Corporate

Govt rejigs accounts to spend Rs 25,725 cr

To dole out Rs 3,000 cr to fertiliser companies; Rs 800 cr to AI - Public expenditure to go up by additional Rs 25,727 cr - Govt earns Rs 8,308 cr from mobile companies - Air India proposes 10% cut in expat pilots" wages - India"s drug industry is over Rs 1 lakh cr - Answers to last week's quiz (#124) - AI incurs Rs 7,226 cr loss in last two fiscals The government today sought Parliament’s approval for additional spending of Rs 25,725 crore on fertiliser subsidies, food and for equity infusion in ailing state-run carrier Air India (AI), among other heads in the current financial year. The government has decided to give a Rs 3,000-crore cash subsidy to fertiliser companies and put in another Rs 800 crore in AI. Oil marketing companies, though, are unlikely to get any subsidy for the losses they incur on selling cooking fuel at subsidised rates in the current year. Infrastructure companies may get some more business, as the government will put in Rs 1,000 crore for the Commonwealth Games to be held in New Delhi next year and another Rs 1,200 crore in drought and flood relief programmes to be carried out in other parts of the country. “The government spending for the full year will continue to be Rs 1,02,083 crore this year, since we have cut allocation for programmes and departments where the pace of expenditure has been slow. We want to do away with the practice of the ministries spending money at the end of the year,” said a senior finance ministry official. The gap between government earnings and expenditure is expected to remain at the budgetary estimate of 6.8 per cent of the gross domestic product. Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee today placed the proposals in the Lok Sabha as part of the supplementary to the Budget. Unlike last year, when government spending rose 20 per cent in the two supplementaries as a result of stimulus measures and implementation of the Sixth Pay Commission report, the expenditure is not going to shoot up this year. Another window for additional spending would be open only at the time of the next Budget, when the expenditure estimates for 2009-10 would be revised. A major chunk of the Rs 25,725-crore spending will go into the unplanned expenditure like payment of pensions and superannuation benefits to defence personnel and other central government employees. With the implementation of the Sixth Pay Commission recommendation on pensions, the outgo on this account is Rs 6,743 crore. Food subsidy on account of higher minimum support price and payment to state governments for decentralised procurement of food grain has also gone up by Rs 3,458 crore.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Rs 9.9 lakh highest offer at NID
In a first at the National Institute of Design (NID), academic profiles were offered to the graduating batch of young designers during placements this year. The annual industry interface at NID campuses in Ahmedabad and Gandhinagar saw around 70 firms visiting the campus. Apart from academics, profiles in auto design, apparel design, retail, and product design were offered by some of the biggies like Honda R&D, Bajaj Auto, LG, Madura Garments, TAFE, Luxor, Godrej Industries Limited, and Godrej & Boyce Manufacturing.
Popular Articles
payday loans

CBI files supplementary chargesheet in Satyam scam
Satyam Computer Services’ founder-chairman Ramalinga Raju and his aides forged board resolutions and unauthorisedly got loans/advances of Rs 1,220 crore in the name of Satyam Computers from banks but this is not reflected in the accounting books, according to the supplementary chargesheet the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) filed on Tuesday.

Top-8 cos add Rs 1 lakh cr in m-cap last week
The country"s most valued firm Reliance Industries (RIL) helped eight of the top-10 Sensex firms add over Rs 1 lakh crore in their market valuation during the last week, while the state-run MMTC and private telecom services provider Bharti Airtel saw value erosion.