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Business / Wed, 26 Jun 2024 Business Standard

Budget could stick to Rs 50,000 cr asset-sale, monetisation targets

Click here to connect with us on WhatsApp In the Interim Budget in February, the Centre had reworked its strategy on capital management. It had set a target of Rs 50,000 crore under miscellaneous capital receipts. Unlike previous classi­fications of loans and advances, disinvestment, and asset monetisation, non-debt capital receipts comprise loans and advances. We can always do it in a gradual, calibrated way,” Tuhin Kanta Pandey, secretary, DIPAM, had told reporters in a briefing after the Interim Budget. In the Interim Budget, it had pegged dividends from non-financial CPSEs at Rs 48,000 crore.

The Centre in the upcoming Budget may stick to its capital-receipts target of Rs 50,000 crore in 2024-25 (FY25) on account of disinvestment, asset monetisation, and other capital receipts, continuing its new calibrated approach to asset-sale strategy, according to official sources.

Further, the focus will remain on the strategic sale of IDBI Bank. However, the transaction could spill over to FY26, given the process involved, sources said.

Click here to connect with us on WhatsApp In the Interim Budget in February, the Centre had reworked its strategy on capital management. For the first time, it did not explicitly mention the disinvestment target for FY25. It had set a target of Rs 50,000 crore under miscellaneous capital receipts.

Unlike previous classi­fications of loans and advances, disinvestment, and asset monetisation, non-debt capital receipts comprise loans and advances. Budget documents show the Revised Estimate (RE) for such receipts during FY24 has been lowered to Rs 30,000 crore from the target of Rs 61,000 crore set in February 2023. That included Rs 51,000 crore for disinvestment.

This was followed by delay in some major asset-sale plans such as those relating to IDBI Bank, Shipping Corporation of India, NMDC Steel, and BEML. Since 2010, barring FY18 and FY19, the Centre’s divestment receipts have fallen short of the projection, with the targets growing more ambitious every year.

For this financial year, the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (Dipam) expects to conclude some transactions including the one of IDBI Bank. On the bank, the Dipam is awaiting the go-ahead from the Reserve Bank of India. The central bank is examining the “fit and proper criteria” of the potential bidders.

The Centre and the Life Insurance Corporation of India would together sell a 60.72 per cent stake in the bank.

“We have not kept a fixed target for divestment … We need to have a new paradigm in terms of thinking and not just keep on parting with that wealth in one stroke. We can always do it in a gradual, calibrated way,” Tuhin Kanta Pandey, secretary, DIPAM, had told reporters in a briefing after the Interim Budget.

In the July Budget, the government might enhance the estimates of dividend from central public sector enterprises (CPSEs). In the Interim Budget, it had pegged dividends from non-financial CPSEs at Rs 48,000 crore.

So far this financial year, CPSEs have paid Rs 4,917.58 crore as dividend. This includes Rs 3,443 crore as special dividend from Telecommunications Consultants India, an enterprise under the Ministry of Telecom.

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