On 23rd July, Nirmala Sitharaman, India’s Finance Minister, presented the Union Budget 2024-2025 in Parliament. This budget marks her seventh budget in a row under the Narendra Modi-led India Government and the first budget of the BJP-led alliance.
Union Budget 2024 Key Highlights
The union budget provides an overview of the government’s financial strategy for the upcoming fiscal year, encompassing both revenues and expenditures. Below are some key highlights:
Vision for ‘Viksit Bharat’
The budget is designed to foster a prosperous and equitable India by 2047, with a key emphasis on boosting economic growth, generating employment opportunities, and enhancing infrastructure.
Key Proposals
- Tax Reforms: Several changes in income tax structure can be anticipated.
- Infrastructure: Enhanced financial support for infrastructure projects.
- Tribal Communities: Upgraded aid and investment for tribal communities.
Budget Speech Structure
The Finance Minister’s speech covers discussions on economic circumstances, policy measures and industry-specific funding distributions.
It provides understanding of the government’s priorities and fiscal management.
The Annual Union Budget in India is a crucial financial event that details the government’s revenue and expenditure for the next fiscal year.
Below is how the budget speech is presented and the structure of the speech:
Union Budget Speech presentation
In Lok Shaba (the lower house of the Parliament), the finance minister presents the Union Budget, which is an event held usually in February.
The presentation of the union budget comprises the finance bill, which outlines tax proposals and the appropriation bill, which authorizes government expenditures.
The budget needs to be approved by the Lok Sabha before it can be effective on April 1, the start of India’s financial year.
The Structure of the Budget Speech
The budget speech delivered by the finance minister is divided into two primary segments: Part A and Part B
Part A of the Budget Speech
Part A of the budget speech begins with a thorough examination of past and present economic situations. It also provides a summary of economic expansion, inflation, budget deficits and other important aspects.
Part B of the Budget Speech
Part B of the budget speech includes the current budget projections, funding distribution and policy declarations. It encompasses different areas like farming, education, healthcare, infrastructure and defense. It also highlights important programs, tax revisions and government priorities.
What can we expect from Union Budget 2024?
The Union Budget is expected to bring changes to income tax structures, developments in infrastructure, job creation and measures for supporting the farmers. Although tax relief is expected to maintain fiscal discipline, which is important.
Major takeaways of the Union Budget
Education and Employment
PM Package:
5 schemes with ₹2 lakh crore allocation from employment and skilling.
Budget Provision:
₹1.48 lakh crore for employment, education and skilling.
Incentives for First-Time Employees:
- One-month wage upon joining
- Up to ₹15,000 in three DBT instalments for eligible employees earning up to ₹1 lakh/month
- Benefiting 210 lakh youths
Higher Education Support:
Financial assistance for loans up to ₹10 lakh.
Youth Internships:
- One crore youth to receive internships in 500 companies over five years.
- ₹5,000 monthly allowance.
- Training costs are to be covered by companies using CSR funds.
Jobs in Manufacturing
Scheme to incentivize job creation in manufacturing:
- EPFO contribution benefits for first-time employees and their employers for 4 years.
- Upto ₹3,000 monthly for two years for employers, aiming to benefit 30 lakh youths and create 50 lakh new jobs across all sectors.
Agriculture
- Crops: 109 new high yielding and climate-resilient varieties of 32 field and horticultural crops.
- National Cooperation Policy for National Development announced
- Digital infrastructure: Introduction of Kisan credit cards in 5 states.
- Shrimp farming promoted
- Focus on large-scale vegetable production
- Self-sufficiency in pulses and oilseeds: Government to strengthen production, storage and marketing
- Natural farming: One crore farmer will transition to natural farming with support for certification and branding, with 10,000 bio-input resource centres to be established.
