Government of India: Press Information Bureau
Government of India: Press Information Bureau
Government of India: Press Information Bureau
Government of India
Minist ry o f Finance
Present ing t he first ever digital Union Budget, Union Minist er of Finance and Corporat e Affairs
Smt . Nirmala Sit haraman st at ed t hat India’s fight against COVID-19 continues into 2021 and
t hat t his moment in hist ory, when t he polit ical, economic, and st rat egic relat ions in t he post -
COVID world are changing, is t he dawn of a new era – one in which India is well-poised to truly
be the land of promise and hope.
Rs. 2,23,846 crore outlay for Health and Wellbeing in BE 2021-22 as against Rs. 94,452
crore in BE 2020-21 – an increase of 137%
Focus on strengthening three areas: Preventive, Curative, and Wellbeing
Steps being taken for improving health and wellbeing:
v. Vaccines
Rs. 35,000 crore for COVID-19 vaccine in BE 2021-22
The Made-in-India Pneumococcal Vaccine to be rolled out across the country, from
present 5 states – to avert 50,000 child deaths annually
v. Health Systems
Rs. 64,180 crore outlay over 6 years for PM AatmaNirbhar Swasth Bharat Yojana – a
new centrally sponsored scheme to be launched, in addition to NHM
Main interventions under PM AatmaNirbhar Swasth Bharat Yojana:
v. Nutrition
Rs. 2,87,000 crore over 5 years for Jal Jeevan Mission (Urban) - to be launched with an
aim to provide:
Rs. 1,41,678 crore over 5 years for Urban Swachh Bharat Mission 2.0
Main interventions under Swachh Bharat Mission (Urban) 2.0:
v. Clean Air
Rs. 2,217 crore to tackle air pollution, for 42 urban centers with a million-plus
population
v. Scrapping Policy
Voluntary vehicle scrapping policy to phase out old and unfit vehicles
Fitness tests in automated fitness centres:
Rs. 1.97 lakh crore in next 5 years for PLI schemes in 13 Sectors
To create and nurture manufacturing global champions for an AatmaNirbhar
Bharat
To help manufacturing companies become an integral part of global supply chains,
possess core competence and cutting-edge technology
To bring scale and size in key sectors
To provide jobs to the youth
v. Textiles
Mega Investment Textiles Parks (MITRA) scheme, in addition to PLI:
7 Textile Parks to be established over 3 years
Textile industry to become globally competitive, attract large investments and boost
employment generation & exports
v. Infrastructure
a. 5operational toll roads worth Rs. 5,000 crore being transferred to the NHAIInvIT
b. Transmission assets worth Rs. 7,000 crore to be transferred to the PGCILInvIT
c. Dedicated Freight Corridor assets to be monetized by Railways, for operations and
maintenance, after commissioning
d. Next lot of Airports to be monetized for operations and management concession
e. Other core infrastructure assets to be rolled out under the Asset Monetization
Programme:
Oil and Gas Pipelines of GAIL, IOCL and HPCL
AAI Airports in Tier II and III cities
Other Railway Infrastructure Assets
Warehousing Assets of CPSEs such as Central Warehousing Corporation and
NAFED
Sports Stadiums
Rs. 5.54 lakh crore capital expenditure in BE 2021-22 – sharp increase of 34.5% over Rs.
4.12 lakh crore allocated in BE 2020-21 :
Over Rs. 2 lakh crore to States and Autonomous Bodies for their Capital Expenditure.
