Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia presented a Rs 46,600 crore annual budget for 2016-17, pegging plan outlay at Rs 20,600 crore, while allocating Rs 26,000 crore for non-plan expenditure.
Price of some tobacco products will go up as the government decided to impose a flat VAT (Value Added Tax) of 20 per cent on all products including gutkha and bidis.
The VAT on the items, whose prices will come down, has been proposed to be brought down from 12.5 to 5 per cent with the exception of the watches on which the impost will be reduced from 20 per cent to 12 per cent.
The budget also proposed to provide drinking water to all authorised and unauthorised colonies by December 2017 through pipelines. Sisodia set aside an amount of Rs 676 crore for the purpose.
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"This is the budget for the Aam Aadmi. The important thing of this budget is that no (fresh) tax has been introduced. We have not even increased any tax rates and instead taxes on a number of items have been reduced," said Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal.
In the budget, Rs 10,690 crore was earmarked for education, a rise of 8.68 per cent over last year. Of this, Rs 4,645 crore is for plan expenditure (23 per cent), highest among all the heads.
"21 new school buildings have been constructed while 8,000 new classrooms are being built. It equals to the infrastructure of 200 schools. Every classroom will have CCTV cameras installed for which Rs 100 crore has been set aside," Sisodia said.
For its three-tier public health roadmap, the government alloted Rs 5,250 crore which forms 16 per cent of the total expenditure, against last year's allocation of Rs 4787 crore.
Rs 6,919 crore has been provided to the three civic
bodies in the Budget. "We hope the amount will be spent wisely," Sisodia said.
Rs 1,068 crore has been earmarked for women safety, security and empowerment and a plan outlay of Rs 1,381 crore for social security and welfare schemes.
Extending the Mohalla Sabha Scheme to all the constituencies, Sisodia announced Rs 350 crore allocation in 2016-17 for the Citizen Local Area Development (CLAD) scheme.
About the health sector, Sisodia said government will add 10,000 new beds at the hospitals run by it and also open 1,000 'mohalla clinics'.
The city is set to have three more monitoring stations and one mobile van to constantly monitor air quality, the government said while enunciating steps to combat growing air pollution in the budget for 2016-17.
It also earmarked Rs 137 crore for a long-pending project under which LED screens will display pollution levels, public awareness messages and real-time traffic information at public places across the national capital.
"We are constantly monitoring the pollution levels on a real-time basis and have installed six Ambient Air Quality Monitoring Stations in Delhi. It is proposed to increase it to nine. In addition, one Mobile Ambient Air Quality Monitoring Van is also proposed," Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said.
VAT on sweets and namkeens has been also proposed to be reduced from 12.5 per cent to 5 per cent, while tax rate on readymade garments costing above Rs 5,000 has been proposed to be lowered from 12.5 per cent to 5 per cent.
"Rationalisation of tax on textiles and fabrics by applying uniform tax of 5 per cent on all varieties of textiles and fabrics (including sarees except khadi and handloom fabrics) has been proposed," he said. Tax on plastic waste has also been proposed to be levied at 5 per cent.