The Union Budget is one of the most important documents of the Indian economy. It shows how the government plans to collect money and how it plans to spend that money during a financial year.
For students, the Budget is not just a yearly event. It is a complete framework for understanding government revenue, public expenditure, taxation, borrowings, deficits, capital formation and fiscal discipline.
Chapter 5 explains the meaning of the Budget, constitutional provisions, government accounts, types of budgets, revenue and capital accounts, different deficits and the FRBM Act.
Table of Contents
What Is Union Budget?
The Union Budget is a document presented by the government declaring its estimated revenue and expenditure for a financial year.
In India, the Budget is prepared by the Department of Economic Affairs under the Ministry of Finance.
The constitutional basis of the Union Budget is Article 112 of the Indian Constitution, which refers to the Annual Financial Statement.
Why Is The Budget Important?
The Budget is important because it shows:
- How much money the government expects to earn.
- How much money the government plans to spend.
- How much tax will be collected.
- How much borrowing may be required.
- Which sectors will receive more allocation.
- Whether the government is focusing on welfare, infrastructure, defence, subsidies or fiscal discipline.
In simple words, the Budget is the financial plan of the government for 1 financial year.
Important Budget Documents
The chapter mentions that a set of documents is presented with the Budget.
Important documents include:
- Annual Financial Statement
- Finance Bill
- Statements related to receipts and expenditure
Annual Financial Statement
The Annual Financial Statement is the main constitutional document of the Budget under Article 112.
It shows the estimated receipts and expenditure of the government.
Finance Bill
The Finance Bill contains proposals related to taxation.
It is used for tax collection, tax changes, exemptions and remissions.
The chapter refers to Article 265, which states that no tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law.
Appropriation Bill
The Appropriation Bill allows the government to withdraw money from the Consolidated Fund of India.
It is connected with Article 114.
Without legislative approval through the Appropriation Act, money cannot be spent from the Consolidated Fund of India.
Government Accounts In India
Incoming money of the government is kept in 3 main accounts:
- Consolidated Fund of India
- Public Account of India
- Contingency Fund of India
Consolidated Fund Of India
The Consolidated Fund of India is mentioned under Article 266.
It is the most important government fund.
It includes:
- Revenue collected by the government.
- Loans raised by the government.
- Money received from repayment of loans.
- Interest and principal-related receipts.
Can Government Spend Directly From This Fund?
No.
The approval of Parliament is required to spend money from the Consolidated Fund of India.
This ensures legislative control over government expenditure.
Public Account Of India
The Public Account of India is also mentioned under Article 266.
It includes money that the government holds as a banker or trustee.
Examples:
- Provident fund.
- Small savings funds.
- State provident fund.
- Money orders.
- Other deposits held by the government.
Parliamentary approval is not required for normal withdrawals from the Public Account because this money does not belong fully to the government.
Contingency Fund Of India
The Contingency Fund of India is mentioned under Article 267.
It is used for urgent and unforeseen expenditure.
Example: sudden natural disaster, emergency relief or immediate crisis response.
The fund is placed at the disposal of the President of India.
Parliament approval is not required before using this fund, but approval is taken later to replenish it.
Difference Between The Three Government Funds
| Fund | Article | Purpose | Parliament Approval |
| Consolidated Fund of India | Article 266 | Main government revenue, loans and receipts | Required before spending |
| Public Account of India | Article 266 | Money held by government as trustee or banker | Not required for normal withdrawals |
| Contingency Fund of India | Article 267 | Urgent and unforeseen expenditure | Not required immediately |
Vote On Account
A Vote on Account is passed to meet government expenditure for a short period before the full Budget is passed.
After the Budget is presented, Parliament needs time to discuss, scrutinise and pass the Appropriation Bill.
During this period, the government still needs money to run regular functions.
So, Vote on Account allows temporary withdrawal of funds.
Why Vote On Account Is Needed
It is needed because:
- Budget discussion takes time.
- Government expenditure cannot stop.
- Salaries, pensions, defence, administration and welfare payments must continue.
- It allows spending between Budget presentation and final approval.
Types Of Budget
The chapter explains different types of budget based on revenue, expenditure, purpose and accounting method.
