Budget 2007: Rural infrastructure gets 31% hike
The thrust on agriculture and India’s rural areas continues in India’s Union Budget 2007-2008, in keeping with the government’s plan to marry growth with equity and social justice
A 31% hike in allocation towards the Bharat Nirman programme for upgrading rural infrastructure, from Rs 18,696 crore to Rs 24,603 crore, and a proposed Rs 225,000 crore for farm credit are some of the main outlays for rural India in Budget 2007-08.
Presented by Finance Minister P Chidambaram to Parliament on February 28, the budget proposes that an additional irrigation potential of 2,400,000 hectares be created, including 900,000 hectares under the Accelerated Irrigation Benefit Programme (AIBP).
The outlay for the AIBP is to be increased from Rs 7,121 crore to Rs 11,000 crore including a grant component to state governments of Rs 3,580 crore, up from Rs 2,350 crore over the previous budget. In the current financial year, 35 projects will be completed under the AIBP.
In the year ending December 2006, 53,370,000 new farmers were brought into the institutionalised credit system. The target for 2007-08 is set at Rs 225,000 crore with an addition of 50,000,000 new farmers accessing credit.
The National Agricultural Insurance Scheme (NAIS) will be continued for the 2007-08 kharif and rabi season, with a budgetary provision of Rs 500 crore. A weather-based crop insurance scheme will be started by the Agricultural Insurance Corporation on a pilot basis as an alternative to the NAIS, with an allocation of Rs 100 crore for 2007-08.
Rs 1,800 crore has been allocated for a water recharging scheme that will offer a 100% subsidy to small farmers and 50% to other farmers to encourage them to recharge water by diverting rainwater into ‘dug wells’. The scheme will be finalised by the Ministry of Water Resources and will be transferred to NABARD, to be distributed through lead banks in the districts to the beneficiaries.
In March 2005, a pilot project was launched to restore and rejuvenate waterbodies in 13 states. The World Bank signed a loan agreement with Tamil Nadu for Rs 2,182 crore to restore 5,763 waterbodies with a command area of 400,000 hectares. An agreement with Andhra Pradesh is expected to be concluded in March 2007 to cover 3,000 water bodies with a command area of 250,000 hectares.
A special plan is being implemented over a period of three years in 31 suicide-prone districts in four states, involving a total amount of Rs 16,979 crore. Of this, around Rs 12,400 crore will be spent on water-related schemes. The plan includes a scheme for the induction of high-yielding milch animals and related activities in order to enhance livelihood options.
Other budgetary allocations and schemes for the farm sector are:
The 2% interest subvention scheme for short-term crop loans will continue with a provision of Rs 1,677 crore.
A Special Purpose Tea Fund to rejuvenate tea production. Financial mechanisms for replantation and rejuvenation will also be implemented for coffee, rubber, spice, cashew and coconut plantations.
To address the problem of poor availability and quality of certified seeds, the Integrated Oilseeds, Oilpalm, Pulses and Maize Development Programme will be expanded with sharper focus on scaling up the production of breeder, foundation and certified seeds. Government will fund the expansion of the Indian Institute of Pulses Research, Kanpur, and offer other producers a capital grant or concessional financing to double production of certified seeds within a period of three years.
Rs 100 crore allocated for the National Rainfed Area Authority set up under last year’s budget.
The Agriculture Technology Management Agency (ATMA), now in place in 262 districts, will be extended to another 300 districts. Provision for ATMA will be increased from Rs 50 crore to Rs 230 crore.
The amount of fertiliser subsidy has been increased from Rs 17,253 crore to Rs 22,452 crore. Based on a study, yet to be conducted, a pilot programme will be implemented in at least one district in each state to deliver subsidies directly to farmers.
The budget has also allotted Rs 12,000 to the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. However, since it is a demand-driven scheme, the budget will be supplemented as required. One of the government’s most ambitious programmes is expected to be extended to 330 of India’s poorest districts in the financial year 2007-2008.
Additionally, an amount of Rs 2,800 crore has been provided for the Sampoorna Gramin Rozgar Yojana in districts not covered by the NREGS. Allocation for the Swaranjayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana, promoting self -employment among the rural poor, has been increased from Rs 1,200 crore to Rs 1,800 crore.
To augment its resources for refinancing rural credit cooperatives, the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) will issue government-guaranteed rural bonds to the extent of Rs 5,000 crore with suitable tax exemptions.
The corpus of the Rural Infrastructure Development Fund, which sanctions and disburses funds to state governments, is to be raised to Rs 12,000 crore from Rs 10,000 crore in the previous budget. A separate window for rural roads will continue, with a corpus of Rs 4,000 crore.
Source: PTI, March 1, 2007
www.unionbudget.nic.in, February 28, 2007
The Hindu, February 28, 2007
Budget 2007: Rs 85 crore for child protection scheme
The Ministry of Women and Child Development will launch an Integrated Child Protection Scheme to address the issue of child protection and build a protective environment for children through government-civil society partnerships
With the safety of children becoming an issue of national concern, in the aftermath of the Nithari killings, India’s Union Budget 2007-2008 has earmarked Rs 85.5 crore for implementation of an Integrated Child Protection Scheme (ICPS).
