In line with expectations, the interim Budget for fiscal 2024-25 kept an eye on long term goals. It made no attempt to please markets with near term sops.
At the outset, Finance Minister Sitharaman clarified that this Budget had its focus on 3 Ds - Demography, Democracy, and Diversity.
So, the vision for the Budget was keeping India's 2047 goals in mind.
Not surprisingly, technology related R&D and innovation was probably the only area wherein the government announced fresh allocation.
The Budget offered Rs 1 trillion allocation to R&D in the form of interest free or low interest long term loans to give a big boost to innovation.
This is keeping in mind the research facilities needed to power several megatrends that the Indian economy needs to leverage.
Research on electric mobility, green energy, semiconductors, medical technology, infrastructure, transportation, artificial intelligence are just few of the areas whether such funds could be deployed.
More importantly, the focus should be on intellectual property (IP), particularly patents.
India has witnessed a surge in innovation, with an average of 247 patents filed per day in 2023, the highest in the last two decades, according to a report by SBI Research and Indian Patent Office.
Patent filings increased by 17% to 90,309 in 2023, and the average patent pendency was reduced by 15 months to 53 months. As per the data, 0.84 m patents have been filed in the country until 2023.
A bill introduced in the Budget of 2023, the Anusandhan National Research Foundation Bill, has been instrumental in driving sizeable contribution from the private sector, to seed, grow and promote research and development (R&D). Hence the new allocation, in 2024, should be able to leverage the momentum.
The Budget aims at a slower growth in planned capital expenditure (11% compared to over 30% in past fiscal).
This significantly, eschews from big welfare spending. Rather it banks on high GDP growth and strong tax revenue. More importantly, it aims at improving India's fiscal deficit.
Here are few other takeaways from the Budget:
By prioritising long-term prudence to short-term populist measures, the Budget has at least laid the ground for long term investment in equities.
With interest rates possibly heading lower globally, Indian equities are likely to remain a favoured asset class amongst not just domestic investors but also FIIs.
Do check the most attractive stocks from long term perspective on Equitymaster Screener.
Warm regards,
Tanushree Banerjee
Editor, StockSelect
Equitymaster Agora Research Private Limited (Research Analyst)
Tanushree Banerjee (Research Analyst), is the editor of Stock Select and Forever Stocks. Tanushree started her career at Equitymaster covering the banking and financial sector stocks and scrutinising RBI policies. Over the last decade, she developed Equitymaster's research processes that helped us pick out various multibaggers, across all sectors. A firm believer of "safety first" when it comes to investing, Tanushree closely follows the investing philosophies of Warren Buffett, Jeremy Grantham, and Joel Greenblatt.
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