Balanced Budget
A balanced budget is a budget where government revenue and government expenditure are equal.
Revenue = Expenditure
In this situation, the government neither borrows extra nor has surplus fun ds.
It is considered fiscally disciplined, but it may not always be suitable for a developing country that needs higher public investment.
Surplus Budget
A surplus budget occurs when government revenue is greater than government expenditure.
Revenue > Expenditure
A surplus budget may be used to control inflation because the government takes more money out of the economy than it spends.
This can reduce demand pressure.
Deficit Budget
A deficit budget occurs when government expenditure is greater than government revenue.
Expenditure > Revenue
Developing countries often use deficit budgets to support development, infrastructure and welfare.
However, excessive deficit can increase borrowings and inflationary pressure.
Balanced Budget Vs Surplus Budget Vs Deficit Budget
| Type | Condition | Basic Meaning | Possible Use |
| Balanced Budget | Revenue = Expenditure | No surplus or deficit | Fiscal discipline |
| Surplus Budget | Revenue > Expenditure | Government earns more than it spends | Inflation control |
| Deficit Budget | Expenditure > Revenue | Government spends more than it earns | Development and growth support |
Performance Budget
A performance budget is based on cost-benefit analysis of different ministries and departments.
The idea is simple:
- Better performance gets better allocation.
- Poor performance can lead to review or lower allocation.
It links budget allocation with results.
Outcome Budget
An outcome budget focuses on:
- Input
- Output
- Impact
It does not only ask how much money was spent. It also asks what result was achieved.
Simple Example Of Outcome Budget
If the government spends money to build a school, output is the school building.
But the real outcome is whether students receive education, attendance improves and employment opportunities increase.
Outcome budgeting focuses on the actual impact of expenditure.
Gender Budgeting
Gender budgeting means making special budgetary provisions for women and children.
It reflects the sensitivity of the government towards gender equality and welfare.
The chapter notes the concept in the Indian budgetary context and links it with special allocation for women and children.
Zero-Based Budgeting
In zero-based budgeting, every project or scheme starts from zero for budget purposes.
Past allocation is not automatically continued.
Each department must justify why money should be allocated again.
This prevents wasteful spending and encourages fresh evaluation.
Accrual Budgeting
Accrual budgeting records income and expenditure when they are earned or incurred, even if cash has not actually been received or paid.
It is credit-based accounting.
Example: If the government has earned revenue but payment will come later, it may still be recorded under accrual accounting.
Cash-Based Budgeting
Cash-based budgeting records transactions when money is actually received or paid.
It focuses on actual cash flow.
This is simpler than accrual budgeting but may not show future liabilities clearly.
Types Of Budget At A Glance
| Type Of Budget | Meaning |
| Balanced Budget | Revenue equals expenditure |
| Surplus Budget | Revenue exceeds expenditure |
| Deficit Budget | Expenditure exceeds revenue |
| Performance Budget | Allocation based on performance and cost-benefit analysis |
| Outcome Budget | Focuses on input, output and impact |
| Gender Budgeting | Special allocation for women and children |
| Zero-Based Budgeting | Fresh justification required for every allocation |
| Accrual Budgeting | Records income and expenditure when earned or incurred |
| Cash-Based Budgeting | Records actual cash receipts and payments |
Structure Of Budget: Revenue And Capital Accounts
The Budget is divided into 2 major accounts:
- Revenue Account
- Capital Account
Each account has receipts and expenditure.
| Account | Receipts | Expenditure |
| Revenue Account | Revenue receipts | Revenue expenditure |
| Capital Account | Capital receipts | Capital expenditure |
Revenue Receipts
Revenue receipts are receipts that do not create liability and do not reduce assets of the government.
Revenue receipts are divided into:
- Tax revenue
- Non-tax revenue
Tax Revenue
Tax revenue includes money collected through taxes.
It may include:
- Direct taxes.
- Indirect taxes.
Examples:
- Income tax.
- Corporation tax.
- GST.
- Customs duty.
Non-Tax Revenue
Non-tax revenue includes income earned by the government from sources other than taxes.
