Fiscal Policy & Management
Public Expenditure
& the FRBM Act
Good fiscal management is about the quality of spending, not just its size. India has pivoted toward capital expenditure (now 23.3% of total spending) and anchored discipline in the FRBM Act, 2003 — even as combined debt sits near 81% of GDP, well above the 60% target.
Raising resources is only half the story; managing how they are spent and how the deficit is contained is the other half. This section covers two pillars of fiscal management — improving the quality of public expenditure, and the legislative discipline imposed by the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act, 2003.
A deficit spent on a highway is an investment; the same deficit spent on a subsidy is consumption. The FRBM Act was India's promise to borrow responsibly — its real test is not whether the number is hit, but whether the spending behind it builds the future. — Legacy IAS Faculty
Public Expenditure Management
Since liberalisation in 1991, managing public spending has grown more complex. The core challenges are timeless: ensuring expenditure actually delivers outcomes, curbing wasteful spending, and balancing development needs against fiscal discipline. As the Economic Survey FY25 notes, a revenue surplus (or a lower revenue deficit) tends to go hand-in-hand with higher capital expenditure — disciplined day-to-day spending frees money for asset creation.
A persistent friction point is fiscal federalism — the sharing of money between the Centre and states. The Centre's growing reliance on cesses and surcharges (which are not shared with states) and the states' demand for higher devolution (their share of central taxes, decided by the Finance Commission) keep this a live tension in expenditure allocation.
From Quantity to Quality of Expenditure
The headline reform in recent budgets is a deliberate shift in the composition of spending — prioritising capital expenditure (investment in assets) over revenue expenditure (day-to-day consumption). The logic: capex yields higher economic returns and "crowds in" private investment — meaning public projects create the demand and infrastructure that pull private players in to invest alongside.
To spread this investment push, the Union Budget FY26 proposed an outlay of ₹1.5 lakh crore for 50-year interest-free loans to states for their own capital expenditure, tied to reform incentives — a model continued and expanded in Budget 2026-27.
Beyond shifting toward capex, India improves spending quality through Outcome Budgeting (linking money to measurable results, not just allocations), Gender & Child Budgeting (tracking spending on women and children), the Public Financial Management System (PFMS) and Direct Benefit Transfer (cutting leakage), and a push to limit off-budget borrowings (debt parked in PSUs to keep it off the official deficit). Watch the term Zero-Based Budgeting too — building each budget from scratch rather than incrementally.
The FRBM Act, 2003
The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act, 2003 was enacted to bring transparency and discipline to public finances by setting legislative targets for key deficits — turning fiscal prudence from a political promise into a legal obligation.
- Rationale: to rein in high fiscal deficits and rising public debt, securing long-term macroeconomic stability and inter-generational equity — i.e., not forcing tomorrow's citizens to repay today's borrowing.
- Key objectives: fiscal discipline, debt management, long-term sustainability, efficient resource allocation, and macroeconomic stability.
- Original targets: for the Centre, eliminate the revenue deficit and cut the fiscal deficit to 3% of GDP. States were required to enact their own FRBM laws.
The N.K. Singh Committee & the 'Escape Clause'
The FRBM framework has been reviewed repeatedly. The N.K. Singh Committee (2016) drew up a fresh roadmap for consolidation:
- Debt as the primary anchor: target a government debt-to-GDP ratio of 60% by 2023 — split as 40% for the Centre and 20% for states.
- The 'Escape Clause': a formal emergency exit letting the government breach its fiscal targets in specific situations — national security, war, national calamity, or a collapse in the economy (growth falling at least 3 percentage points below trend). It gives flexibility for genuine shocks without destroying the framework's credibility (it was invoked during COVID-19).
India's Fiscal Consolidation Journey
How well has the FRBM framework actually worked? Three phases tell the story.
Strong Early Consolidation
Gross Fiscal Deficit (GFD) cut sharply from 5.8% to 2.6% of GDP — via expenditure cuts (2.1%) and a revenue rise (1.1%). The tax-to-GDP ratio climbed from 9.1% to 12.1%.
Slow Grind Post-Crisis
After the global financial crisis stimulus, the GFD eased to 3.4% by 2018-19 — but consolidation was slow, averaging just 0.2% of GDP a year, mostly from expenditure cuts (1.5%) with little revenue gain (0.2%).
Post-COVID Recovery Path
GFD around 4.8–4.9% of GDP on the way back down — but combined Centre-plus-state debt sits near 81% of GDP, far above FRBM's 60% target. The numbers improve, the debt overhang remains.
