PUBLIC FINANCE
Samir K Mahajan, M.Sc. Ph.D
SOME BASIC CONCEPTS
Public Finance: Public Finance is a subject that is concerned with the income and expenditure of public authorities.
Government Budget: A government budget is a statement of estimated income and expenditure of public authorities. It is a future programme and is framed generally for a year.
Budget
Receipts
Revenue Receipts
Capital Receipts
Expenditure
Revenue Expenditure
Capital Expenditure
SOME BASIC CONCEPTS
A government budget is traditionally presented with two components such as: Revenue Budget and Capital Budget. Revenue budget consists of revenue receipts and expenditure met form such receipts. The capital budget consists of capital receipts and its payment.
Government Budget
Revenue Budget
Revenue Receipts
Revenue Expenditure
Capital Budget
Capital Receipts
Capital Expenditure
Budget Receipts: Classification of Government Receipts.
The receipts of the public authorities are broadly classified into revenue receipts and non-revenue receipts.
Budget Receipts
Revenue Receipts
Tax Revenue
Non-Tax Revenue
Capital or
Non-Revenue Receipts
Borrowings
Recoveries of Loans
Other Non-Revenue Receipts
REVENUE RECEIPTS contd.
REVENUE RECEIPTS
Revenue receipts are those receipts which do not create a liability or lead to reduction in assts. These receipts are routine, ordinary and usual in nature.
Revenue receipts includes tax-revenue and non-tax revenues.
Taxes can be classified as direct tax and indirect tax.
DIRECT TAX: Direct taxes are levied on income, property and expenditure. Direct Taxes are those taxes the burden of which cannot be shifted to others. In case of direct tax, the impact and incidence fall on the same person.
INDIRECT TAXES: INDIRECT taxes are imposed on goods and services. These taxes are those the burden of which can be ultimately shifted to some other persons. In case of indirect tax, the impact and incidence fall on different persons.
Non-tax revenues of public authorities are obtained from non-tax sources .
REVENUE RECEIPTS contd.
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SUMMARY OF TAXES SHARING BETWEEN UNION AND STATES in India (Since Independence to 30th June 2017)
q Taxes levied, collected and appropriated by Union
Corporate tax, custom duties, property tax etc
q Taxes imposed, collected by Union but shared with States
Income tax other than agriculture income tax, union excise duties on tobacco and other goods except liquor and narcotics etc.
q Taxes imposed, collected by Union Government but assigned to States
Estate duties in respect of property other than agricultural land, taxes on railways fares and freights etc
q Taxes imposed by Union but collected and appropriated by States
Stamp duties, registration fees ect
q Taxes imposed, collected and appropriated by States
Sales tax, entertainment tax, toll tax Land revenue, agricultural income tax, profession tax. Exercise duties on liquor and narcotics etc.
REVENUE RECEIPTS contd.
. THE CASE OF GST The Goods and Services Tax (GST) has revolutionized the Indian taxation system. The GST Act was passed in the Lok Sabha on 29th March, 2017, and came into effect from 1st July, 2017. GST is an indirect tax REGIME on the supply of goods and services. GST Law has replaced many indirect tax laws that previously existed in India.
GST is a comprehensive, multi-stage, destination-based tax that will be levied on every value addition. GST avoids this cascading (double taxation) effect as tax is calculated only on the value added at each transfer of ownership.
There are 3 applicable taxes under GST: CGST, SGST & IGST.
CGST: Collected by the Central Government on an intra-state sale (Eg: Within Karnataka) SGST: Collected by the State Government on an intra-state sale (Eg: Within Karnataka) IGST: Collected by the Central Government for inter-state sale (Eg: Karnataka to Tamil Nadu)rolum
GST does not apply to petroleum product.
axation
REVENUE RECEIPTS contd.
