Difficult Word/ Phrase | Contextual Sense |
Self-congratulatory | Praising yourself or saying how well you have done something |
Replete | Well supplied |
Surmounted | To deal successfully with a difficulty or problem |
Entrepreneurship | Skill in starting new businesses, especially when this involves seeing new opportunities |
Imbuing | To fill something or someone with a quality or feeling |
Eschewed | To avoid something intentionally, or to give something up |
Comprehensive | Complete and including everything that is necessary |
Resounding | Very great; complete |
Pegging | An arrangement that fixes a price, currency, etc. at a particular level |
Pruning | The activity of reducing the number or amount of something |
Nominal | In name or thought but not in fact or not as things really are |
Notwithstanding | Despite the fact or thing mentioned |
Consolidation | The process of becoming or being made stronger and more certain |
Emphasised | To show that something is very important or worth giving attention to |
Glossed | To provide an explanation for a word or phrase |
Prudence | Behaviour that is careful and avoids risks |
Undermining | To make someone less confident, less powerful, or less likely to succeed, or to make something weaker, often gradually |
Momentum | The quality that keeps an event developing or making progress after it has started |
Poll posture: On the 2024 Interim Budget
Slowing growth and rising inequality must both be tackled head-on
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s sixth consecutive Budget speech was an election-eve, self-congratulatory (praising yourself or saying how well you have done something) report card on the economic achievements engendered by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the two governments he has led since 2014. Echoing the Finance Ministry’s review of the economy’s performance, and stating that Mr. Modi had inherited a situation replete (well supplied) with ‘enormous challenges’ when he assumed office, Ms. Sitharaman asserted that those were surmounted (to deal successfully with a difficulty or problem) through ‘structural reforms, pro-people programmes and the creation of opportunities for employment and entrepreneurship (skill in starting new businesses, especially when this involves seeing new opportunities)’. A reinvigorated economy had helped ensure that the fruits of development started reaching the people at scale, imbuing (to fill something or someone with a quality or feeling) them with a sense of purpose and hope, and translated into a bigger mandate five years ago, she averred. In a clear sign that the Bharatiya Janata Party-led regime is far more confident of returning to power this time around, Ms. Sitharaman eschewed (to avoid something intentionally, or to give something up) any announcements that could be seen as targeting a particular constituency of voters. Instead, the focus was on talking up the commitment to ‘an inclusive and sustainable policy approach that had led to the attainment of a more comprehensive (complete and including everything that is necessary) GDP of governance, development and performance’. A nonchalant observation that the government would detail a road map for attaining a ‘Viksit Bharat’ by 2047 in its full Budget in July, was premised on the certainty of winning a ‘resounding’ (very great; complete) electoral mandate.
The Budget numbers posit a continuing journey on the path of fiscal consolidation, with the Revised Estimates (RE) pegging (an arrangement that fixes a price, currency, etc. at a particular level) the current year’s fiscal deficit at 5.8% of the GDP, a 10 basis points improvement from last February’s Budget Estimate (BE) of 5.9%. This, the Minister has achieved by pruning (the activity of reducing the number or amount of something) effective capital expenditure by ₹1 lakh crore in the RE, a moderation in nominal (in name or thought but not in fact or not as things really are) growth estimates notwithstanding (despite the fact or thing mentioned). For 2024-25, she has projected a sharper consolidation (the process of becoming or being made stronger and more certain) and pegged the deficit at 5.1% by factoring in a 14% jump in revenue receipts on a BE basis, that is expected to help offset an 11% increase in estimated capital expenditure to ₹11.11 lakh crore. Ms. Sitharaman, who emphasised (to show that something is very important or worth giving attention to) a tripling in the capital spending outlays over the past four years that had had ‘a multiplier impact on growth and employment creation’, however, glossed (to provide an explanation for a word or phrase) over the fact that the budgeted increase in capital spending next year is set to be sharply lower than the 28% jump in the RE versus last fiscal’s actuals. At a time when official estimates for private consumption spending show growth at its lowest ebb since the pandemic, the Budget’s stress on fiscal prudence (behaviour that is careful and avoids risks) does carry the risk of undermining (to make someone less confident, less powerful, or less likely to succeed, or to make something weaker, often gradually) economic momentum (the quality that keeps an event developing or making progress after it has started). The bigger challenge is the more worrying possibility of rising inequality.
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