Critical Evaluation of the FRBM Act
The FRBM story is one of real achievement shadowed by real gaps. A balanced scorecard:
Successes
Limitations
Key Lessons
Suggestions
The FRBM Act has delivered notable fiscal consolidation and institutionalised discipline — but strategic reforms (a flexible glide path, a fiscal council, and a higher tax-to-GDP base) are needed to ensure sustained fiscal prudence and long-term stability rather than discipline that buckles at the first shock.
Recent Update — Where the Numbers Stand (Budget 2026-27)
India has stayed on its consolidation path and recast the entire framework around debt.
From FY27, the debt-to-GDP ratio replaces the fiscal deficit as the primary fiscal anchor — exactly the N.K. Singh Committee's "debt-first" philosophy, now operationalised. The fiscal deficit still appears in the budget, but as a derived number on the road to a falling debt ratio.
Probable Prelims MCQs (Application-Based)
UPSC-standard practice on fiscal management and the FRBM Act. Tap to reveal the answer and reasoning.
Q1. The FRBM Act, 2003, in its original form, mandated which of the following for the Central Government?
2. Reduction of the fiscal deficit to 3% of GDP
3. A balanced current account every year
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Show Answer
Q2. Under the N.K. Singh Committee framework, the FRBM "escape clause" can be invoked in which of the following situations?
2. A fall in real output growth of at least 3 percentage points below trend
3. A routine shortfall in disinvestment receipts
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Show Answer
Q3. The N.K. Singh Committee recommended a general government debt-to-GDP target. What was its proposed split?
(b) 40% combined — 20% Centre and 20% States
(c) 80% combined — 60% Centre and 20% States
(d) 50% combined — 25% Centre and 25% States
Show Answer
Q4. The shift toward "quality of expenditure" in recent Union Budgets primarily refers to:
(b) Raising the share of capital expenditure that creates productive assets and crowds in private investment
(c) Cutting total expenditure to balance the budget
(d) Transferring all spending to the states
Show Answer
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. What is the FRBM Act and why was it needed?
The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act, 2003, sets legal targets for the government's deficits to enforce fiscal discipline and transparency. It was needed to curb chronically high fiscal deficits and rising public debt, protecting long-term stability and ensuring today's borrowing doesn't unfairly burden future generations.
Q2. What is the "escape clause" in simple terms?
It is a legal emergency exit. It lets the government temporarily breach its fiscal-deficit targets during genuine crises — war, national calamity, security threats, or a sharp growth collapse (a fall of at least 3 percentage points). It builds in flexibility so the framework bends instead of breaking; it was used during COVID-19.
Q3. Why is India moving from a fiscal-deficit target to a debt-to-GDP target?
The annual fiscal deficit is just one year's borrowing; the debt-to-GDP ratio captures the total accumulated burden and its sustainability. Anchoring on debt (per the N.K. Singh Committee) gives a truer picture of fiscal health, allows flexibility in shocks, and aligns India with global practice — targeting ~50% Centre debt by FY31.
Q4. What does "crowding in" private investment mean?
It is the opposite of "crowding out." When the government spends on infrastructure (roads, ports, power), it creates demand and removes bottlenecks, making private projects more viable — so private firms invest more, pulled in alongside public capex rather than pushed out by it.
Key Takeaways
- Quality over quantity: India is shifting spending toward asset-creating capex (now 23.3% of total, up from ~12% a decade ago) to crowd in private investment — backed by ₹1.5 lakh crore of 50-year interest-free loans to states.
- Fiscal federalism friction: the Centre's reliance on cesses/surcharges (un-shared) vs states' demand for higher devolution remains a live tension.
- FRBM Act 2003 made fiscal prudence a legal duty — originally targeting zero revenue deficit and a 3% fiscal deficit, with inter-generational equity at its core.
- N.K. Singh Committee (2016): debt as the primary anchor (60% combined: 40% Centre, 20% states) plus a formal escape clause for genuine shocks (used in COVID-19).
- Consolidation journey: strong 2003-08 (5.8%→2.6%), slow 2010-19 (to 3.4%), and a post-COVID path back down — but combined debt (~81%) stays well above target.
- Balanced verdict: real discipline achieved, but reforms needed — a flexible glide path, an independent fiscal council, and a higher tax-to-GDP base; the framework is now anchored on debt-to-GDP (55.6% FY27 → ~50% by FY31).
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