. SUMMARY OF TAXES SHARING BETWEEN UNION AND STATES in India (Since 1 July 2017) afer introdcution of GST
e
q Taxes levied, collected and appropriated by Union
Corporate tax, property tax etc
q Taxes imposed, collected by Union but shared with States
Income tax other than agriculture income tax,
q Taxes imposed, collected by Union Government but assigned to States
Estate duties in respect of property other than agricultural land, taxes on railways fares and freights etc
q Taxes imposed by Union but collected and appropriated by States
Stamp duties, registration fees ect
q Taxes imposed, collected and appropriated by States
Land revenue, agricultural income tax, profession tax.
q Taxes imposed by central government collected states in case of intra-state sale , and union case of intra-state and inter-state sale. Revenue will be shared equally between the Centre and the State in case of intra-state sale. The Union will share the revenue collected under inter-state sale with state based on the destination of goods.
Taxes imposed on goods and services included within the GST basket.
REVENUE RECEIPTS contd.
TAX REVENUE
Tax revenues may be further classified into direct and indirect.
q DIRECT TAX: Direct taxes are levied on income, property and expenditure. Direct Taxes are those taxes the burden of which cannot be shifted to others. In case of direct tax, the impact and incidence fall on the same person. Some Direct taxes are as follows:
o Corporate Tax: Corporate taxes are imposed on income of companies and business corporations. Corporation taxes are levied, collected and retained with central government.
o Income Tax: Income taxes are taxes imposed on income (earned by individuals) from salaries, business, profession, property and some other sources. Income taxes except agricultural income tax are levied and collected by central government, and shared with the states.
o Wealth tax: Wealth tax are levied on wealth accumulated by individuals in the form of land, buildings, gold, credit instruments, cash etc. Wealth taxes are levied, collected and retained with union or central government.
REVENUE RECEIPTS contd. DIRECT TAX contd.
o Estate duties: Estate duties are levied on the property or wealth when passed to other Individual(s) following the death of property owners. Estate duties are levied and collected by central governments but are retained with the states government.
o Agricultural income tax: Agricultural income taxes are levied on agricultural income. In India, these are levied, collected and retained by the sates government.
o Profession tax: Profession taxes are levied on income of professionals such as doctors, chartered accountants, artists, etc. Professions tax are levied by the states governments.
o Land revenue: Land revenues are levied on the land owned. Land revenues are levied by state governments on land owned by landowners.
o Stamps and registration fees: Stamps fees are levied in case of agreements, contracts, sales and purchases deeds. Registration fees are charged on registration of properties such as land, buildings, etc. These taxes are levied by the Union government, but charged by the state governments. Revenue is also received from licence fees, road tax etc.
REVENUE RECEIPTS contd
q INDIRECT TAXES: INDIRECT TAXES: INDIRECT taxes are imposed on goods and services. These taxes are those the burden of which can be ultimately shifted to some other persons. In case of indirect tax, the impact and incidence fall on different persons. Some of the Indirect taxes are:
o Excise duties: Taxes levied on production of certain commodities are excise duties. In India, excise duties are levied by Central government on commodities except liquors and narcotics. Proceeds from union excise duties are shared with the states by central government. State governments imposes excise duties on liquor and narcotics.
o Customs duties: Custom duties are levied on imports and exports of goods. Custom duties are levied , collected and retained with central governments.
o Sales tax: Sales taxes are charged on the sales made by the traders. Sales tax are the most important source revenue for the state governments.
o Entertainment tax: Entertainment are levied on all types of paid entertainment activities. Entertainment tax is levied by state government.
REVENUE RECEIPTS contd
NON-TAX REVENUE
Non-tax revenues of public authorities are obtained from non-tax sources . Non tax revenue includes:
o Earnings from currency and coinageo Interest received from loans advanced to state governments, local bodies and other
partieso Commercial revenues (such as profits and dividends from public sector enterprises) o Administrative revenues from administrative services such as: public services
commissions, police, jails, agriculture and allied services, industry and minerals, water and power department, public works, education, forestry, minerals and so on.
o Service financing receipts (such as fees and fine, licensees, permits etc. )o grants and gifts such as external grants from foreign countries
CAPITAL RECEIPTS OR NON-REVENUE RECEIPTS
Receipts creating liability or reduction in assets are called capital receipts. Capital receipts are casual an irregular in nature. Capital receipts of central Government includes
o Borrowings – internal (such as internal loans from RBI; market by selling treasury bills; public issue of bonds, Certificates etc) and external (such as external loans from foreign governments, international agencies like IMF, World Bank ) etc.
o Recoveries of loans and advances extended to state governments, union territories, local bodies another parties
o Receipts from disinvestment (disinvestment means selling wholly or partially equity share of public enterprises held by government )
o Other receipts such as receipts from small savings of public such as Post Office Savings Bank Deposits, Post office Time Deposits and such other schemes Recurring Deposits, National Savings Certificates etc. The major part of such collection goes to state government.
