India Union Budget 2013-14 Analysis
ActualsTotal expenditure, revenue receipts, fiscal deficit, and department-wise allocation for FY 2013-14
India Budget 2013-14 at a Glance โ Key Numbers
Total Receipts
Rs 10.56 lakh crore
+20.1%
Total Expenditure
Rs 15.58 lakh crore
+10.5%
Fiscal Deficit
4.5%
Rs 5.03 lakh crore
Capital Expenditure
Rs 1.64 lakh crore
-1.3%
Tax Revenue
Rs 8.16 lakh crore
+10.0%
Interest Payments
Rs 3.86 lakh crore
25% of expenditure
Revenue Receipts Breakdown 2013-14
Tax vs Non-Tax revenue sources of the Indian government
Government Expenditure Breakdown 2013-14
Revenue vs Capital spending and top department allocation
Revenue vs Capital Split
Top 10 Departments by Allocation
Fiscal Deficit as Percentage of GDP โ 2013-14
The fiscal deficit for 2013-14 is targeted at 4.5% of GDP (Rs 5.03 lakh crore), reflecting the government's commitment to fiscal consolidation while maintaining development spending.
The FRBM Act targets a fiscal deficit of 3% of GDP. The government aims to bring the central government debt-to-GDP ratio down to 50% by March 2031 from the current 51.7%.
Interest payments at Rs 3.86 lakh crore consume 24.8% of total expenditure, making it the single largest spending head.
India Budget 2013-14 โ Receipts & Expenditure Summary
| Particulars | Amount | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| A. Total Receipts | Rs 15.58 lakh crore | 100% |
| 1. Revenue Receipts | Rs 10.56 lakh crore | 67.8% |
| a. Tax Revenue (Net) | Rs 8.16 lakh crore | 52.4% |
| b. Non-Tax Revenue | Rs 2.4 lakh crore | 15.4% |
| B. Total Expenditure | Rs 15.58 lakh crore | 100% |
| 1. Revenue Expenditure | Rs 13.74 lakh crore | 88.2% |
| 2. Capital Expenditure | Rs 1.64 lakh crore | 10.5% |
| of which: Interest Payments | Rs 3.86 lakh crore | 24.8% |
| C. Fiscal Deficit | Rs 5.03 lakh crore | 4.5% of GDP |
| Revenue Deficit | Rs 3.17 lakh crore | โ |
Source: Union Budget Documents, Ministry of Finance, Government of India. All figures in Indian Rupees.
Department-wise Budget Allocation 2013-14
Top 20 ministries by allocation in 2013-14. Click column headers to sort.
| Department โ | Revenue โ | Capital โ | Total โ | Share |
|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Ministry of Finance (Interest Payments & Transfers) | Rs 5.1 lakh crore | Rs 65,000 crore | Rs 5.75 lakh crore | 36.9% |
2. Ministry of Defence | Rs 1.73 lakh crore | Rs 75,473 crore | Rs 2.48 lakh crore | 15.9% |
3. Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public Distribution | Rs 92,000 crore | Rs 1,600 crore | Rs 93,600 crore | 6.0% |
4. Ministry of Home Affairs | Rs 73,000 crore | Rs 7,500 crore | Rs 80,500 crore | 5.2% |
5. Ministry of Rural Development | Rs 68,500 crore | Rs 4,800 crore | Rs 73,300 crore | 4.7% |
6. Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilisers | Rs 68,000 crore | Rs 450 crore | Rs 68,450 crore | 4.4% |
7. Ministry of Education | Rs 53,000 crore | Rs 3,800 crore | Rs 56,800 crore | 3.6% |
8. Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare | Rs 36,500 crore | Rs 3,500 crore | Rs 40,000 crore | 2.6% |
9. Ministry of Road Transport & Highways | Rs 4,800 crore | Rs 33,000 crore | Rs 37,800 crore | 2.4% |
10. Ministry of Railways | Rs 2,200 crore | Rs 33,500 crore | Rs 35,700 crore | 2.3% |
11. Ministry of Health & Family Welfare | Rs 26,800 crore | Rs 3,000 crore | Rs 29,800 crore | 1.9% |
12. Ministry of Communications | Rs 20,500 crore | Rs 8,500 crore | Rs 29,000 crore | 1.9% |
13. Ministry of Women & Child Development | Rs 17,200 crore | Rs 280 crore | Rs 17,480 crore | 1.1% |
14. Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs | Rs 9,200 crore | Rs 6,800 crore | Rs 16,000 crore | 1.0% |
15. Ministry of Jal Shakti | Rs 6,200 crore | Rs 7,500 crore | Rs 13,700 crore | 0.9% |
16. Ministry of Science & Technology | Rs 7,600 crore | Rs 380 crore | Rs 7,980 crore | 0.5% |
17. Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment | Rs 6,200 crore | Rs 180 crore | Rs 6,380 crore | 0.4% |
18. Ministry of Commerce & Industry | Rs 4,900 crore | Rs 1,400 crore | Rs 6,300 crore | 0.4% |
19. Ministry of Labour & Employment | Rs 4,800 crore | Rs 90 crore | Rs 4,890 crore | 0.3% |
20. Ministry of Tribal Affairs | Rs 4,200 crore | Rs 140 crore | Rs 4,340 crore | 0.3% |
Union Budget 2013-14 Analysis & Highlights
Key Highlights
- Total expenditure reached Rs 15.59 lakh crore, with growth held to 10.5% in a consolidation year
- Fiscal deficit achieved at 4.5% of GDP, meeting the revised target and continuing the consolidation path
- GDP growth partially recovered to 6.4% in the second half as policy measures gained traction
- Taper Tantrum in May-August 2013 caused a severe rupee crisis, the currency falling to Rs 68.85 per dollar
- National Food Security Act enacted in September 2013, covering 67% of the population with subsidised grain
- Investment allowance of 15% introduced for manufacturing companies investing over Rs 100 crore in plant and machinery
- Nirbhaya Fund of Rs 1,000 crore established for women safety initiatives following the December 2012 tragedy
- Food subsidy surged to Rs 92,000 crore with the implementation of the National Food Security Act