Examples from the chapter include:
- Interest received on loans given to states, UTs, LIC, SBI or foreign countries.
- Dividend and profit from public sector undertakings.
- Grants received from foreign countries.
- Administrative fees.
- Fines and penalties.
- Escheat and forfeitures.
- Commercial revenue from government services such as railways and postal services.
Revenue Expenditure
Revenue expenditure is expenditure that does not create physical or financial assets.
It is regular expenditure required to run the government.
Examples:
- Interest payment on loans.
- Interest on government securities.
- Military and paramilitary revenue expenditure.
- Subsidies on food, fuel and fertiliser.
- Wages and salaries.
- Loan waivers.
- Relief funds.
- Grants to states and UTs without legislature.
- Social and economic services cost.
- Pensions.
Revenue Receipts Vs Revenue Expenditure
| Basis | Revenue Receipts | Revenue Expenditure |
| Meaning | Income that does not create liability or reduce assets | Spending that does not create assets |
| Examples | Taxes, fees, dividends, interest received | Salaries, pensions, subsidies, interest payments |
| Nature | Regular income | Regular expenditure |
| Asset Creation | No asset reduction | No asset creation |
Capital Receipts
Capital receipts are receipts that either create liability or reduce assets of the government.
Capital receipts are of 2 types:
- Debt-creating capital receipts
- Non-debt-creating capital receipts
Debt-Creating Capital Receipts
These receipts create liability because the government has to repay them.
Examples:
- Loan from RBI.
- Market borrowings.
- Loan from public sector banks.
- Loan from foreign countries.
- Loan from international financial institutions such as IMF.
- Loan from provident fund and small savings schemes.
Non-Debt-Creating Capital Receipts
These receipts do not create repayment liability.
Examples:
- Recovery of loans given earlier.
- Disinvestment receipts.
Disinvestment means selling government shares in public sector enterprises.
Example: Sale of government stake in a PSU.
Capital Expenditure
Capital expenditure creates physical or financial assets or reduces liabilities.
Examples:
- Land acquisition.
- Setting up defence or military establishments.
- Loans to states, PSUs and UTs.
- Repayment of internal and external loans.
- Purchase of financial assets such as bonds and securities.
Capital expenditure is important because it improves future productive capacity.
Capital Receipts Vs Capital Expenditure
| Basis | Capital Receipts | Capital Expenditure |
| Meaning | Receipts that create liability or reduce assets | Expenditure that creates assets or reduces liabilities |
| Examples | Borrowings, disinvestment, recovery of loans | Infrastructure, loans to states, purchase of securities |
| Effect | May increase liability | May build future capacity |
| Budget Account | Capital account | Capital account |
Revenue Deficit
Revenue deficit occurs when revenue expenditure exceeds revenue receipts.
Formula:
Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure – Revenue Receipts
A revenue deficit means the government is borrowing to meet regular expenditure.
This is considered less healthy because borrowing is not creating physical assets.
Simple Example
If revenue receipts are Rs 100 crore and revenue expenditure is Rs 130 crore:
Revenue Deficit = 130 – 100 = Rs 30 crore
The government has to cover this gap through borrowings or capital receipts.
Effective Revenue Deficit
Effective Revenue Deficit adjusts revenue deficit by subtracting grants given for creation of capital assets.
The idea is that some grants shown as revenue expenditure may actually help create assets in states or other bodies.
Formula:
Effective Revenue Deficit = Revenue Deficit – Grants For Creation Of Capital Assets
Fiscal Deficit
Fiscal deficit occurs when the government’s total expenditure exceeds its total receipts excluding borrowings.
It shows the total borrowing requirement of the government.
Fiscal Deficit Formula
Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure – (Revenue Receipts + Non-Debt Creating Capital Receipts)
In simple words, fiscal deficit shows how much the government needs to borrow to meet its expenditure.
The chapter also explains fiscal deficit as overall expenditure exceeding revenue, covered by borrowings.
Budgetary Deficit
Budgetary deficit is the difference between total expenditure and total receipts.
Formula:
Budgetary Deficit = Total Expenditure – Total Receipts
The chapter explains deficit as expenditure minus receipts.
