Govt to surpass FY24 target for state-run firms' dividends by $1.4 bln

According to the government, so far this fiscal, India has received 438 billion rupees in dividends from state-owned firms.

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The government is likely to exceed its fiscal year target for dividends from state-run companies by at least 120 billion rupees ($1.4 billion), partly offsetting an expected shortfall from share sales, a government source aware of the matter said on Thursday. The dividend receipts could range from 550 billion rupees to as much as 600 billion rupees, the source told Reuters, potentially topping not only the government's target of 430 billion rupees for the April-March fiscal year but also the 595 billion rupees it collected in dividends last fiscal year.

According to the government, so far this fiscal, India has received 438 billion rupees in dividends from state-owned firms.  The high dividend will partly offset the shortfall in the government's revenue from the sale of equity in state-run enterprises. The government may not be able to mop up even 300 billion rupees through stake sales this fiscal year, which will be an over 40 per cent shortfall, the source said.

Still, the government is likely to meet its fiscal deficit target of 5.9 per cent of gross domestic product for 2023-24, as tax collection would be higher than projected, according to the source.

India's finance ministry did not immediately respond to a mail and message sent by Reuters seeking comment.

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Aditi Nayar, an economist at ICRA, expects the government's net tax revenues to exceed the fiscal year budget target by 300 billion rupees-400 billion rupees.

The Indian government collected 14.36 trillion rupees as net tax revenue in April-November, 62 per cent of the annual target.

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With Reuters Inputs

Published By:
 Rajat Mishra
Published On: