Budget or Annual Financial
Statement
This is actually the annual budget, as
stated in the Constitution. Divided into three parts — Consolidated Fund,
Contingency Fund and Public Account — it has a statement of receipts and
expenditure of each. Expenditure from the Consolidated Fund and Contingency
Fund requires the nod of Parliament.
Consolidated Fund
It contains all revenues, money
borrowed and receipts from loans it has given. All government expenditure is
made from this fund.
Contingency Fund
Any urgent or unforeseen expenditure is
met from this Rs 500 crore fund, which is at the disposal of the President. The
amount withdrawn is returned from the Consolidated Fund.
Public Account
The government is nothing more than a
banker, as this is a collection of money belonging to others such as public
provident fund.
Revenue/Capital Budget
The government has to prepare a Revenue
Budget (detailing revenue receipts and revenue expenditure) and a Capital
Budget (capital receipts and capital expenditure).
Revenue and Capital
The budget has to distinguish all
receipts/expenditure on revenue account from other expenditure. So all receipts
in, say, the consolidated fund, are split into Revenue Budget (revenue account)
and Capital Budget (capital account), which include non-revenue receipts and
expenditure.
Revenue Receipt/Expenditure
All receipts like taxes and expenditure
like salaries, subsidies and interest payments that do not entail sale or creation
of assets fall under the revenue account.
Capital Receipt/Expenditure
Capital account shows all receipts from
liquidating (eg. selling shares in a public sector company) of assets and
spending to create assets (lending to receive interest).
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