Five key numbers that investors should note in India’s budget

General economy in Ahmedabad while Modi recommends precautions against viruses ahead of India's festival season

Photographer: Sumit Dayal / Bloomberg

India’s annual budget on Monday will be Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s chance to stimulate demand and investment in an economy craterized by the second largest coronavirus outbreak in the world.

The plans centered on the growth of her government will be outlined by the Minister of Finance, Nirmala Sitharaman, when she gives her budget speech from 11am in New Delhi. It is expected to set aside more money for healthcare and infrastructure development and partially pay for them by raising record amounts by selling stakes in state-owned companies.

Read: India achieves 11% GDP growth in fiscal year 2022 aided by vaccine application

While the success of the budget depends on the effectiveness with which India is able to stem the increase in infections through vaccines in a country of more than 1.3 billion people, here are five important numbers to note in the spending plan:

Nominal GDP

India’s economy is expected to recover next year

Source: Bloomberg, Government of India


The IMF India’s economy is forecast to expand 11.5% in the year beginning in April, up from 9.2% estimated in a Bloomberg survey. Add inflation of around 4.5% to these projections and you will have a nominal growth rate of gross domestic product in the range of almost 14% -16%. The number is critical, as the budget assumptions for revenues and expenditures are based on it. Some economists, including Citigroup Inc.’s Samiran Chakraborty, expect nominal GDP to be set at 15% – the optimistic end of the band.

Tax revenue

Indian tax revenues are expected to grow 19% next year

Source: Citi Research, Government of India


India’s tax collection has recently increased, as the economy’s momentum builds up after the end of the blockades to combat the coronavirus outbreak. This should give Sitharaman a reason to peg overall tax revenue to a level higher than the 16.3 trillion rupees ($ 223 billion) budgeted for the current year.

.Source