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  • Refined oil
  • Bidis
  • Sunglasses
  • Unbranded diesel
  • Wrist watches, pocket watches
  • Unbranded Petrol
  • Olive oil
  • Cigarette lighter
  • Branded Diesel
  • Video games
  • Branded petrol
  • TV sets
  • Hike in pay for President, V-P and governors
  • Mumbai rail network to get Rs 11,000 crore
  • Rs 40K standard deduction against expenses
  • No change in income tax slabs
  • Corporate tax cut for MSMEs
  • Toothpaste
  • Fiscal deficit for 2018-19 seen at 3.3% of GDP
  • Defence outlay increased by 5.84%.
  • Digital payment at toll booths soon
  • Cashew
  • Allocation for Digital India doubled
  • Cut, polished gems
  • UDAN scheme to connect 56 unserved airports
  • Mobile phones
  • Govt proposes to set up 5 lakh WiFi hot spots
  • Silk fabrics
  • Govt to allocate Rs 7,140 crore for textiles sector
  • Rs 17,000 crore for Bengaluru Metro
  • WiFi in all railway stations, trains
  • Footwear
  • Women to contribute only 8% PF in first 3 yrs
  • Pan Masala
  • 18 more in IITs to come up
  • 'Modicare' health scheme unveiled
  • Imitation jewellery
  • Rs 1 lakh crore in 4 years to boost R&D
  • Education to go digital
  • Loans to women self-help groups up to Rs 75,000
  • Truck and radial typres
  • Special team to address Delhi air pollution
  • 8 crore BPL women to get free gas connection
  • Smart watches/wearable devices
  • Bricks, tiles
  • Operation Green with Rs 500 crore allocation
  • Beauty products
  • Agricultural corpus of worth Rs 2000 crore
  • Kisan credit cards for livestock farmers
  • Orange juice
  • Shaving products
  • Lamps and lighting fitting
  • Accessories of motor vehicles
  • Exports to grow by 17% in 2017-18
  • Food processing allocation doubled to Rs 1,500 cr
  • Perfume
  • Cranberry juice
  • Total 2018-19 expenditure seen at Rs 24.42 tn
  • Crop MSP to be 1.5 times production cost
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2-min read

NGO Demands Greater Transparency in Budgetary Process

As Finance Minister Arun Jaitley gears up to present the Union Budget 2018-19 today, an NGO said on parameters of international standards on budget transparency, the Indian budget was considered "less transparent" as it put only "limited" information in the public domain.

PTI

Updated:February 1, 2018, 10:12 AM IST
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NGO Demands Greater Transparency in Budgetary Process
File photo of Finance Minister Arun Jaitley.
New Delhi: Claiming that the budgetary process in India was not transparent enough, an NGO on Wednesday urged the government to place more information related to the budget in the public domain.

As Finance Minister Arun Jaitley gears up to present the Union Budget 2018-19 today, the NGO, Transparency International India, said on parameters of international standards on budget transparency, the Indian budget was considered "less transparent" as it put only "limited" information in the public domain.

"Budgetary process in India is still non-transparent, non-participative with poor accessibility by citizenry," it said in a press release here.

While the government "boasts its intentions of transparency", India ranks low on indicators representing budget transparency, it said, demanding greater openness in the budgetary process.

"India is not one of the most transparent countries. India scored 48 on 100 in the open budget survey of 2017.

It is interesting to see that all the major powers of the world do have better transparency in their budget processes as compared to other countries," it said.

This meant that for a nation to emerge as a promising democracy, "transparency in the system" would be a key factor, it said.

"India amongst its neighbouring countries fares better than all, but Bangladesh. Economically not as sound as India, Bangladesh has better transparency than India in its system," the statement said.

Despite its utmost importance, the state budget in India remains "one of the most intractable of documents, incomprehensible for ordinary citizens, specialists and non- specialists alike", it said.

This makes it difficult for the people to participate in shaping public policy, the NGO said.

"The lack of budget transparency cannot simply be treated only as a serious violation of democratic rules and good governance. It leads to severe economic and financial problems related to the spread of corruption and waste...," it said.

Knowledge of the state budget should not be limited to experts and specialists, the release said.

"It's high time now for a citizen's budget for easy understanding of the total budgetary revenue and expenditure statements, the mid-year review pre-budget statement and the audit report to be published on time, not published online or produced only for government use," it said.

The budget in India was "still more or less the exclusive domain of the civil servant due to quite a complex system and procedure", it said.

Transparency International India describes itself as a "non-political, independent, non-governmental anti-corruption organisation".
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