Public Finance NotesRole of public finance in an underdeveloped country like India
Meaning
and Definition of Public Finance
Public finance is a study of income and expenditure or receipt and
payment of government. It deals the income raised through revenue and
expenditure spend on the activities of the community and the terms ‘finance’ is
money resource i.e. coins. But public is collected name for individual within
an administrative territory and finance. On the other hand, it refers to income
and expenditure. Thus public finance in this manner can be said the science of
the income and expenditure of the government.
Different economists have defined public finance differently. Some
of the definitions are given below.
According to prof. Dalton “public finance is one of those subjects
that lie on the border lie between economics and politics. It is concerned with
income and expenditure of public authorities and with the mutual adjustment of
one another. The principal of public finance are the general principles, which
may be laid down with regard to these matters.
According to Adam Smith “public finance is an investigation into
the nature and principles of the state revenue and expenditure”
To sum up, public finance is the subject, which studies the income
and expenditure of the government. In simpler manner, public finance embodies
the study of collection of revenue and expenditure in the public interest for
the welfare of the country
Role
of public finance in an underdeveloped country like India
Public Finance occupies great significance in
an underdeveloped or developing country. According to R. J. Chelliah, “Public
finance has a positive and significant role in the context of economic
development.” The importance of public finance in an underdeveloped/developing
country like India may be summarized as under:
a) Capital Formation: Since
development entirely depends on the rate of capital formation in the country,
the first and foremost aim of public finance is to promote capital formation.
Students of commerce and economics are well aware of the fact that the burning
problem of an underdeveloped or developing country is the low capital
formation. In the words of Dr. Baljit Singh, “For an undeveloped country all
economic policies and measures in the initial stages must concentrate on
production and fiscal policy should act as a tool of capital formation.”
Capital formation can be increased through an effective and well-planned
taxation policy. In the words of R. Nurkse, “For economic development, it is not
the aim of public finance to bring about reduction in inequalities of incomes
but its aim is to increase that proportion of the income which goes into
capital formation.”
b) Unemployment Problem: Another
major problem of an underdeveloped/developing country is the unemployment
problem. Increased income may be eaten up by a large mass of unemployed people.
This problem of unemployment leads again to low standard of living, poverty,
backwardness, ignorance and above all starvation. It is the function of public
finance to provide employment opportunity. In the connection must be remembered
that fiscal policies (public finance policies) are most effective tools for
tackling of the problem of unemployment.
c) Planned Economic Development: In
underdeveloped/developing countries the productive resources are limited in
quantity as well as quality. Public finance renders valuable help in the
planned economic development of the country. The entire machinery of planning
works through the mechanism of public finance. The principles of public finance
have paramount importance in the sphere of rapid economic planning because both
of these are the closely related activities of the state. For example, the
Government of India is raising necessary funds through taxation etc. for
formulation and implementation of its five year plans.
d) Increase in Income: Capital
formation is not an end in itself but only a means of achieving another
important end, i.e. increase in income. The object of public expenditure is to
increase the income in underdeveloped countries so at to invest funds in such
industries and in such an economical and efficient manner that least amount of
money fetches the greatest possible output. The Government gives subsidies and
grants to industries to enable them to increase production at cheaper rates.
This will lead to prosperity and development with an overall increase in the
income of the masses.
e) Reduction in Economic Inequalities: Another
problem of underdeveloped or developing countries is the unequal distribution
of income and wealth to the public. Public finance has an important role to
play in this context. For example, the Government can impose heavy taxes (such
as income tax) on the richer sections of the society and spend the income so
received on providing cheap food, cheap housing, employment, free medical aid
etc. for poorer sections of the society.
f) Optimum Utilization of Resources: Another
major problem of underdeveloped or developing countries is the problem of
non-utilization or even destruction of the scarce and limited resources. The
solution of this basic problem lies in the optimum utilization of these
available resources by means of adopting planned monetary and public finance
policies. The state can direct the flow of consumption, production and
distribution in the right direction by adopting balanced budget policy.
g) Problem of Economic Stabilization: Another
problem of an underdeveloped and developing country is the economic
instability. After 1929-30 worldwide depression, it has been emphasised that
public finance (revenue and expenditure process of the Government) may be used
to secure economic stability or to remove economic fluctuations and distortion
in the economy.
h) Increase to Savings: The major
problem of developing and underdeveloped countries is that savings are very
nominal which hinder their economic development. Public finance encourages the
accumulation of savings.
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