Union Budget 2021: PLI scheme for 13 manufacturing sectors will includue firms in global supply chains Most of the key announcements from the Budget are in line with the central theme of ‘Aspirational India, Economic Development, A Caring Society’. Kumar Deepak February 02, 2021 12:24:08 IST Manufacturing needs a boost now. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons
All eyes from the manufacturing industry were on Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman as the industry was hoping for some relief and help to recover from a year devastated by COVID-19 . Most of the key announcements from the Budget are in line with the central theme of ‘Aspirational India, Economic Development, A Caring Society’.
Pragmatic in approach, nuanced by construction
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Against the backdrop of sharp deceleration in growth in the wake of an unprecedented global health crisis, the FY22 Budget has emphatically provided a much needed thrust for healthcare spending, job creation, and overall economic recovery, all within the ambit of deft fiscal rectitude. The announcements made by the Finance Minister should be seen in conjunction with government’s previous announcements under various fiscal packages encompassing Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yogana and Atma Nirbhar Bharat Abhiyan.
From an objective standpoint, in a year of difficult fiscal computations, the Finance Minister has walked a tightrope to balance the stretched revenue receipts with necessary expenditure support. At 6.8 per cent of GDP, FY22 fiscal deficit is a realistic display of support to reinvigorate India’s Real GDP growth, which is projected at 11 per cent, albeit supported by low base.
The Indian textiles and clothing industry has broadly welcomed the
Union Budget 2021-22 presented by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman in Parliament on February 1. Setting up of 7 mega textiles parks under MITRA, and reducing duty on nylon raw materials are welcomed by all trade bodies, while there is a mixed reaction to 10 per cent import duty on cotton.
The grant to the
textiles and clothing sector in Union Budget 2021-22 is ₹3,614.64 crore, which is about 10 per cent higher than the revised budget of ₹3,300 crore in 2020-21. The budget also puts emphasis on Infrastructure Development and Research & Capacity Building as the grant for these sectors has been increased by about 43.7 per cent and 77.5 per cent respectively as compared to last year. Share of these sectors in total textile and apparel budget allocation for 2021-22 stands at about 6 per cent and 10 per cent respectively.
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1. Health and Wellbeing
There is substantial increase in investment in Health Infrastructure and the Budget outlay for Health and Wellbeing is Rs 2,23,846 crore in BE 2021-22 as against this year’s BE of Rs 94,452 crore, an increase of 137 percentage.
The Finance Minister announced that a new centrally sponsored scheme, PM AatmaNirbhar Swasth Bharat Yojana, will be launched with an outlay of about Rs 64, 180 crore over 6 years. This will develop capacities of primary, secondary, and tertiary care Health Systems, strengthen existing national institutions, and create new institutions, to cater to detection and cure of new and emerging diseases. This will be in addition to the National Health Mission. The main interventions under the scheme are: