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Budget 2019: India won't become a superpower with these allocations

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Budget 2019: India won't become a superpower with these allocations
Only 3.4% of total federal spending was budgeted for education - down from 3.74% the previous year and from 4.3% when Modi took over in 2014
Mihir S Sharma Last Updated at July 8, 2019 09:40 IST



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This Budget has been made with a 10-year vision in mind: FM Sitharaman

Traditionally, India’s finance minister carries the annual budget to Parliament in an old-fashioned briefcase; photographs of him holding the briefcase up are usually splashed across the front pages the next day. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, the first woman to hold the post, broke tradition last Friday by carrying her budget in a folded red cloth cover, of the sort used by some trading communities in India to store their accounts.

Having provoked the flurry of media attention the gesture was intended to generate, Sitharaman’s deputy was happy to explain: The new finance minister meant to break with a tradition inherited from the British. It was, he said, “a step in the direction” of becoming a “superpower.”

That statement left me wondering if the official in question knows what a superpower is. The budget made me wonder the same about the government.

Consider, for example, the treatment of India’s armed forces. Sitharaman barely mentioned defense spending (indeed, for much of the first half of her speech, she barely mentioned any numbers at all). Perhaps that was because the defense outlay has barely kept up with inflation for years, and under Prime Minister Narendra Modi has reached record lows as a percentage of gross domestic product. Not since China humiliated India in a traumatic border war in 1962 has any government allowed defense spending to fall so low. Last year, it came in at less than 1.6 per cent of GDP.

Perhaps you think that, instead of defense, India is investing in its own people, as a 21st-century superpower should do? Well, only 3.4 per cent of total federal spending was budgeted for education — down from 3.74 per cent the previous year and from 4.3 per cent when Modi took over in 2014. And the federal government and state governments together spend less than 1 per cent of GDP on health, a fact which this budget did little to change.

Capital expenditure, too, has been squeezed — by one estimate, from Rs. 9.2 trillion ($134 billion) last year to Rs. 8.7 trillion this year. What has grown in the budget is subsidies: The government and public-sector corporations are borrowing in order to fund a direct transfer of cash to India’s farmers.

It’s true that India’s farmers need help. But what they really need is agricultural reform that would allow them to access national and world markets instead of depending on government procurement. There was no sign that such changes are on the agenda, even though India’s procurement program is controversial at the World Trade Organization and one of the major stumbling blocks towards moving forward on multilateral trade negotiations.

India at the moment faces both a cyclical and a structural slowdown. The former is because credit and investment have frozen up, with new project launches at a 14-year low last year. The latter owes more to the fact that manufacturing and exports are both facing a crisis thanks to sustained weakness in skills and competitiveness.

Sitharaman’s budget offered hope of addressing the first problem. India’s troubled non-banking financial companies — its shadow banking sector — will be thrown a lifeline. Public-sector banks will be recapitalized and small businesses will be able to borrow at cheaper rates and get their money quicker. Start-ups have for years been complaining about harassment by tax officials; in her speech, Sitharaman promised crucial changes to the rules to reduce this persecution.

The government has also announced that it will start issuing dollar-denominated bonds, something previous Indian governments have been terrified of doing. That should hopefully mean it will appropriate a smaller proportion of domestic Indian savings, allowing some of those to be used for private-sector investment instead of government spending. That’s cheered the bond markets and might create some space for the Reserve Bank of India to continue to cut rates, perhaps more sharply than expected. I’m a little more optimistic about the short- to medium-term now.

But, if anything, I am more pessimistic about the long-term. The failure of the government’s skilling program was glossed over in the budget and, instead of looking to integrate into global supply chains in order to grow exports, the finance minister continued with the Modi government’s practice of arbitrarily raising tariffs to protect domestic industry. Who would want to set up an export-focused factory in India when tariffs are changed constantly and arbitrarily?

Investors can take solace in the fact that India will almost certainly recover from its cyclical slowdown. But I still don’t see it taking any steps in the direction of being a superpower — or even a comfortable, upper-middle income country.

https://www.business-standard.com/b...sh-to-become-a-superpower-119070800119_1.html
 
Indian education budget is atleast twice our defence budget. Education is a state subject initially later made a concurrent subject. Union budget had allocated 93000 crores for entire India (mostly for central univs and IITs and merit grants). Maharashtra and UP together allocated about 120000 crore for education in their respective budgets. We have (29-2) 27 other states, put together they all must be close to 6 lakh crore. Hopefully Pakistan also invests as such on their kids.

MOD EDITED: DONT DRAG IN PAKISTAN
 
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Indian education budget is atleast twice our defence budget. Education is a state subject initially later made a concurrent subject. Union budget had allocated 93000 crores for entire India (mostly for central univs and IITs and merit grants). Maharashtra and UP together allocated about 120000 crore (twice as much as Pak defence budget in dollar terms) for education in their respective budgets. We have (29-2) 27 other states, put together they all must be close to 6 lakh crore. Hopefully Pakistan also invests as such on their kids.

What Pakistan has to do with this thread and article posted?
Please enlighten us how you became an authority on this subject, as compare to a professional writer?
Thanks.
 
