Fiscal deficit at 54.5% of FY26 target at Dec end

ET logo


The central government’s fiscal deficit until December this financial year narrowed to 54.5% of the annual target, compared with 56.7% a year before, as net tax collections climbed significantly last month, according to the official data released on Friday.

In absolute terms, the fiscal deficit between April and December 2025 stood at ₹8.56 lakh crore, against ₹9.14 lakh crore a year earlier.

The data further bolsters the chances of the government meeting its target of containing its 2025-26 fiscal deficit at 4.4% of gross domestic product (GDP), experts said.

The deficit, which was much as 62.3% of the annual target until November this fiscal against 52.5% a year before, moderated after a fiscal surplus of ₹1.20 lakh crore in December. This was in contrast with a fiscal deficit of ₹67,495 crore in December 2024.

Net tax revenue jumped 36.5% in December from a year before to ₹5.45 lakh crore. This has driven up the growth in the net tax mopup in the first three quarters of this fiscal by 5.2% to ₹19.39 lakh crore.


Gross tax revenues jumped 32% in December, pushing up the year-on-year growth in the first three quarters of the fiscal to 9%, thanks to strong increases in collections of the corporation tax, customs duties and the integrated goods and services tax. Non-tax revenues expanded by 20.6% until December to ₹5.40 lakh crore, thanks to a record ₹2.69 lakh crore dividend transfer by the central bank. Total receipts increased 8.9% year-on-year until December to almost ₹25.3 lakh crore.

Meanwhile, the government has kept a lid on revenue expenditure, which grew just 1.8% until December to ₹25.93 lakh crore. However, capital spending rose by 15% in the first three quarters of the fiscal to ₹7.88 lakh crore even though there was a contraction in December after a frontloading of such productive expenditure to aid economic growth earlier in the year.Icra chief economist Aditi Nayar said, “We do not anticipate the FY26 revised estimate to indicate a higher fiscal deficit than the budget estimate.”

Going forward, Nayar expected the fiscal deficit to be pegged at 4.3% of GDP in FY27, only marginally lower than the 4.4% target for this financial year.



Source link

Online Company Registration in India

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *