Fiscal deficit at 63% of full-year target: CGA


Fiscal Deficit at 63% of Full-Year Target: CGA Data (FY 2025-26)

[UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note]


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Fiscal Deficit — Key Definitions: - Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure − Total Receipts (excluding borrowings) - Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure − Revenue Receipts - Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit − Interest Payments - Effective Revenue Deficit = Revenue Deficit − Grants for capital asset creation

CGA Data (April–January 2025-26): [S1][S3] - Fiscal deficit: ₹9.8 lakh crore = 63% of BE 2025-26 - Previous year (same period): 74.5% of BE - Full-year BE target: ₹15.58 lakh crore = 4.4% of GDP

Total Receipts (April–January 2025-26): [S1] - Total receipts: ₹27.08 lakh crore = 79.5% of RE 2025-26 - Tax revenue (net to Centre): ₹20.94 lakh crore - Non-tax revenue: ₹5.57 lakh crore - Non-debt capital receipts: ₹57,129 crore

State Devolution: - ₹11.39 lakh crore transferred to states as share of taxes — ₹65,588 crore higher than previous year. [S1]

Institutional Framework: - Controller General of Accounts (CGA): Principal Accounts Adviser to GoI; under Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance; releases monthly Statement of Central Government Accounts. - Statutory basis: FRBM Act, 2003 (as amended); Article 112 (Union Budget), Article 266 (Consolidated Fund of India). - GDP growth projections FY 2025-26: Real GDP 7.4%; Nominal GDP 8%. [S6] - IMF definition of India's deficit (includes off-budget items): ~4.5% of GDP for 2025-26. [S7]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Administrative

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. CGA stands for Controller General of Accounts; it functions under the Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance. [S3]
  2. India's fiscal deficit target for FY 2025-26 is 4.4% of GDP, or ₹15.58 lakh crore. [S2]
  3. At January-end 2025-26, fiscal deficit stood at ₹9.8 lakh crore = 63% of BE. [S1]
  4. In the same period of FY 2024-25, the fiscal deficit was 74.5% of BE — a year-on-year improvement of ~11.5 percentage points. [S1]
  5. The commitment to bring fiscal deficit below 4.5% of GDP by FY 2025-26 was first announced in FY 2021-22. [S2]
  6. FRBM Act was enacted in 2003; significantly amended in 2018 following NK Singh Committee recommendations. [S2]
  7. Fiscal deficit = Total Expenditure − (Revenue Receipts + Non-debt Capital Receipts); not total receipts including borrowings.
  8. Primary deficit = Fiscal Deficit − Interest Payments (measures current-year borrowing excluding inherited interest burden).
  9. State devolution in April–January 2025-26 was ₹11.39 lakh crore — ₹65,588 crore higher than the previous year. [S1]
  10. India's tax revenue (net to Centre) for April–January 2025-26 was ₹20.94 lakh crore (79.5% of RE). [S1]
  11. The new fiscal consolidation path targets Central Government debt at ~50±1% of GDP by 31 March 2031. [S2]
  12. Budget 2026-27 targets fiscal deficit at 4.3% of GDP — a further step down from 4.4%. [S2]
  13. IMF's broader measurement of India's FY 2025-26 deficit is approximately 4.5% of GDP (vs official 4.4%), accounting for off-budget items. [S7]
  14. Non-debt capital receipts (e.g., disinvestment proceeds) for April–January 2025-26 were ₹57,129 crore. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III — Indian Economy and issues relating to Planning, Mobilisation of Resources, Growth, Development and Employment; Government Budgeting.

Specific syllabus headings: - Fiscal Policy; FRBM framework; Union Budget; Fiscal consolidation; Centre-State financial relations.

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Analyse India's fiscal consolidation trajectory since 2020-21. How significant is the achievement of the 4.4% of GDP fiscal deficit target in FY 2025-26, and what challenges remain on the path to the 2031 debt anchor?" (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "The Controller General of Accounts releases monthly fiscal data that has transformed budget transparency in India. Critically examine the role of fiscal transparency institutions in ensuring FRBM compliance." (GS-III, 10 marks) 3. "Distinguish between fiscal deficit, primary deficit, and effective revenue deficit. Explain how reducing fiscal deficit without addressing revenue deficit can be counter-productive for long-term fiscal health." (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
FRBM Act, 2003 and NK Singh Committee Statutory framework governing fiscal deficit targets
Union Budget process — Constitutional provisions Articles 112, 113, 266; Annual Financial Statement; Consolidated Fund
Revenue Deficit vs Fiscal Deficit Understanding quality of expenditure — capital vs revenue spending
Public Debt Management Debt-to-GDP ratio, market borrowings, Treasury Bills; the 50% debt anchor
Disinvestment and Non-Tax Revenue Key levers for reducing fiscal deficit without cutting expenditure
Centre-State fiscal transfers — Finance Commission Devolution figures in CGA data; 15th/16th Finance Commission relevance
IMF Article IV Consultation — India International assessment of India's macro-fiscal framework
Economic Survey 2025-26 Provides narrative context for fiscal data; direct Mains source

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing fiscal deficit % of BE vs % of GDP: "63% of full-year target" means 63% of the ₹15.58 lakh crore BE — NOT that the deficit is 63% of GDP. The GDP share remains 4.4%.
  2. CGA vs CAG: CGA (Controller General of Accounts) releases monthly accounts of Central Government receipts/expenditure. CAG (Comptroller and Auditor General) conducts post-facto audit under Article 148. They are entirely different constitutional/statutory bodies.
  3. Primary deficit is NOT fiscal deficit minus revenue deficit — it is fiscal deficit minus interest payments. Revenue deficit is a separate concept.
  4. FRBM target confusion: The original FRBM target was 3% of GDP; post-NK Singh Committee (2018), the anchor shifted to debt-to-GDP (60% combined Centre+States). The 4.4% target is a glide path goal, not a permanent statutory ceiling.
  5. Off-budget borrowings: Official CGA figures do not capture off-budget liabilities (borrowings by PSUs for government schemes). The IMF and CAG flag these; aspirants must know that the "true" deficit is slightly higher than headline figures. [S7]

11. Sources