Funds for child developmenton the whole have been increased to Rs 5,053.33 crore from last year’s Rs 4,255.51 crore, Finance Minister P Chidambaram announced as he presented the budget to Parliament on February 28.
The ICPS is being launched by the Ministry of Women and Child Development to address the issue of child protection and build a protective environment for children through government-civil society partnerships.
In addition to the budgetary provision of Rs 85.5 crore, an amount of Rs 9.50 crore will be made available for implementation of the scheme in the northeastern states.
Allocation for the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) has been increased to Rs 4,761 crore from last year’s Rs 4,087 crore. The government plans to expand the ICDS to cover all habitations during the Eleventh Five-Year Plan.
A conditional cash transfer scheme for girl-children, with insurance cover, is also being introduced during the current financial year as a central pilot project. Budgetary provision of Rs 13.50 crore has been made available for this scheme that aims to tackle the problem of discrimination against the girl-child.
The cash transfer will be provided to the family of the girl-child, preferably the mother, only after the claimant fulfils certain conditions such as providing the child’s birth registration certificate, immunisation records, enrolling the child in school, and agreeing not to marry her off until she is 18 years old.
Source:
www.hindu.com, February 28, 2007
Budget 2007: Focus on education, health
Services like schooling, housing and nutrition have the largest claim (Rs 83,950.69 crore) on total plan allocation in India’s latest budget. Together with energy and transport, the social sector accounts for nearly 75% of the total allocation of Rs 319,992 crore
A 35% increase on education spending and a 22% hike in allocations for public health and family welfare are highlights of India’s Union Budget 2007-2008. Presented by the country’s Finance Minister P Chidambaram to Parliament on February 28, Budget 2007-08 also has new schemes for disadvantaged sections of the population like the physically challenged, the elderly and landless rural families.
Maintaining high priority for eight flagship programmes of the UPA government -- including the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, Bharat Nirman, and the National Rural Health Mission -- the finance minister’s fourth budget pegs gross budgetary support for the coming fiscal at Rs 205,100 crore, of which the central plan will be Rs 154,939 crore.
Allocation to the education sector has been increased by 34.2%, to Rs 32,352 crore. An amount of Rs 23,142 crore has been allocated for school education programmes, as against Rs 17,133 crore in 2006-07.
The Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (Universal Education Programme) gets Rs 10,671 crore and the mid-day meal scheme will be extended to upper primary classes in 3,427 educationally-backward blocks.
Two lakh more teachers are to be employed and 5 lakh more classrooms constructed in primary schools, the finance minister said.
The secondary education allowance will be doubled from Rs 1,837 crore to Rs 3,794 crore.
Chidambaram also proposed the implementation of national means-cum-merit scholarships with an allocation of Rs 6,000 to every child who completes Classes 9 to 12, to lessen school dropout rates.
Enhanced allocations for SC/ST scholarships from Rs 440 crore to Rs 611 crore and a scholarship programme for students from minority communities were also announced. The allocation for the latter is Rs 72 crore at the higher secondary school level, and Rs 48 crore for graduate and postgraduate students.
Besides education, allocations for health and family welfare have been hiked substantially by 21.9% to Rs 15,291 crore. The hike in allocations to these sectors is almost identical to those in the previous two budgets.
Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh reiterated that the prime focus of Union Budget 2007-08 was education and healthcare, in keeping with his government’s commitment to increase spending on the country’s social infrastructure. “Education and healthcare are the primary imperatives as far as this budget is concerned.” Dr Singh added that there was a need to improve the skill level of India’s population, and therefore special emphasis was being laid on secondary education.
The prime minister said the budgetary emphasis was also on improving access to social services and providing a social safety net. Therefore, 70 lakh households are to be covered under a social welfare scheme with the Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) and with support from state governments. Of this, 50% of the premium, at Rs 200 per household, will be given by the Centre. LIC will maintain a Rs 1,000 crore fund for the purpose.
In a scheme for economically weak sections of the population, the ceiling of loans under the differential rate of interest scheme would be raised from Rs 6,500 to Rs 15,000, and for housing loans from Rs 5,000 to Rs 20,000. Insurance companies will launch a senior citizens scheme in 2007-08.
Chidambaram also announced that the government would create 1 lakh jobs for the physically challenged.
The budgetary allocation for scheduled castes and scheduled tribes (SC/STs) is to be increased to Rs 3,271 crore in the coming financial year. And, finally, Rs 63 crore has been earmarked for share capital for the National Minorities Development Finance Corporation following the Sachar Committee recommendations.
The budget continues to focus on agriculture for the fourth consecutive year, with substantial increases in funds for farm credit, subsidies and extension of irrigation coverage. The rural infrastructure improvement programme, Bharat Nirman, has been given Rs 24,603 crore, an increase of 31.6% over the current year.
These, together with Rs 12,000 crore for expansion of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme to 330 districts, from the current 200, are other key features of Budget 2007-08.
Source: Reuters, February 28, 2007
PTI, February 28, 2007
www.expressindia.com, February 28, 2007
www.business-standard.com, February 28, 2007
http://www.infochangeindia.org/GovernanceItop.jsp?section_idv=20#4820