What Pakistan has to do with this thread and article posted?
Please enlighten us how you became an authority on this subject, as compare to a professional writer?
Thanks.
I gave example of Pakistan as a reference. As for education, he may not know that Indian states spend on education mostly.
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So here we go. I was wrong these 2 states actually spend 1.35 trillion rupees on education. So do you want me to prove we actually spend twice as much as entire Pakistan budget on our education in dollar terms as well.
 
I gave example of Pakistan as a reference. As for education, he may not know that Indian states spend on education mostly.
View attachment 568376

View attachment 568377

So here we go. I was wrong these 2 states actually spend 1.35 trillion rupees on education. So do you want me to prove we actually spend twice as much as entire Pakistan budget on our education in dollar terms as well.
Feeling you accomplished something big, by comparing India with bank corrupt Pakistan? This is the level you want to reach? did you check the size of the country and population?

If you want to be a super power, try to compare with the countries better then you, not poor countries.

again Pakistan has no relation whatsoever in this thread.
 
Feeling you accomplished something big, by comparing India with bank corrupt Pakistan? This is the level you want to reach? did you check the size of the country and population?

If you want to be a super power, try to compare with the countries better then you, not poor countries.

again Pakistan has no relation whatsoever in this thread.

I know Pakistan is bankrupt. But most of the people who mock India are also Pakistanis. That is the dichotomy. I need to give them an example that is closer to home for their thick skulls to understand.

As regards to the thread, India has to tackle many priorities at the same time. Even with a trillion dollar budget (federal and states included) there is only so much one can allocate on a sector.

Indian budget expenditure (federal and states) is 30% more than UK. So there satisfied. I compared India with a better country.
 
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I know Pakistan is bankrupt. But most of the people who mock India are also Pakistanis. That is the dichotomy. I need to give them an example that is closer to home for their thick skulls to understand.

As regards to the thread, India has to tackle many priorities at the same time. Even with a trillion dollar budget (federal and states included) there is so much one can allocate on a sector.

Indian budget expenditure (federal and states) is 30% more than UK. So there satisfied. I compared India with a better country.
more than the thick skull its Indian jingoism. Indian baseless tall claims, give a reason for mocking, and you are not doing any different.

if you do not agree with the writer, counter his claims with valid reasoning. Writer must have done some research before writing an article.
 
more than the thick skull its Indian jingoism. Indian baseless tall claims, give a reason for mocking, and you are not doing any different.

if you do not agree with the writer, counter his claims with valid reasoning. Writer must have done some research before writing an article.

I gave you my opinion. It's you who couldn't bear it. Every writer has his bias. Like you have your bias about Indian jingoism. I have mine. At least mine is not rabid anti-pakistani.
 
I gave you my opinion. It's you who couldn't bear it. Every writer has his bias. Like you have your bias about Indian jingoism. I have mine. At least mine is not rabid anti-pakistani.
you are Indian and author of the article is an Indian, counter his points. My opinion does not matter here.

if you have something solid to prove the write wrong make points against his reasoning. posting charts and a general statement..better then Pakistan and 30% more then UK id not helping.
 
I have given you the budget statements of maharastra and UP as proof. You can also find them at

https://www.prsindia.org/parliamenttrack/budgets/uttar-pradesh-budget-analysis-2019-20
https://www.prsindia.org/parliamenttrack/budgets/maharashtra-budget-analysis-2019-20

In the same site, you can find budget statements of all states. Find the allocation for education by each of 29 states and 7 union territories, you'll find that India spends about 6-7 trillion rupees on education. And you should know that Pakistan entire federal budget outlay was only 7 trillion Pakistani rupees(which itself is unachievable as it is about 34% more than previous outlay). And you know indian rupee has more purchasing power than Pakistani rupee (about 2.3 times more in value). So Indian education budget outlay is about twice entire Pakistan budget outlay in dollar terms.

Also, India spends about 30 times more than what Pakistan spends on education (with 6 times more population). In dollar terms India spends 70 times more. Not to mention huge private sector spending that happens in India. Over 350 mega universities were set up in this decade alone.

So trolls from Pakistan should know who they are criticizing.
Thank you for your concerns regarding Pakistan, but still you have not countered the article posted and which is the topic of this thread.

India was suppose to become super power since 2012, but you Indians are still getting bloody nose from poor bank corrupt Pakistan.

you are just a troll.

@Dubious @Arsalan this gentleman is trolling off topic and obsessed with Pakistan which is not the topic here.
 
Indian education budget is atleast twice our defence budget. Education is a state subject initially later made a concurrent subject. Union budget had allocated 93000 crores for entire India (mostly for central univs and IITs and merit grants). Maharashtra and UP together allocated about 120000 crore for education in their respective budgets. We have (29-2) 27 other states, put together they all must be close to 6 lakh crore. Hopefully Pakistan also invests as such on their kids.

MOD EDITED: DONT DRAG IN PAKISTAN
Stop dragging Pakistan in attempts to derail the thread!

Thread is about india keep it at that!
 

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