax changes; Article 279A; cooperative federalism in taxation
Fiscal multiplier and Keynesian economics Theoretical basis for privileging Capex over revenue spending
Public Debt management in India Borrowing to fund the deficit; RBI's role; sustainability of debt trajectory
PM GatiShakti National Master Plan The policy umbrella under which infrastructure Capex is channelled
Revenue Deficit vs. Fiscal Deficit Conceptual distinction critical for budget analysis MCQs
Direct Tax Code / New Income Tax Act 2025 Outcome of the income-tax simplification process; operational from 1 April 2026
Monetary-Fiscal Coordination RBI's rate decisions interact with government fiscal stance; relevant for GS-III and RBI policy analysis

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Conflating GST Council's role: The Council recommends rates; it does not unilaterally impose them. Rate changes need a three-fourths weighted majority — not a simple majority.

  2. Wrong base for income-tax rebate: The ₹12 lakh zero-liability applies under the new tax regime only. The old regime continues with different slabs. Examiners test this distinction.

  3. Capex vs. Revenue Expenditure categorisation: Subsidies (food, fertiliser) are revenue expenditure, not Capex — a common MCQ trap. Defence capital procurement is Capex; defence salaries/pensions are revenue expenditure.

  4. Fiscal deficit ≠ Revenue deficit: Fiscal deficit includes capital receipts (borrowings) on the financing side; revenue deficit is purely the current account gap. The statement "India reduced its revenue deficit to 0.8% of GDP" does not mean fiscal deficit is 0.8%.

  5. Implementing ministry confusion: GST administration — CBIC under Ministry of Finance. Income-tax — CBDT under Ministry of Finance. Both are under Finance, but different boards; examiners occasionally test which board handles which tax.

  6. GST revenue timing lag: Monthly GST data released refers to the previous month's economic activity (e.g., December data = November activity). This one-month lag is a recurring MCQ/analytical trap.


11. Sources