Monetised Deficit
A monetised deficit occurs when the government covers its deficit by borrowing from RBI.
RBI may print additional money to finance this borrowing.
This can create inflation in the economy because money supply increases.
Why Monetised Deficit Can Be Risky
If more money enters the economy without a matching rise in goods and services, prices may rise.
This is why monetised deficit is linked with inflation.
Primary Deficit
Primary deficit shows the current borrowing requirement of the government excluding interest payments on past loans.
Formula:
Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments
The logic is that interest on previous loans should be separated from the current year’s fresh borrowing need.
Fiscal Deficit Vs Revenue Deficit Vs Primary Deficit
| Deficit | Formula | Meaning |
| Revenue Deficit | Revenue Expenditure – Revenue Receipts | Borrowing for regular expenditure |
| Effective Revenue Deficit | Revenue Deficit – Grants for Creation of Capital Assets | Adjusted revenue deficit |
| Fiscal Deficit | Total Expenditure – Revenue Receipts – Non-Debt Capital Receipts | Total borrowing requirement |
| Primary Deficit | Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments | Fresh borrowing excluding past interest |
| Monetised Deficit | Deficit financed by borrowing from RBI | Can increase money supply and inflation |
Order Of Deficits
The chapter gives a rough order:
Fiscal Deficit > Revenue Deficit > Effective Revenue Deficit > Primary Deficit
This order helps students remember that fiscal deficit is generally the broadest deficit measure.
FRBM Act, 2003
FRBM stands for Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management.
The FRBM Act, 2003 was introduced to make the government fiscally disciplined.
Its purpose is to:
- Reduce fiscal deficit.
- Reduce revenue deficit.
- Improve fiscal transparency.
- Control excessive borrowing.
- Promote long-term macroeconomic stability.
FRBM Targets Mentioned In The Chapter
The chapter states that fiscal deficit should be reduced gradually to make it stable at around 3 per cent of GDP.
It also mentions reducing revenue deficit towards zero.
These targets and actual numbers change with time and are revised through government policy, Finance Commission recommendations and Budget decisions.
So, for current exams, students should check the latest Union Budget and official government documents.
Why Deficit Control Matters
Deficit control matters because excessive borrowing can lead to:
- Higher interest burden.
- Less money for development expenditure.
- Inflationary pressure.
- Higher public debt.
- Reduced fiscal flexibility.
However, some deficit can be useful if it finances productive capital expenditure such as roads, railways, defence infrastructure, irrigation and power.
Revenue Expenditure Vs Capital Expenditure: Exam Comparison
| Basis | Revenue Expenditure | Capital Expenditure |
| Asset Creation | Does not create assets | Creates assets or reduces liabilities |
| Nature | Regular running expenditure | Development and investment expenditure |
| Examples | Salaries, pensions, subsidies, interest payments | Roads, bridges, land, defence infrastructure |
| Long-Term Impact | Maintains current functioning | Improves future capacity |
| Quality Of Spending | Less growth-oriented if excessive | More growth-oriented if productive |
Simple Budget Example
Suppose the government has:
- Revenue receipts: Rs 500 crore.
- Revenue expenditure: Rs 650 crore.
- Total expenditure: Rs 1,000 crore.
- Non-debt capital receipts: Rs 100 crore.
Revenue Deficit
Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure – Revenue Receipts
Revenue Deficit = 650 – 500 = Rs 150 crore
Fiscal Deficit
Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure – (Revenue Receipts + Non-Debt Capital Receipts)
Fiscal Deficit = 1,000 – (500 + 100)
Fiscal Deficit = Rs 400 crore
This Rs 400 crore shows the borrowing requirement of the government.
Important Budget Formulas
| Concept | Formula |
| Balanced Budget | Revenue = Expenditure |
| Surplus Budget | Revenue > Expenditure |
| Deficit Budget | Expenditure > Revenue |
| Revenue Deficit | Revenue Expenditure – Revenue Receipts |
| Effective Revenue Deficit | Revenue Deficit – Grants for Creation of Capital Assets |
| Fiscal Deficit | Total Expenditure – (Revenue Receipts + Non-Debt Creating Capital Receipts) |
| Budgetary Deficit | Total Expenditure – Total Receipts |
| Primary Deficit | Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments |
FAQs On Union Budget
What is Union Budget in simple words?
