Finance Secretary TV Somnathan discusses realistic projections on the economy, fiscal limits, and private sector investment in India [View in browser]( [See all newsletters]( 03 February 2024 âPublic investmentnot a substitute for private sector investmentâ [TV Somanathan, Finance Secretary] The future projections on the economy, especially the much-talked-about 5.1 per cent fiscal deficit number in the interim Budget, are based on realistic revenue and expenditure numbers, Finance Secretary TV Somnathan told businessline on Friday. Speaking on issues ranging from inflation to capex, the Finance Secretary underlined that government investment cannot be a continuous substitute for private investment. - Also read: space in Budget to accommodate minor fluctuations resulting from risks, says Finance Secretary Somanathan]( âThere are limits to the governmentâs ability to keep expanding capital expenditures. There are fiscal limits, and we will adhere to prudent limits. So, it will be what it will be. It cannot be a continuous substitute for the private sector,â Somnathan said. This is significant in the context of the significant rise in the governmentâs capital expenditure when private investment is not keeping pace. The Finance Secretary, however, does not believe that private investments are not picking up. Making a reference to the budget speech, he said, âI will point to one statement in the budget that is a concrete example of rapid private sector investment. 1,000 aircraft are being purchased. Is that a capital investment or not? And does that end with the purchase of the aircraft? Is there not a requirement for augmenting ground handling, equipment to maintain, and staff to be employed to handle these? So, capital investment is happening.â Somnathan maintained that the private sector should invest where it thinks it is prudent to do so. âIt is not for me to tell them to invest if they donât find investment opportunities, but India abounds in investment opportunities. Therefore, I remain very optimistic that there will be rising private investment,â he said. Talking about the 5.1 per cent target for the fiscal deficit, he said that both revenue and expenditure numbers are realistic, which will help in reaching the set target. âThe aggregate expenditure grows at about 6-7 per cent, approximately. I think that it is an achievable number. Itâs a mix of a growth of 11 per cent in capital expenditure and less than that in revenue expenditure. Overall, I think the numbers are achievable,â he said. When asked about lowering the target for the current fiscal year to 5.8 per cent from 5.9 per cent, the Secretary said that the combined total of revenue and capital expenditure is within the expenditure estimates and revenues are slightly higher. âThese two together have been enough to constrain the deficit to 5.8 per cent even on a lower GDP,â he said. You Might Also Like [Zee claims â¹700 crore in costs from Sony for fulfilling merger conditions]( [Companies]( [Zee claims â¹700 crore in costs from Sony for fulfilling merger conditions]( [Interim Budget effect: Thaw in yields may support Banksâ bottomline in Q4FY25]( [Money & Banking]( [Interim Budget effect: Thaw in yields may support Banksâ bottomline in Q4FY25]( [Govt to sell âBharat Riceâ at â¹29/kg in retail outlets from Feb 9]( [Agri Business]( [Govt to sell âBharat Riceâ at â¹29/kg in retail outlets from Feb 9]( [Byjuâs leadership rallies behind Byju Raveendran; the firm says investors have no right to decide who should be CEO]( [Companies]( [Byjuâs leadership rallies behind Byju Raveendran; the firm says investors have no right to decide who should be CEO]( Stay informed Subscribe to businessline to stay up-to-date with in-depth business news from India [arrow]( Copyright @ 2024, THG PUBLISHING PVT LTD. If you are facing any trouble in viewing this newsletter, please try [here]( Manage your newsletter subscription preferences [here]( If you do not wish to receive such emails go [here](