Budget Expenditure : Classification of Government Expenditure.
The receipts of the public authorities are broadly classified into revenue Expenditure and non-revenue Expenditure.
Budgetary Expenditure
Revenue Expenditure
Development
Expenditure
Non-Development
Expenditure
Capital Expenditure
Development
Expenditure
Non-Development
Expenditure
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
Public Expenditures refer to expenses of public authorities i.e. the central, state and local governments. Budget Public expenditures are classified as Revenue expenditures and Capital expenditures.
qRevenue Expenditure: Revenue expenditure are the expenditure incurred for the normal functioning of the government departments and provisions for various services including salaries, pensions of employees, interests charged on debt of the government, grants and subsidies given by government etc. Revenue expenditures do not create assets. Revenue expenditures includes expenditures on
o Administrative and general Serviceso Social and Community Serviceso Economics services such as agriculture, industry, trade etco Maintenance of roads, railways etco Collection of taxes o Interest payment o Subsidies and Transfer to local bodies o Defence and internal securities
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE contd.
qCapital Expenditures: Capital expenditures are the expenditure incurred on acquisition of assets such as land, building, machineries, equipments, investment in shares, loans and advances given to state governments, union territories, corporations etc.
o Public Works o Construction of power generation plant o Construction of roadways and railwayso Flood control workso Capital Project on agriculture Irrigation canalso Power projectso Repayment of loanso loans advances by government o Administration
qDevelopment expenditures: Development expenditures are those which directly help economic and social development. They may be either in revenue or capital account. Development expenditure includes
o Expenditure on economic services such as Agriculture, Industry, Transport, Communication, Power, Minerals etc
o Expenditure on social ad community services such as Medical and public health, Education, Housing and sanitations, social and welfare programme
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE contd.
DEVELOPMENT AND NON-DEVELOPMENT EXPENDITURE
Budget also depicts its expenditure in terms of development and non-development heads.
qNon-development expenditure: Non-development expenditures are those expenditures which are incurred to run the government functionary and indirectly help development. Non-development Expenditure may be either in revenue or capital account.
o Defenceo Administrationso Policeo Tax collectiono Interest on public debto Subsidies o External affairs o Repayment of loans
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE contd.
DEVELOPMENT AND NON-DEVELOPMENT EXPENDITURE contd.
STRUCTURE OF GOVERNMENT BUDGET
TYPES OF GOVERNMENT BUDGET
qSurplus budget: Excess of estimated revenue of the government over its anticipated expenditure is known as surplus budget.
qBalanced budget: when estimated revenue of the government over is equal to its anticipated expenditure, it is known as balanced budget.
qDeficit budget : When estimated government expenditure exceeds its estimated revenue, it is known as deficit budget.
STRUCTURE OF GOVERNMENT BUDGET contd.
TYPE OF BUDGETARY DEFICIT
qRevenue deficit: Excess of estimated revenue expenditure of government over its estimated revenue is known as deficit budget.
Revenue deficits = total revenue expenditure - total revenue receipts
q Fiscal deficit: Excess of all estimated expenditure of government over its estimated receipts of the year on both revenue account and capital account except borrowings during any year is termed as fiscal deficit. Fiscal deficits reflects the total borrowing requirement of the government.
Fiscal Deficit = Total Budgetary expenditure – (Revenue receipts + capital receipts excluding borrowings ) = (Revenue Expenditure + Capital Expenditure ) – Revenue receipts – recoveries of loans – receipts from disinvestment
qPrimary Deficits: Primary deficits is fiscal deficits less interest payments
Primary Deficits=Fiscal deficits – interest payment
STRUCTURE OF GOVERNMENT BUDGET contd.
TYPE OF BUDGETARY DEFICIT
qPrimary Deficits: Primary deficits is fiscal deficits less interest payments
Primary Deficits = Fiscal deficits – interest payment