Over Rs. 44,000 crore for the Department of Economic Affairs to provide for
projects/programmes/departments exhibiting good progress on Capital Expenditure
Rs. 1,18,101 lakh crore, highest ever outlay, for Ministry of Road Transport and
Highways – of which Rs. 1,08,230 crore is for capital
Under the Rs. 5.35 lakh crore Bharatmala Pariyojana, more than 13,000 km length of
roads worth Rs. 3.3 lakh crore awarded for construction:
Rs. 1.03 lakh crore outlay for 3,500 km of NHs in Tamil Nadu
Rs. 65,000 crore investment for 1,100 km of NHs in Kerala
Rs. 25,000 crore for 675 km of NHs in West Bengal
Over Rs. 34,000 crore to be allocated for 1300 km of NHs to be undertaken in next 3
years in Assam, in addition to Rs. 19,000 crore works of NHs currently in progress in the
State
Flagship Corridors/Expressways:
Speed radars
Variable message signboards
GPS enabled recovery vans will be installed
v. Railway Infrastructure
Rs. 1,10,055 crore for Railways of which Rs. 1,07,100 crore is for capital expenditure
National Rail Plan for India (2030): to create a ‘future ready’ Railway system by 2030
100% electrification of Broad-Gauge routes to be completed by December, 2023
Broad Gauge Route Kilometers (RKM) electrification to reach 46,000 RKM, i.e. 72% by end
of 2021
Western Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC) and Eastern DFC to be commissioned by June
2022, to bring down the logistic costs – enabling Make in India strategy
Additional initiatives proposed:
The Sonnagar-Gomoh Section (263.7 km) of Eastern DFC to be taken up in PPP mode in
2021-22
Future dedicated freight corridor projects –
Aesthetically designed Vista Dome LHB coach on tourist routes for better travel
High density network and highly utilized network routes to have an indigenously
developed automatic train protection system, eliminating train collision due to
human error
v. Urban Infrastructure
Raising the share of public transport in urban areas by expansion of metro rail
network and augmentation of city bus service
Rs. 18,000 crore for a new scheme, to augment public bus transport:
Innovative PPP models to run more than 20,000 buses
To boost automobile sector, provide fillip to economic growth, create employment
opportunities for our youth
A total of 702 km of conventional metro is operational and another 1,016 km of metro and
RRTS is under construction in 27 cities
‘MetroLite’ and ‘MetroNeo’ technologies to provide metro rail systems at much lesser
cost with similar experience in Tier-2 cities and peripheral areas of Tier-1 cities.
Central counterpart funding to:
a. Kochi Metro Railway Phase-II of 11.5 km at a cost of Rs. 1957.05 crore
b. Chennai Metro Railway Phase –II of 118.9 km at a cost of Rs. 63,246 crore
c. Bengaluru Metro Railway Project Phase 2A and 2B of 58.19 km at a cost of Rs. 14,788
crore
d. Nagpur Metro Rail Project Phase-II and Nashik Metro at a cost of Rs. 5,976 crore and
Rs. 2,092 crore respectively.
v. Power Infrastructure
139 Giga Watts of installed capacity and 1.41 lakh circuit km of transmission lines added,
and additional 2.8 crore households connected in past 6 years
Consumers to have alternatives to choose the Distribution Company for enhancing
competitiveness
Rs. 3,05,984 crore over 5 years for a revamped, reforms-based and result-linked new
power distribution sector scheme
A comprehensive National Hydrogen Energy Mission 2021-22 to be launched
Rs. 2,000 crore worth 7 projects to be offered in PPP-mode in FY21-22 for operation of
major ports
Indian shipping companies to get Rs. 1624 crore worth subsidy support over 5 years in
global tenders of Ministries and CPSEs
To double the recycling capacity of around 4.5 Million Light Displacement Tonne (LDT)
by 2024; to generate an additional 1.5 lakh jobs
v. Financial Capital
To increase the permissible FDI limit from 49% to 74% and allow foreign ownership and
control with safeguards
v. Recapitalization of PSBs
Rs. 20,000 crore in 2021-22 to further consolidate the financial capacity of PSBs
v. Deposit Insurance
Amendments to the DICGC Act, 1961, to help depositors get an easy and time-bound
access to their deposits to the extent of the deposit insurance cover
Minimum loan size eligible for debt recovery under the Securitisation and Reconstruction
of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest (SARFAESI) Act, 2002 proposed
to be reduced from Rs. 50 lakh to Rs. 20 lakh for NBFCs with minimum asset size of Rs.
100 crore
v. Company Matters
Launch of data analytics, artificial intelligence, machine learning driven MCA21 Version
3.0 in 2021-22
v. Disinvestment and Strategic Sale
Treasury Single Account (TSA) System for Autonomous Bodies to be extended for
universal application
Separate Administrative Structure to streamline the ‘Ease of Doing Business’ for
Cooperatives
v. Agriculture
Ensured MSP at minimum 1.5 times the cost of production across all commodities.