- Current account deficit improved dramatically to 1.7% of GDP from 4.8% through gold import restrictions
- RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan took charge in September 2013, introducing measures to stabilise the rupee
- Petroleum subsidy remained at Rs 85,400 crore despite ongoing diesel price deregulation
- Tax revenue grew 14.2% aided by improved compliance and a partial recovery in economic activity
- Disinvestment raised Rs 15,800 crore, again falling well short of the Rs 40,000 crore target
- Pre-election populist pressures constrained fiscal space as UPA-II prepared for the 2014 general election
Compare India Budget โ Last 5 Years Trend
Interactive year-over-year comparison of key fiscal metrics
| Metric | 2009-10 | 2010-11 | 2011-12 | 2012-13 | 2013-14 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Expenditure | โ | โ | โ | Rs 14.1 lakh crore | Rs 15.58 lakh crore |
| Total Receipts | โ | โ | โ | Rs 14.1 lakh crore | Rs 15.58 lakh crore |
| Capital Expenditure | โ | โ | โ | Rs 1.66 lakh crore | Rs 1.64 lakh crore |
| Fiscal Deficit (% GDP) | โ | โ | โ | 4.9% | 4.5% |
| Tax Revenue | โ | โ | โ | Rs 7.42 lakh crore | Rs 8.16 lakh crore |
| Interest Payments | โ | โ | โ | Rs 3.17 lakh crore | Rs 3.86 lakh crore |
Columns showing "โ" will populate as we ingest historical data. Data shown is from official Budget documents.
Expert Analysis on Union Budget 2013-14
"The shift from Budget Estimates to Revised Estimates reveals the real fiscal story. When capex gets cut in RE, it signals that the government is prioritizing fiscal deficit targets over infrastructure spending."
"India's fiscal deficit target of 4.3% must be seen alongside off-budget borrowings. The true borrowing picture only emerges when you consolidate all government liabilities including FCI, NHAI, and state guarantees."
"Capital expenditure at 3.4% of GDP is historically significant. The quality of capex matters as much as quantity. Road and rail infrastructure spending has the highest multiplier effect on GDP growth."
"The real story of Indian public finance is in state budgets. The Centre transfers over 40% of its tax revenue to states, but conditions on these transfers shape state-level spending priorities significantly."
How to Read India's Union Budget 2013-14
The Union Budget is the annual financial statement of the Government of India, presented in Parliament by the Finance Minister on February 1st each year. It outlines the government's revenue expectations and expenditure plans. The Budget is prepared by the Budget Division of the Department of Economic Affairs in the Ministry of Finance.
Union Budget 2013-14 Revenue Receipts Explained
Revenue Receipts include tax revenue (income tax, corporate tax, GST, customs duty) and non-tax revenue (PSU dividends, fees, interest receipts). Tax revenue forms over 80% of total revenue receipts. The Centre shares a portion of gross tax revenue with states as mandated by the Finance Commission.
Capital Expenditure vs Revenue Expenditure in 2013-14 Budget
Revenue expenditure covers recurring spending: salaries, interest payments, subsidies (food, fertiliser, fuel), pensions, and grants to states. Capital expenditure is asset-creating spending: highways, railways, bridges, defence equipment, and investments in public enterprises. Increasing the share of capex is critical for long-term GDP growth.
What Is Fiscal Deficit and Why It Matters
Fiscal Deficit is the gap between total expenditure and total receipts excluding borrowings. A high fiscal deficit means more government borrowing, leading to higher interest payments in future budgets. The FRBM Act targets 3% of GDP, though the government follows a glide path.
Actuals vs Revised Estimates vs Budget Estimates
Budget documents present three columns: Actuals (verified spending from two years ago), Revised Estimates (updated current-year projections), and Budget Estimates (upcoming year projections). Comparing these reveals whether the government meets its targets.
How the Union Budget Process Works in India
The budget process starts months before February 1st. The Finance Ministry collects expenditure proposals from all ministries, the Department of Revenue prepares tax estimates based on GDP projections, and the Economic Survey (presented the day before) sets the macroeconomic context. Parliament then debates and passes it through the Finance Bill and Appropriation Bill.
Explore More Budget Data & Analysis
Official References & Data Sources
- India Budget Portal โ Ministry of Finance (Official budget documents)
- Economic Survey of India (Pre-budget macro analysis)
- Department of Economic Affairs (Fiscal policy & borrowing)
- Department of Revenue (Tax revenue data)
- RBI โ State Finances Study (State deficit & borrowing data)
- Open Budgets India (Machine-readable budget datasets)
- Comptroller & Auditor General (CAG) (Audit reports & actuals verification)
- Finance Commission of India (Centre-state revenue sharing)
- Press Information Bureau (PIB) (Budget press releases)
- data.gov.in โ Open Government Data (Downloadable fiscal datasets)
Economic Survey precedes the Budget
The Economic Survey sets the macroeconomic context for the Union Budget