The Centre has presented to Parliament its first batch of supplementary demand for financial grants to be made to various departments. The demand is to spend an additional Rs 2.36 trillion in FY21.
The Centre presents its annual spending plan two months ahead of the beginning of a new fiscal year. But as the year progresses, the government takes stock of the spending done, the amount that remains to be spent, and considers the new requirements that demand a bigger sum than originally planned. While doing this, it also includes those departments who no longer need the money they had been assigned, or as the case may be, if the Centre is unable to earn the revenue so required. There are three ways to look at this number: one, through its bifurcation into extra cash needed on the one hand, and bonds, borrowings, and savings from other ministries or departments to be used from other purposes, on the other; two, its division into spending that’s already done at this point of time, and the part that is newly announced; and three, expenditure that needs parliament nod and the part that doesn’t.
Most of it is to account for extra spending to bolster the health department’s effort to tackle the Covid-19 public health emergency (Rs 8,000 crore), to make possible cash transfers to needy households and strengthen rural employment generation (Rs 73,000 crore), facilitate decentralised grain procurement for food security of the poorest (Rs 10,000 crore), and towards price stabilisation fund that helps tame extreme volatility in prices of essential consumer food items (Rs 6,000 crore).
The remainder of nearly Rs 69,000 crore worth of funds is taken care of from savings of various ministries or departments after assessing that they no longer need that much of money, or through enhanced receipts or recoveries.
The government announced a slew of measures to contain the economic losses that the pandemic brought with it. This included the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana, PMGK Anna (food) Yojana, PMGK Rozgaar Abhiyaan (employment mission), which was targeted to provide financial assistance in the form of cash, free food to the needy rural folk, and more works under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS).
Most of the supplementary grants have already been announced, and also spent, according to experts. The Controller General of Accounts shows a completed spending of Rs 1.02 trillion in four months by the department of rural development, against the annual (12 months) allocation of Rs 1.2 trillion (85 per cent). More than half of it is for wages to MGNREGS workers, and about a third, towards cash transfers to women Jan Dhan account holders.