Rating agency ICRA has warned that the FY27 fiscal deficit target of 4.5% of GDP faces significant risks due to the ongoing conflict between Israel, the U.S., and Iran. The primary concern is the “sky-high” international energy prices, which are forcing the Indian government to prioritize consumer stability over tax revenue.
1. The Fiscal Friction: Revenue vs. Subsidies
The conflict has created a double-edged sword for India’s budget management:
- Tax Revenue “Hit”: To prevent a domestic price collapse, the government today slashed the special additional excise duty on petrol and diesel by ₹10 per litre.
- The Goal: To help Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) offset massive under-recoveries, currently estimated at ₹24/litre for petrol and ₹30/litre for diesel.
- Rising Subsidy Bill: Higher natural gas and crude prices directly inflate the government’s spending on fertilizers and LPG. With the Kharif sowing season approaching, any spike in input costs will require higher central subsidies to keep retail prices affordable for farmers.
2. Why FY27 is at Risk
ICRA notes that even if the geopolitical situation stabilizes, energy prices are likely to remain higher than the “budgeted assumptions” used to set the 4.5% deficit target.
- Logistical Disruptions: The closure of the Strait of Hormuz (which handles 20% of global oil) is driving up freight and insurance costs, adding an inflationary layer to every barrel imported.
- Corporate Tax Moderation: As energy-intensive industries (cement, steel, chemicals) face higher input costs, their profit margins shrink, potentially leading to lower corporate tax collections for the government.
3. The “Buffers”: India’s Financial Safety Net
Despite these pressures, ICRA believes the 4.5% target is still within reach due to several strategic buffers:
- Economic Stabilisation Fund: A dedicated pool of funds designed to absorb external shocks without derailing the main budget.
- Expenditure Savings: Historically, the government has been able to find savings in non-essential capital or revenue expenditure to reallocate toward urgent subsidies.
- Small Savings Collections: Robust inflows into small savings schemes (like PPF and Sukanya Samriddhi) provide the government with non-market borrowing options, reducing pressure on bond yields.
Summary of the Economic Impact
| Factor | Impact on Fiscal Deficit | Reason |
| Excise Duty Cut | Negative | Loss of direct tax revenue from fuel sales. |
| Fertilizer Subsidy | Negative | Higher gas prices increase the cost of producing urea. |
| Oil Company Losses | Negative | Potential need for a government “bailout” or capital infusion for OMCs. |
| Stabilisation Fund | Positive | Provides a ready cash cushion to prevent deficit slippage. |
The Outlook
The ultimate outcome depends on the duration of the West Asian conflict. While India has the resilience to handle a short-term spike, a prolonged blockade of the Persian Gulf could force the government to either raise retail fuel prices or officially revise its fiscal deficit targets upward.