State Assistance
Bihar:
- A new 2400 MW power plant in Pirpainti, Bihar
- New airports, medical colleges and sports infrastructure
Andra Pradesh
- Financial support, including ₹15,000 crore this fiscal year
- Completion and financing of the Polavaram irrigation project
Odisha
- Assistance to Odisha for the development of tourism
MSMES gets a push
Mudra Loans:
Limit enhanced from ₹10 lakh to ₹20 lakh for those who have availed and successfully repaid loans previously taken under the Tarun category.
New Credit Guarantee Scheme:
A new credit guarantee scheme to enable collateral-free term loans for machinery and equipment with the cover of up to ₹100 crore.
Angel and Income Tax
Abolish Angel Tax: Eliminating angle tax for all investor classes
Income Tax Act Review
A comprehensive review of the Income-tax Act, 1961 in six months to make it concise, lucid and reduce disputes and litigation.
TDS Changes
- E-commerce rate reduced from 1% to 0.1%.
- Decriminalized delays in payments up to filing due date
- Simplified reassessment for cases over ₹50 lakh
Capital Gains Tax
- Short-term gains on certain financial assets taxed at 20%
- Exemption limit raised to ₹1.25 lakh annually for some assets.
- Taxes on unlisted bonds, debt mutual funds and market-linked debentures.
Additional Tax
- Securities Transaction Tax: Increased to 0.2% for futures and 0.1% for options.
- NPS Contributions: Deduction limit raised from 10% to 14% of salary.
- Standard Deduction: Increased from ₹50,000 to ₹75,000
- Family Pension Deduction: increased from ₹15,000 to ₹25,000.
Urban and Rural Development
- PM Awas Yojana Urban 2.0
₹10 lakh crore to address housing needs for one crore poor and middle class, including ₹2.2 lakh crore of central assistance over five years.
- Street Markets
Develop 100 weekly ‘haats’ or steet food hubs in select cities
- Transit-Oriented Development:
For 14 large cities with a population above 30 lakhs
- Water Management:
Water supply, sewage treatment and solid waste management projects and services for 100 large cities
- PM Awas Yojana (Rural Development):
₹2.66 lakh crore for rural development, including construction of three crore houses.
Women’s Welfare
- Female Workforce Participation
To be increased through hostels and women-specific skilling programs.
- Funding Increase
218.8% rise in women’s welfare and empowerment funding from FY14 to FY25.
- Stamp Duty Reduction
States are encouraged to lower stamp duties for properties purchased by women.
- Energy Security
PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana offers free electricity up to 300 units per month to 1 crore households by installing rooftop solar plants. The focus is on developing small and modular nuclear reactors.
Foreign Investments
- Corporate tax rate cut on foreign companies from 40% to 35%
- FDI rules to be simplified further
- Promote use of rupee for overseas investments
Special Announcements
- Phase IV of the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana was announced
- Space Economy
Plan to quintuple the space economy over the next 10 years, supported by a ₹1,000 crore venture capital fund.
- Cancer Meds
Exemption of customs duties on three cancer drugs
- Spirirtual tourism
Developing tourism corridors at Vishnupad and Mahabodhi Temples and supporting Nalanda as a tourist center.
What Got Costlier after the Union Budget 2024?
- Ammonium nitrate
- Non-Biodegradable plastics
- Specified telecom equipment
- Imported Garden Umbrellas
- Notified goods of value worth more than ₹10 lakh
What Got Cheaper after the Union Budget 2024?
- Imported Gold, Silver and Platinum
- Mobile phones and chargers
- Ferro Nickel and Blister Cooper
- Shrimp and Fish Feed
- X-Ray Machines
- Seafood
- Some cancer medicines
- Leather goods
- 25 essential minerals for industries such as nuclear energy and space
- Capital goods for solar panel manufacture
Mallika Sadhu is a journalist committed to revealing the raw, unfiltered truth. Mallika's work is grounded in a dedication to transparency and integrity, aiming to present clear and impactful stories that matter. Through comprehensive reporting and honest storytelling, she strives to contribute to provide narratives that genuinely inform and engage. When not dwelling in the world of journalism, she is immersed in the colors of her canvas and pages of her journal.
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