<p>Mumbai: India's high public <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/debt">debt</a> offers limited fiscal space to undertake welfare measures which can help stimulate the economy, a foreign brokerage said on Monday.</p>.<p>In a report that comes weeks ahead of the presentation of the budget, <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/goldman-sachs">Goldman Sachs</a> said Finance Minister <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/nirmala-sitharaman">Nirmala Sitharaman</a> may continue on the fiscal consolidation roadmap, sticking to the 5.1 per cent fiscal deficit target announced in the interim budget.</p>.<p>It said investors are expecting from the budget some relaxation in fiscal consolidation path and a shift in focus to welfare spending from capital expenditure.</p>.Union Budget 2024 | Jobs, rural India likely to be focus of new Modi government, says Goldman Sachs.<p>However, the same is not plausible, the brokerage hinted.</p>.<p>"There is limited fiscal space in our view to stimulate the economy given high public debt, (and) India's infrastructure upgrades have created long-term positive growth spillovers which policymakers may not be willing to give up," it reasoned.</p>.<p>It said that the final fiscal deficit target may also be lowered from the present 5.1 per cent, and Sitharaman may further reduce the number to 4.5 per cent in FY26.</p>.<p>Even if there is "some expenditure allocation" towards welfare spending, it may not require a reduction in capex given the Rs 2.1 lakh crore dividend transfer from the Reserve Bank, it said.</p>.<p>There is a limited fiscal space for stimulus in FY25, it said, pointing out that interest expense constitutes a large share at 5.4 per cent of GDP in the general government's budget.</p>.<p>"Our fiscal impulse calculations also show that general government fiscal policy has been a drag on growth since FY22 and will remain so in FY25 and FY26 given the fiscal consolidation target of the central government," it said.</p>.<p>Capex grew at a healthy 31 per cent between FY21-24, giving a boost to growth, it said.</p>.<p>The brokerage said the upcoming budget may go beyond just fiscal numbers, and lay emphasis on job creation.</p>.<p>For this it may focus on labour-intensive manufacturing, credit for small businesses, continued focus on services exports by expanding global capability centres. It may also have a thrust on domestic food supply chain and inventory management to control price volatility, the report said.</p>.<p>It may also lay out a path for the future of public finance in India, which will entail a roadmap for public debt sustainability, and green finance. </p>
<p>Mumbai: India's high public <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/debt">debt</a> offers limited fiscal space to undertake welfare measures which can help stimulate the economy, a foreign brokerage said on Monday.</p>.<p>In a report that comes weeks ahead of the presentation of the budget, <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/goldman-sachs">Goldman Sachs</a> said Finance Minister <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/nirmala-sitharaman">Nirmala Sitharaman</a> may continue on the fiscal consolidation roadmap, sticking to the 5.1 per cent fiscal deficit target announced in the interim budget.</p>.<p>It said investors are expecting from the budget some relaxation in fiscal consolidation path and a shift in focus to welfare spending from capital expenditure.</p>.Union Budget 2024 | Jobs, rural India likely to be focus of new Modi government, says Goldman Sachs.<p>However, the same is not plausible, the brokerage hinted.</p>.<p>"There is limited fiscal space in our view to stimulate the economy given high public debt, (and) India's infrastructure upgrades have created long-term positive growth spillovers which policymakers may not be willing to give up," it reasoned.</p>.<p>It said that the final fiscal deficit target may also be lowered from the present 5.1 per cent, and Sitharaman may further reduce the number to 4.5 per cent in FY26.</p>.<p>Even if there is "some expenditure allocation" towards welfare spending, it may not require a reduction in capex given the Rs 2.1 lakh crore dividend transfer from the Reserve Bank, it said.</p>.<p>There is a limited fiscal space for stimulus in FY25, it said, pointing out that interest expense constitutes a large share at 5.4 per cent of GDP in the general government's budget.</p>.<p>"Our fiscal impulse calculations also show that general government fiscal policy has been a drag on growth since FY22 and will remain so in FY25 and FY26 given the fiscal consolidation target of the central government," it said.</p>.<p>Capex grew at a healthy 31 per cent between FY21-24, giving a boost to growth, it said.</p>.<p>The brokerage said the upcoming budget may go beyond just fiscal numbers, and lay emphasis on job creation.</p>.<p>For this it may focus on labour-intensive manufacturing, credit for small businesses, continued focus on services exports by expanding global capability centres. It may also have a thrust on domestic food supply chain and inventory management to control price volatility, the report said.</p>.<p>It may also lay out a path for the future of public finance in India, which will entail a roadmap for public debt sustainability, and green finance. </p>