Fiscal Deficit May Remain At 3.5-3.6% Post-Corp Tax Cuts

Mumbai: The risks of a large fiscal slippage in the current year are expected to be addressed through larger non-tax revenues and the savings on interest expenses, ratings and research firm Acuite said, adding therefore, fiscal deficit in the current fiscal may remain limited to 3.5-3.6 per cent moderately higher by 0.2-0.3 per cent over […]

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Mumbai: The risks of a large fiscal slippage in the current year are expected to be addressed through larger non-tax revenues and the savings on interest expenses, ratings and research firm Acuite said, adding therefore, fiscal deficit in the current fiscal may remain limited to 3.5-3.6 per cent moderately higher by 0.2-0.3 per cent over the budgeted levels.

Additional non-tax revenues, particularly disinvestment profits, can be a key driver Acuite Ratings believes that there is still a significant scope to limit India's fiscal deficit to 3.5-3.6 per cent, if the government gives high priority to disinvestment and there is a sustainable revival in consumption and market sentiment, expected to be brought in by the sharp cut in corporate taxes up to 10 per cent, over the next two quarters.