The Union Budget is the annual financial statement of the government showing estimated revenue and expenditure for a financial year.
Who prepares the Union Budget in India?
The Union Budget is prepared by the Department of Economic Affairs under the Ministry of Finance.
Which Article deals with the Union Budget?
Article 112 of the Indian Constitution deals with the Annual Financial Statement, commonly called the Union Budget.
What is Finance Bill?
Finance Bill contains taxation proposals of the government, including tax collection, changes and exemptions.
What is Appropriation Bill?
Appropriation Bill allows the government to withdraw money from the Consolidated Fund of India.
What is Consolidated Fund of India?
Consolidated Fund of India is the main government fund containing revenue, loans and receipts. Parliament approval is required to spend from it.
What is Public Account of India?
Public Account of India contains money held by the government as trustee or banker, such as provident funds and small savings.
What is Contingency Fund of India?
Contingency Fund of India is used for urgent and unforeseen expenditure and is placed at the disposal of the President.
What is Vote on Account?
Vote on Account allows the government to meet expenditure for a short period before the full Budget is passed.
What is a balanced budget?
A balanced budget is one where government revenue equals government expenditure.
What is a surplus budget?
A surplus budget is one where government revenue is greater than government expenditure.
What is a deficit budget?
A deficit budget is one where government expenditure is greater than government revenue.
What is performance budgeting?
Performance budgeting allocates funds based on performance and cost-benefit analysis.
What is outcome budgeting?
Outcome budgeting focuses on input, output and final impact of government expenditure.
What is gender budgeting?
Gender budgeting makes special provisions for women and children in budget allocation.
What is zero-based budgeting?
Zero-based budgeting treats past allocation as zero and requires fresh justification for every new allocation.
What are revenue receipts?
Revenue receipts are receipts that do not create liability and do not reduce government assets.
What is revenue expenditure?
Revenue expenditure is expenditure that does not create physical or financial assets.
What are capital receipts?
Capital receipts are receipts that create liability or reduce government assets, such as borrowings and disinvestment.
What is capital expenditure?
Capital expenditure creates assets or reduces liabilities, such as spending on infrastructure or loans to states.
What is revenue deficit?
Revenue deficit occurs when revenue expenditure exceeds revenue receipts.
What is fiscal deficit?
Fiscal deficit is the difference between total expenditure and total receipts excluding borrowings. It shows the government’s borrowing requirement.
What is primary deficit?
Primary deficit is fiscal deficit minus interest payments.
What is monetised deficit?
Monetised deficit occurs when the government borrows from RBI and RBI creates additional money to finance the deficit.
What is FRBM Act?
The FRBM Act, 2003 was introduced to improve fiscal discipline, reduce deficits and control excessive borrowing.
Last Moment Exam Cheat Sheet – Union Budget
- Union Budget is the government’s annual statement of revenue and expenditure.
- Article 112 deals with the Annual Financial Statement.
- The Budget is prepared by the Department of Economic Affairs.
- Finance Bill deals with taxation proposals.
- Appropriation Bill under Article 114 allows withdrawal from the Consolidated Fund of India.
- Government money is kept in 3 accounts: Consolidated Fund of India, Public Account of India and Contingency Fund of India.
- Consolidated Fund spending requires Parliament approval.
- Vote on Account allows temporary expenditure before the full Budget is passed.
- Budget can be balanced, surplus or deficit.
- Performance budget is based on cost-benefit analysis.
- Outcome budget focuses on input, output and impact.
- Zero-based budgeting requires fresh justification for allocation.
- Revenue receipts do not create liability or reduce assets.
- Revenue expenditure does not create assets.
- Capital receipts create liability or reduce assets.
- Capital expenditure creates assets or reduces liabilities.
- Revenue deficit means revenue expenditure is higher than revenue receipts.
- Fiscal deficit shows total borrowing requirement.
- Primary deficit equals fiscal deficit minus interest payments.
- Monetised deficit can create inflation.
- FRBM Act, 2003 was introduced for fiscal discipline.