India Budget Analysis 2001-02
Deep-dive into India's Union Budget 2001-02 — fiscal deficit trajectory, capital expenditure growth, revenue trends, and policy impact analysis.
Total Expenditure
3.62 lakh crore
Total Receipts
3.74 lakh crore
Fiscal Deficit
6.2% of GDP
Analysis Topics
Fiscal Deficit
Rs 1.41 lakh crore
+18.6% YoY
The fiscal deficit measures the gap between total government expenditure and total receipts excluding borrowings. It ind...
Capital Expenditure
Rs 60,842 crore
+27.4% YoY
Capital expenditure represents government spending on infrastructure, assets, and long-term investments. Rising capex si...
Tax Revenue
Rs 1.34 lakh crore
-1.8% YoY
Tax revenue is the primary source of government income, comprising direct taxes (income tax, corporate tax) and indirect...
Revenue Deficit
Rs 1 lakh crore
+17.5% YoY
The revenue deficit shows whether the government earns enough revenue to cover its day-to-day expenses. A persistent rev...
Defence Spending
Rs 3.62 lakh crore
+11.3% YoY
Defence spending is one of the largest line items in India's budget, covering military salaries, equipment procurement, ...
Subsidy Allocation
Rs 3.01 lakh crore
+8.5% YoY
Government subsidies on food, fertiliser, and fuel form a significant portion of revenue expenditure. Subsidy reform — t...
Understanding India's Budget Analysis
This analysis covers six critical dimensions of India's Union Budget 2001-02: fiscal deficit management, capital expenditure priorities, tax revenue collection, revenue deficit trends, defence spending allocation, and subsidy policy. Each topic provides year-over-year comparison and contextual analysis.
Use these analyses to understand how fiscal policy evolves across budget years, identify spending priorities, and track whether the government meets its fiscal consolidation targets under the FRBM Act.