Key Budget Terms Explained: Your Guide to Understanding India's Budget 2026
The Union Budget to be presented on February 1, 2026, by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman is the Government’s blueprint on expenditure, taxes it plans to levy, and other transactions that affect the economy and lives of citizens. It will be presented against a backdrop of geopolitical uncertainties, including a steep 50% U.S. tariff on shipments from India.
To help you understand the budget discussions better, here are the key terms that shape how public spending and revenues are discussed:
A statement of the estimated receipts and expenditure of the government for a particular year. It outlines how much money the government will collect and spend, and on what items.
It is what a government does to influence the course of an economy through decisions on taxes and spending. Fiscal policy is implemented through the budget. It’s the government’s tool to manage economic growth and inflation.
Monetary policy is what a central bank (Reserve Bank of India – RBI) does to influence the course of an economy through decisions on money supply and interest rates. While fiscal policy is about spending and taxes, monetary policy focuses on controlling money circulation.
The Capital Budget consists of capital receipts and payments. It includes investments in shares, loans and advances granted by the Central Government to State Governments, Government companies, corporations and other parties. This is about long-term assets and investments.
Capital receipts are the funds that either create liabilities or reduce assets. These include loans raised by the government (market loans), borrowings through the sale of Treasury Bills, loans received from foreign governments and bodies, and recoveries of loans from State and Union Territories.
Capital expenditure or capex is the money spent by the government on development or to acquire, upgrade, or maintain machinery or assets. This includes spending on land, buildings, machinery, equipment, investments in shares, and loans and advances to State Governments, Union Territories, Government companies, and Corporations. These are productive investments.
The revenue budget consists of revenue receipts of the government and its expenditure. It focuses on day-to-day spending and income that is not repayable.
Income received by the government that is not repayable is revenue receipts. Revenue receipts are divided into two categories: tax and non-tax revenue. Tax revenues include income tax, corporate tax, excise, customs, service and other duties that the government levies. Non-tax revenue sources include interest on loans and dividends on investments.
Revenue expenditure doesn’t create or generate future returns. The government pays for salaries, pensions, and subsidies from revenue expenditure. This is for immediate consumption and recurring expenses, unlike capital expenditure which is for creating assets.
A tax, such as income tax and corporate tax, which has to be borne directly by the person or entity it is imposed on. The tax collector is the same person who bears the tax burden.
Examples:
A tax on goods and services, typically levied on an entity but paid by another. They are paid by consumers when they buy goods and services. The tax burden can be shifted to the consumer.
Examples:
An indirect tax levied on goods manufactured in India and meant for home consumption. It’s collected from producers and manufacturers rather than consumers directly.
Examples:
These are levies charged when goods are imported into, or exported from, the country. They are paid by the importer or exporter. Usually, these are also passed on to the consumer in the form of higher prices.
Purpose: To protect domestic industries and generate government revenue
A fiscal deficit arises when the government’s total expenditure exceeds its total revenue, excluding the money borrowed. In simple terms, it’s when the government spends more money than it collects as taxes and other revenues.
Impact:
The difference between revenue expenditure and revenue receipts is known as the revenue deficit. It shows the shortfall of the government’s current receipts over current expenditure. A revenue deficit means the government cannot even cover day-to-day expenses from its current income.
More concerning than fiscal deficit because it indicates structural spending problems.
The primary deficit is the fiscal deficit minus interest payments. It tells how much of the government’s borrowings are going towards meeting expenses other than interest payments. A smaller primary deficit is considered healthy.
Formula: Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit – Interest Payments
Rolled out in India from April 1, 2016, the GST seeks to make the indirect tax structure simpler and efficient by replacing a slew of levies such as octroi, central sales tax, State sales tax, and entry tax.
Key Features:
Current GST Slabs: 0%, 5%, 12%, 18%, and 28%
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) refers to the total market value of all finished goods and services produced within a country over a specified period of time. It’s the primary measure of a country’s economic size and health.
What GDP Includes:
Why It Matters:
The year-on-year percentage increase in GDP. A 7% GDP growth, for example, means the economy grew 7% compared to the previous year.
The sale of shares of public sector undertakings by the government is called disinvestment. The shares of government companies held by the government are assets at the disposal of the government. If these shares are sold to get cash, earning assets are converted into cash, so it’s referred to as disinvestment.
Purpose:
Recent Examples: Disinvestment in Air India, ONGC, and other PSUs
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