With steady increase in the procurement, payment to farmers increased as under:
v. Fisheries
Investments to develop modern fishing harbours and fish landing centres – both marine
and inland
5 major fishing harbours – Kochi, Chennai, Visakhapatnam, Paradip, and Petuaghat to
be developed as hubs of economic activity
Multipurpose Seaweed Park in Tamil Nadu to promote seaweed cultivation
One Nation One Ration Card scheme for beneficiaries to claim rations anywhere in the
country - migrant workers to benefit the most
Scheme implementation so far covered 86% of beneficiaries across 32 States and UTs
Remaining 4 states to be integrated in next few months
Portal to collect information on unorganized labour force, migrant workers especially,
to help formulate schemes for them
Implementation of 4 labour codes underway
Social security benefits for gig and platform workers too
minimum wages and coverage under the Employees State Insurance Corporation
applicable for all categories of workers
Women workers allowed in all categories, including night-shifts with adequate protection
Compliance burden on employers reduced with single registration and licensing, and
online returns
v. Financial Inclusion
Under Stand Up India Scheme for SCs, STs and women,
v. School Education
v. Higher Education
v. Skilling
SKILLING.jpg
· PSLV-CS51 t o be launched by New Space India Limited (NSIL) carrying Brazil’s Amazonia
Sat ellit e and some Indian sat ellit es
· Proposed Conciliation Mechanism wit h mandat e for quick resolut ion of cont ract ual disput es
wit h CPSEs
Rs. 3,768 crore allocated for first digital census in the history of India
· Rs. 300 crore grant t o t he Government of Goa for t he diamond jubilee celebrat ions of t he
st at e’s liberat ion from Port uguese
· Rs. 1,000 crore for t he welfare of Tea workers especially women and t heir children in Assam
and West Bengal t hrough a special scheme
Fiscal Position
Expenditure `30.42 lakh crore `34.50 lakh crore `34.83 lakh crore
Capital Expenditure `4.12 lakh crore `4.39 lakh crore ` 5.5 lakh crore
RE for Expenditure is Rs. 34.50 lakh crore as against original BE expenditure of Rs.
30.42 lakh crore
Quality of expenditure has been maintained as Capital Expenditure estimated as per RE is
Rs. 4.39 lakh crore in 2020-2021 as against Rs. 4.12 lakh crore in BE 2020-21
· Est imat es of Rs. 34.83 lakh crore BE for expendit ure in 2021-2022 including Rs. 5.5 lakh crore
as capit al expendit ure, an increase of 34.5% t o give required push t o economy
· The fiscal deficit in BE 2021-2022 is est imat ed t o be 6.8% of GDP. The fiscal deficit in RE
2020-21 is pegged at 9.5% of GDP - funded t hrough Government borrowings, mult ilat eral
borrowings, Small Saving Funds and short t erm borrowings
Gross borrowing from the market for the next year to be around 12 lakh crore.
Plan to continue on the path of fiscal consolidation, achieving a fiscal deficit level below
4.5% of GDP by 2025-2026 with a fairly steady decline over the period
It will be achieved by increasing the buoyancy of tax revenue through improved
compliance, and secondly, by increased receipts from monetisation of assets, including
Public Sector Enterprises and land
Deviation Statement under Sections 4(5) and 7(3) (b) of the FRBM Act tabled necessitated
by this year’s unforeseen and unprecedented circumstances
Amendment to FRBM Act proposed to achieve targeted Fiscal Deficit levels
· The Cont ingency Fund of India is t o be augment ed from Rs. 500 crore t o Rs. 30,000 crore
t hrough Finance Bill
Net borrowing for the states allowed at 4% of GSDP for the year 2021-2022 as per
recommendation of 15th FC
Part of this earmarked for incremental capital expenditure
Additional borrowing ceiling of 0.5% of GSDP will be provided subject to conditions
States expected to reach a fiscal deficit of 3% of GSDP by 2023-24, as recommended by
the 15th Finance Commission
The final report covering 2021-26 was submitted to the President, retaining vertical
shares of states at 41%
Funds to UTs of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh would be provided by Centre
On the Commission’s recommendation, Rs. 1,18,452 crore have been provided as
Revenue Deficit Grant to 17 states in 2021-22, as against Rs. 74,340 crore to 14 states in
