National debt /Sovereign Debt /Public Debt :
- Debt taken by the governments is national debt.
- It is said to be national as it is backed by the government which is national power.
- Public debt consists of budgetary as well as extra budgetary borrowings of the govt.
- Public debt is the accumulated borrowings of the govt over a period of time
- This type of debts are most reliable in the sense that such debt can't default as government is backing such debt.
- Default on national debt means government has failed .
- It can be from internal sources as well as external sources.
Internal debt can be of following types :
● Market loans
● Market Stabilisation Bills / Bonds
● Treasury Bills
● Other Special Securities issued to RBI
● Ways and Means Advances /14 days T-Bills
● Securities against Small Savings
● Cash Management Bills
Special Securities Issued to Public Sector Banks
External National debt includes:
- External Debt under the ‘External Assistance’ programme
- Multilateral loans (debt from Multilateral Creditors such as the International Development Association (IDA), International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), Asian Development Bank (ADB) etc.
- Bilateral Debt (debt from sovereign countries with whom sovereign and non-sovereign entities enter into one-to-one loan arrangements).
- Other Government Debt includes IMF Loans, FPI investment in G-sec and defence debt .
Fiscal deficit VS public debt:
- Fiscal Deficit includes exclusively the budgetary borrowings.
- Fiscal deficit is the borrowings of the government for the current year
while
- public debt consists of budgetary as well as extra budgetary borrowings of the govt.
- public debt provides a better and holistic picture as compared to fiscal deficit.