ZE
ZESTEXAM

SSC JHT Budget, Fiscal & Monetary Policy

Study Material · Concept Notes · Shortcuts

This page covers SSC JHT Budget, Fiscal & Monetary Policy with complete concept notes, 40 graded practice MCQs, key points and exam-specific tips. Free to study.

0 PYQs
none yet
40 Practice
MCQs
10 Key Points
to remember
Free
no login needed
Take Free Mock →Full Practice Set
Also for:CGLCHSLMTSGD
PYQs
0
Practice
40
Key Points
10
Access
Free
Concept Notes

Budget, Fiscal & Monetary Policy— Rules & Concept

Core ConceptRead this first — the foundation of the topic
BUDGET BASICS

The Union Budget is the government's annual financial statement. It shows how much money the government will earn (receipts) and spend (expenditure) in one year

Budget has two parts

Revenue Budget (day-to-day expenses) and Capital Budget (asset creation). Revenue Deficit occurs when revenue receipts fall short of revenue expenditure. Fiscal Deficit happens when total expenditure exceeds total receipts except borrowings.

Formula BlockMemorise — at least one formula appears in every paper
Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure - Revenue Receipts
Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure - Total Receipts (excluding borrowings)
Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit - Interest Payments
Fiscal Deficit as % of GDP = (Fiscal Deficit ÷ GDP) × 100

FISCAL POLICY:

Fiscal Policy uses government spending and taxation to influence the economy. Expansionary Fiscal Policy means increasing spending or cutting taxes to boost growth. Contractionary Fiscal Policy means reducing spending or raising taxes to control inflation. The Finance Ministry handles fiscal policy through the annual budget.

MONETARY POLICY:

Monetary Policy controls money supply and interest rates. RBI (Reserve Bank of India) manages monetary policy. Main tools are Repo Rate, Reverse Repo Rate, CRR (Cash Reserve Ratio), and SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio). Repo Rate is the rate at which RBI lends to banks. CRR is the percentage of deposits banks must keep with RBI.

Exam PatternsWhat examiners ask — read before attempting PYQs

SSC CGL typically asks about deficit types, policy tools, and current rates. Questions often test the difference between fiscal and monetary policy. Budget terminology and RBI functions are frequently asked.

ShortcutsUse these to save 30–60 seconds per question

Remember 'FRPP' for deficit hierarchy: Fiscal > Revenue > Primary > Effective Revenue Deficit (in terms of size, usually).

Worked ExampleSolve this step-by-step before moving on
1
Step 1

Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure - Total Receipts (excluding borrowings) Fiscal Deficit = ₹35 - ₹28 = ₹7 lakh crore

2
Step 2

Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit - Interest Payments Primary Deficit = ₹7 - ₹6 = ₹1 lakh crore WORKED EXAMPLE 2: If Fiscal Deficit is ₹15 lakh crore and GDP is ₹250 lakh crore, calculate Fiscal Deficit as percentage of GDP.

1
Step 1

Use formula = (Fiscal Deficit ÷ GDP) × 100

2
Step 2

= (₹15 ÷ ₹250) × 100

3
Step 3

= 0.06 × 100 = 6% SHORTCUT FOR POLICY EFFECTS: Expansionary Policy = More spending/Lower taxes/Lower interest rates = Economic growth Contractionary Policy = Less spending/Higher taxes/Higher interest rates = Control inflation

Exam TrapsCommon mistakes students make — avoid these

#1: Students confuse Fiscal Deficit with Revenue Deficit. Remember: Fiscal Deficit includes ALL expenditure (revenue + capital), while Revenue Deficit only includes revenue expenditure. Fiscal Deficit is always larger than Revenue Deficit. CURRENT EXAM FOCUS: SSC CGL 2024 heavily focuses on budget components, deficit calculations, and policy tools.

Questions on RBI's monetary policy committee (MPC) and inflation targeting are trending. Always remember current Repo Rate and key budget figures.

