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Income up to Rs 12 lakh tax-free; consumption, capex key drivers

Implicit in the high capex outlay of Rs 11.21 lakh crore (actually Rs 10,000 crore more than in 2024-25) is probably a lack of conviction that the corporate sector will invest, and hence the heavy lifting has to be undertaken by the Central government.

IF UNION Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s seventh Budget after the BJP returned to power was about coalition politics, the Budget for 2025-26 seems to bet big on an unprecedented tax bonanza to push flagging consumption alongside a continuing thrust on capital expenditure to maintain a 6-per cent plus growth momentum.

Implicit in the high capex outlay of Rs 11.21 lakh crore (actually Rs 10,000 crore more than in 2024-25) is probably a lack of conviction that the corporate sector will invest, and hence the heavy lifting has to be undertaken by the Central government.

Despite this, Sitharaman has kept a leash on government finances; the fiscal deficit for this year is now estimated at 4.8 per cent of the GDP, and that for 2025-26 at 4.4 per cent of GDP. This is lower than the glide path which required her to bring down the deficit to under 4.5 per cent.