(C.N.B.C)
India’s annual Budget will go green this year too, cutting down on the vast printing of documents that were associated with the presentation of tax proposals and financial statements of Asia’s third-largest economy. The Budget documents will be available mostly digitally, with only a handful of physical copies, officials said. The printing of several hundred copies of the voluminous Budget documents was such an elaborate exercise that printing staff had to be quarantined inside the printing press in the basement of North Block — the seat of the finance ministry — for at least a couple of weeks. This quarantine and the beginning of the printing would begin with a traditional ‘Halwa ceremony’ attended by the finance minister, deputy finance ministers, and senior officials in the ministry.
Since coming to power, the Modi government has curtailed printing of the Budget copies — initially cutting copies distributed to journalists and outside analysts and then reducing those provided to Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha MPs citing the outbreak of the pandemic. This year, the outbreak of the highly infectious Omicron variant has brought more curbs. As a result, the symbolic halwa ceremony is being given a go-by, sources said, citing the prevailing pandemic. However, a small group of staffers will undergo mandatory quarantine for the compilation of the digital Budget documents.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, who in her maiden Budget presentation in 2019 shunned the long-standing practice of carrying the speech and Budget document in a briefcase in favour of a ‘bahi-khata’ holding the papers, used a handheld tablet to read her speech on the last occasion on February 1, 2021. She came to Parliament carrying the gadget inside the red-coloured ‘bahi-khata’ cloth. She will present her fourth Budget on February 1, 2022. The ‘halwa ceremony’ was usually held 10 days prior to the Union Budget.