Key Points to Remember

  • Budget = Revenue Budget + Capital Budget, presented annually on February 1st
  • Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure - Total Receipts (excluding borrowings)
  • Revenue Deficit = Revenue Expenditure - Revenue Receipts
  • Primary Deficit = Fiscal Deficit - Interest Payments
  • Fiscal Policy controlled by Finance Ministry, Monetary Policy by RBI
  • Repo Rate = Rate at which RBI lends to commercial banks
  • CRR = Cash Reserve Ratio, percentage of deposits banks keep with RBI
  • Expansionary policy stimulates growth, Contractionary policy controls inflation
  • MPC (Monetary Policy Committee) meets 6 times a year to decide rates
  • FRBM Act 2003 targets fiscal deficit at 3% of GDP

Exam-Specific Tips

  • Union Budget is presented on February 1st every year since 2017
  • FRBM Act 2003 (Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act) targets fiscal deficit at 3% of GDP
  • Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) has 6 members with 4-year tenure
  • RBI's inflation target is 4% with upper tolerance of 6% and lower tolerance of 2%
  • Current Repo Rate decisions are taken by 6-member MPC through majority voting
  • SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio) minimum limit is 18% as per RBI Act
  • Budget documents include 13 different statements as per constitutional requirement
  • Article 112 of Constitution deals with Union Budget presentation
Practice MCQs

Budget, Fiscal & Monetary Policy — Practice Questions

40graded MCQs · easy to hard · full solution & trap analysis · showing 20 of 40

All MCQs →
Practice 1easy

The Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) was launched to achieve which primary objective?

Practice 2easy

What is the primary difference between Fiscal Deficit and Revenue Deficit in a government budget?

Practice 3easy

In which year was the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) scheme launched, and which ministry oversees it?

Practice 4easy

Which of the following best describes the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) as a monetary policy tool?

Practice 5easy

The Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) was launched to provide loans to which category of borrowers?

Practice 6easy

Which of the following best describes Fiscal Deficit in the context of India's Union Budget?

Practice 7easy

The Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) primarily aims to achieve financial inclusion by providing which of the following?

Practice 8easy

The Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) scheme was launched in which year?

Practice 9easy

Which of the following best describes Fiscal Deficit in a government budget?

Practice 10easy

The Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) scheme was launched in which year?

Practice 11easy

What is the primary function of the Reverse Repo Rate set by the RBI?

Practice 12easy

Which of the following best describes Fiscal Deficit in the context of India's Union Budget?

Practice 13easy

Revenue Deficit in a government budget refers to which of the following?

Practice 14easy

Which of the following is the primary objective of the Reverse Repo Rate set by the RBI?

Practice 15medium

Which of the following best describes the relationship between the Repo Rate and Reverse Repo Rate set by the RBI?

Practice 16medium

Which of the following best describes the relationship between Fiscal Deficit and Revenue Deficit in India's Union Budget?

Practice 17medium

Which ministry is responsible for implementing the Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana, and what is its primary target group?

Practice 18medium

The Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) aims to provide universal access to banking services. Which of the following is a key feature of PMJDY accounts?

Practice 19medium

As per RBI's monetary policy framework (2024), what is the primary objective of the Repo Rate?

Practice 20medium

As per the Union Budget 2024-25, what is the primary objective of the Fiscal Deficit target announced by the Government of India?

20 more practice questions in the Study Panel

Difficulty-graded, bookmarkable, with timed mode. Free account — no credit card.

Create Free Account →Browse Questions

60-Second Revision — Budget, Fiscal & Monetary Policy

  • Remember: Fiscal Deficit always larger than Revenue Deficit and Primary Deficit
  • Formula: Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure - Total Receipts (excluding borrowings)
  • Trap: Don't confuse fiscal policy (government) with monetary policy (RBI)
  • Current Focus: MPC meets 6 times annually, inflation target 4% ± 2%
  • Quick Recall: Budget date Feb 1st, FRBM target 3% fiscal deficit
  • Policy Effect: Lower rates = growth boost, Higher rates = inflation control
  • Exam Tip: Revenue items repeat yearly, Capital items create assets
Studied the notes? Now test yourself
See how Budget, Fiscal & Monetary Policy appears in the real SSC JHT paper
Full timed mock · Instant All-India percentile · Free
Free forever for basic prepNo app downloadReal exam-pattern questions12,000+ aspirants
Test Budget, Fiscal & Monetary Policy under exam conditions
Free SSC JHT mock · instant rank · no login
Free Mock →
SSC JHT Budget, Fiscal & Monetary Policy — Study Material & 40 Practice MCQs | ZestExam