Agency Name: | Ministry of Finance |
Seal: | Government of India logo.svg |
Jurisdiction: | Government of India |
Headquarters: | Cabinet Secretariat Raisina Hill, New Delhi |
Minister1 Name: | Nirmala Sitharaman, Cabinet Minister |
Deputyminister2 Name: | Pankaj Choudhary |
Deputyminister2 Pfo: | Minister of State |
Chief1 Name: | Ajay Seth, IAS |
Chief1 Position: | Finance Secretary & Economic Affairs Secretary |
Chief2 Name: | Manoj Govil, IAS |
Chief2 Position: | Expenditure Secretary |
Child1 Agency: | Department of Economic Affairs |
Child2 Agency: | Department of Expenditure |
Child3 Agency: | Department of Revenue |
Child4 Agency: | Department of Financial Services |
Child5 Agency: | Department of Investment and Public Asset Management |
Child6 Agency: | Department of Public Enterprise |
Keydocument1: | Union Budget |
Keydocument2: | Economic Survey |
Chief3 Name: | Sanjay Malhotra, IAS |
Chief3 Position: | Secretary (Revenue Secretary) |
Chief4 Name: | Nagaraju Maddirala, IAS[1] |
Chief4 Position: | Secretary (Financial Services) |
Chief5 Name: | Tuhin Kanta Pandey, IAS |
Chief5 Position: | Secretary (Investment and Public Asset Management) |
Chief6 Name: | Ali Raza Rizvi,IAS |
Chief6 Position: | Secretary (Department of Public Enterprises) |
Chief7 Name: | V. Anantha Nageswaran |
Chief7 Position: | Chief Economic Adviser |
The Ministry of Finance (IAST: Vitta Maṃtrālaya) is a ministry within the Government of India concerned with the economy of India, serving as the Treasury of India. In particular, it concerns itself with taxation, financial legislation, financial institutions, capital markets, centre and state finances, and the Union Budget.[2]
The Ministry of Finance is the apex controlling authority of four central civil services namely Indian Revenue Service, Indian Audit and Accounts Service, Indian Economic Service and Indian Civil Accounts Service. It is also the apex controlling authority of one of the central commerce services namely Indian Cost and Management Accounts Service.
Sir Ramasamy Chetty Kandasamy Shanmukham Chetty KCIE (17 October 1892 – 5 May 1953) was the first Finance Minister of independent India. He presented the first budget of independent India on 26 November 1947.[3]
The Department of Economic Affairs is the nodal agency of the Union Government to formulate and monitor country's economic policies and programmes having a bearing on domestic and international aspects of economic management. A principal responsibility of this department is the preparation and presentation of the Union Budget to the parliament and budget for the state Governments under President's Rule and union territory administrations. Other main functions include:
The Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB), housed in the Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance, was an inter-ministerial body, responsible for processing of FDI proposals and making recommendations for Government approval. FIPB is now abolished as announced by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley during 2017-2018 budget speech in Lok Sabha.[4]
Shri Ajay Seth is the current secretary of this department.[5]
The Department of Expenditure is the nodal department for overseeing the public financial management system[6] in the Central Government and matters connected with the state finances. The principal activities of the department include a pre-sanction appraisal of major schemes/projects (both Plan and non-Plan expenditure), handling the bulk of the Central budgetary resources transferred to States, implementation of the recommendations of the Finance and Central Pay Commissions, overseeing the expenditure management in the Central Ministries/Departments through the interface with the Financial Advisors and the administration of the Financial Rules / Regulations /Orders through monitoring of Audit comments/observations, preparation of Central Government Accounts, managing the financial aspects of personnel management in the Central Government, assisting Central Ministries/Departments in controlling the costs and prices of public services, assisting organizational re-engineering thorough review of staffing patterns and O&M studies and reviewing systems and procedures to optimize outputs and outcomes of public expenditure. The department is also coordinating matters concerning the Ministry of Finance including Parliament-related work of the Ministry. The department has under its administrative control the National Institute of Financial Management (NIFM), Faridabad.
The business allocated to the Department of Expenditure is carried out through its Establishment Division, Plan Finance I and II Divisions, Finance Commission Division, Staff Inspection Unit, Cost Accounts Branch, Controller General of Accounts, and the Central Pension Accounting.
Manoj Govil is the current secretary of this department.[7]
The Department of Revenue functionunder the overall direction and control of the Secretary (Revenue). It exercises control in respect of matters relating to all the Direct and Indirect Union Taxes through two statutory Boards namely, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) and the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC). Each Board is headed by a chairman who is also ex officio Special Secretary to the Government of India (Secretary level). Matters relating to the levy and collection of all Direct taxes are looked after by the CBDT whereas those relating to levy and collection of GST, Customs Duty, Central Excise duties and other Indirect taxes fall within the purview of the CBIC. The two Boards were constituted under the Central Board of Revenue Act, 1963. At present, the CBDT has six Members and the CBIC has five Members. The Members are also ex officio Secretaries to the Government of India. Members of CBDT are as follows:
Shri Sanjay Malhotra (IAS) is the current secretary of this department.
The Department of Financial Services covers Banks, Insurance, and Financial Services provided by various government agencies and private corporations. It also covers pension reforms and Industrial Finance and Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise. It started the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana.
Nagaraju Maddirala is the current secretary of this department.[8]
This department has ownership over the following central government establishments.
See main article: articles and All India Financial Institutions.
See also: Public sector banks in India. Presently there are 13 nationalised banks in India.
See main article: article and Regional rural bank. These are government owned scheduled commercial banks of India that operate at regional level in different states.
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhattisgarh
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu and Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram
Nagaland
Odisha
Puducherry
Punjab
Rajasthan
Tamil Nadu
Telangana
Tripura
Uttar Pradesh
Uttarakhand
West Bengal
3. Nationalised Insurance Companies
4. Nationalised Financial Market Exchanges
The Department of Disinvestment has been renamed as Department of Investment and Public Asset Management or 'DIPAM', a decision aimed at the proper management of Centre's investments in equity including its disinvestment in central public sector undertakings. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had announced the renaming of the Department of Disinvestment in his budget speech for 2016–17. Initially set up as an independent ministry (The Ministry of Disinvestment) in December 1999, the Department of Disinvestments came into existence in May 2004 when the ministry was turned into a department of the Ministry of Finance. The department took up all the functions of the erstwhile ministry which broadly was responsible for a systematic policy approach to disinvestment and privatisation of Public Sector Units (PSUs).
Tuhin Kanta Pandey is the current secretary of this department.[11]
The Department of Public Enterprises (DPE) which was earlier part of the Ministry of Heavy Industries and Public Enterprises was shifted to Ministry of Finance. Resulting in Finance Ministry having six departments while the Ministry of Heavy Industries and Public Enterprises was renamed to the Ministry of Heavy Industries. This shift was carried out to help in efficient monitoring of the capital expenditure, asset monetisation and financial health of the Central Public Sector Undertakings (CPSUs).[12]