The Union Budget is one of the most important annual events in India’s financial system. It determines how the government earns money and how it plans to spend it for the development of the country. While the budget may appear complex, understanding the basics is actually very straightforward.
This article simplifies every important concept from the Union Budget—deficit, halwa ceremony, budget documents, types of expenditure, types of receipts, and the entire approval process.
1. What Is the Union Budget?
The Union Budget is a yearly financial statement that shows:
Estimated income (receipts) of the Government of India
Estimated expenses (expenditure) of the Government of India
This is required under Article 112 of the Indian Constitution.
👉 In simple words:
The budget tells how much the government will earn and how much it will spend in the upcoming financial year.
2. Budget = Income & Expenditure Statement
Government income includes:
Income Tax
GST
Customs Duty
Dividends from PSUs
Interest receipts
Borrowings (if needed)
Government expenditure includes:
Salaries and pensions
Roads (PMGSY)
Subsidies (Ujjwala, food, fertilizers)
Railways
Defense
Healthcare
Education
3. What Is Fiscal Deficit? (Very Important)
Fiscal deficit = Total expenditure – Total revenue
Always expressed as a percentage of GDP.
It simply means:
Government is spending more than it earns → so it must borrow.
Example:
If fiscal deficit = 6% of GDP → Government needs to borrow that 6%.
4. The “Halwa Ceremony” – A Famous Budget Tradition
Before the budget is printed, the Finance Ministry holds a symbolic celebration called the Halwa Ceremony.
Halwa is served to all staff in the ministry
Printing of budget documents begins after this
Staff involved in budget printing stay in a “lock-in” environment until presentation day
This tradition marks the beginning of the final stage of budget preparation.
5. How Budget Is Prepared? (Step-by-Step)
Step 1: Departments send estimates
Every ministry (Railways, Defence, Education etc.) sends its spending requirements.
Step 2: Finance Ministry analyses
It evaluates:
Revenue estimates
Expenditure needs
Fiscal deficit targets
Step 3: Finance Minister consults with the Prime Minister
Both finalize key numbers and policies.
Step 4: Final Budget Speech prepared
Step 5: Printing of budget begins (after Halwa Ceremony)
Step 6: Budget is presented in Parliament
Finance Minister delivers the budget speech in:
Lok Sabha
Then Rajya Sabha
Step 7: Bills are passed
Two major bills are necessary:
Finance Bill
Appropriation Bill
Step 8: President gives approval
After approval → Budget becomes law.
6. Finance Bill vs Appropriation Bill
Finance Bill
Contains all tax proposals
Income tax changes
GST changes (if any)
Other financial amendments
Lok Sabha can suggest changes.
Appropriation Bill
Grants permission to withdraw money from the Consolidated Fund of India to spend
Required for schemes like PMGSY, health spending, education spending
Lok Sabha cannot change taxation here. Only spending approvals.
7. Capital vs Revenue Concepts
Government receipts & expenditure are divided into two categories:
A. Revenue Receipts
These come regularly:
Income Tax
GST
Corporate Tax
Customs Duty
Dividends
Interest
Revenue Expenditure
Recurring expenses:
Salaries
Pensions
Subsidies
Grants
Interest payments
B. Capital Receipts
One-time or long-term receipts:
Borrowings
Disinvestment proceeds
Loan recoveries
Capital Expenditure
Long-term investment:
Roads
Bridges
Railways
Schools
Hospitals
Infrastructure
Creates assets for the nation.
8. Types of Budgets
Balanced Budget
Income = Expenditure
Surplus Budget
Income > Expenditure(Rare for developing countries)
Deficit Budget
Expenditure > Income(Most common in India)
9. Why Is the Union Budget Important?
Decides taxation (income tax slabs, GST updates)
Affects cost of living
Determines government’s development priorities
Impacts stock market sentiment
Influences jobs, subsidies, infrastructure
Whether you’re a citizen or an investor, budget announcements directly affect you.
10. Conclusion
The Union Budget may appear complicated, but at its core, it is just a structured plan of:
How the government earns
How the government plans to spend
How much it needs to borrow
Understanding its components—receipts, expenditures, deficit, Finance Bill, Appropriation Bill, and capital vs revenue—helps you see how the economy functions.