2020-21
Tax Proposals
1. Direct Taxes
Achievements:
Corporate tax rate slashed to make it among the lowest in the world
Burden of taxation on small taxpayers eased by increasing rebates
Return filers almost doubled to 6.48 crore in 2020 from 3.31 crore in 2014
Faceless Assessment and Faceless Appeal introduced
Exemption from filing tax returns for senior citizens over 75 years of age and having
only pension and interest income; tax to be deducted by paying bank
Relaxation to NRIs:
Rules to be notified for removing hardships faced by NRIs regarding their foreign
retirement accounts
Limit of turnover for tax audit increased to Rs. 10 crore from Rs. 5 crore for entities
carrying out 95% transactions digitally
Relief for Dividend:
Infrastructure Debt Funds made eligible to raise funds by issuing Zero Coupon Bonds
Relaxation of some conditions relating to prohibition on private funding, restriction on
commercial activities, and direct investment
Supporting ‘Housing for All’:
Additional deduction of interest, up to Rs. 1.5 lakh, for loan taken to buy an affordable
house extended for loans taken till March 2022
Tax holiday for Affordable Housing projects extended till March 2022
Tax exemption allowed for notified Affordable Rental Housing Projects
Tax holiday for capital gains from incomes of aircraft leasing companies
Tax exemptions for aircraft lease rentals paid to foreign lessors
Tax incentive for relocating foreign funds in the IFSC
Tax exemption to investment division of foreign banks located in IFSC
Details of capital gains from listed securities, dividend income, interest from banks, etc. to
be pre-filled in returns
Relief to Small Trusts:
Exemption limit of annual receipt revised from ₹1 crore to ₹5 crore for small charitable
trusts running schools and hospitals
Labour Welfare:
2. Indirect Taxes
GST:
Twin objectives: Promoting domestic manufacturing and helping India get onto global
value chain and export better
80 outdated exemptions already eliminated
Revised, distortion-free customs duty structure to be put in place from 1st October 2021
by reviewing more than 400 old exemptions
New customs duty exemptions to have validity up to the 31st March following two years
from its issue date
Customs duty reduced uniformly to 7.5% on semis, flat, and long products of non-alloy,
alloy, and stainless steels
Duty on steel scrap exempted up to 31st March, 2022
Anti-Dumping Duty (ADD) and Counter-Veiling Duty (CVD) revoked on certain steel
products
Duty on copper scrap reduced from 5% to 2.5%
Textiles:
Basic Customs Duty (BCD) on caprolactam, nylon chips and nylon fiber & yarn reduced to
5%
Chemicals:
Calibrated customs duty rates on chemicals to encourage domestic value addition and to
remove inversions
Duty on Naptha reduced to 2.5%
Renewable Energy:
Phased manufacturing plan for solar cells and solar panels to be notified
Duty on solar invertors raised from 5% to 20%, and on solar lanterns from 5% to 15%
to encourage domestic production
Capital Equipment:
Tunnel boring machine to now attract a customs duty of 7.5%; and its parts a duty of 2.5%
Duty on certain auto parts increased to general rate of 15%
MSME Products:
Customs duty on cotton increased from nil to 10% and on raw silk and silk yarn from 10%
to 15%.
Withdrawal of end-use based concession on denatured ethyl alcohol
Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess (AIDC) on a small number of items
AatmaNirbharta – not a new idea – ancient India was self-reliant and a business
epicentre of the world
AtmaNirbhar Bharat – an expression of 130 crore Indians who have full confidence in
their capabilities and skills
Strengthening the Sankalp of:
Nation First
Doubling Farmer’s Income
Strong Infrastructure
Healthy India
Good Governance
Opportunities for Youth
Education for All
Women Empowerment
Inclusive Development
13 promises made in the Union Budget 2015-16, and resonating with the vision of
AatmaNirbharta, to materialise during the AmrutMahotsav of 2022 – on the 75th year of
our independence
“Faith is the bird that feels the light and sings when the dawn is still dark.”
– Rabindranat h Tagore
*****
RM/AS/AUK/KA/PJ
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Visit o r Co unt er: 195457 Last Updated On: 02 Feb 2021 13:45:00 PM