Fiscal Policy & Deficit Management: What is the significance of the FRBM Act, 2003 in guiding India's fiscal consolidation? Has the Budget 2026-27 adhered to its spirit?

GS3 Indian-Economy
Fiscal Policy & Deficit Management: What is the significance of the FRBM Act, 2003 in guiding India's fiscal consolidation? Has the Budget 2026-27 adhered to its spirit?

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Introduction:

Enacted to institutionalise fiscal discipline, the FRBM Act provides a medium-term roadmap for deficit and debt reduction, enhancing policy credibility.

Body:

The Act mandates the government to limit fiscal deficit and ensure sustainable debt levels, supported by instruments such as the Medium-Term Fiscal Policy Statement and Fiscal Policy Strategy Statement. Amendments following the N.K. Singh Committee (2017) introduced a debt anchor of 60% of GDP (40% Centre, 20% States) and a fiscal deficit glide path of 3% for the Centre, along with an escape clause for exceptional circumstances. The FRBM framework is significant as it reduces inflationary pressures, curbs excessive borrowing, improves investor confidence, and strengthens sovereign credit ratings. It also promotes transparency by requiring disclosure of contingent liabilities and off-budget borrowings.

The Union Budget 2026–27 broadly adheres to the spirit, if not the strict letter, of the FRBM framework. The government has committed to reducing the fiscal deficit to ~4.5% of GDP and has followed a credible post-pandemic consolidation path. It has also maintained a focus on capital expenditure, aligning with the principle of “quality of spending.” However, deviations remain: the deficit is still above the 3% benchmark, and public debt (~80% of GDP) exceeds the prescribed anchor. Continued reliance on optimistic growth assumptions, along with pressures from subsidies and interest payments, raises concerns about the durability of consolidation. Transparency has improved, but off-budget liabilities and state-level fiscal stress still dilute the framework.

Conclusion:

While Budget 2026–27 reflects a pragmatic adherence to FRBM principles, achieving durable fiscal consolidation will require stronger revenue mobilisation, expenditure rationalisation, and a credible path toward the long-term debt anchor.