The government has initiated the spadework for shifting the financial year to January, from April, to align it with the agriculture production cycle.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi had backed the idea of the January-December financial year last month while addressing chief ministers at the Governing Council of NITI Aayog.
Preliminary work has started and it will gather momentum as the year progresses, sources said.
The GST implementation from July 1 is also an indication in that direction, sources said, adding that it is being implemented beginning the second half of the calender year.
The government had last year set up a high-level committee to study the feasibility of shifting the financial year to January 1 from the current practice of starting it from April 1.
The committee submitted its report in December, reasoning for the change and its effect on the different agricultural crop periods and its impact on businesses, the taxation system and procedures, statistics and data collection.
Modi had said that in a country where agricultural income is exceedingly important, budgets should be prepared immediately after the receipt of agricultural incomes for the year.
There have been suggestions to follow January to December as financial year, he had said, urging states to take the initiative in this regard.
Following the Prime Minister’s statement, Madhya Pradesh became the first state to change the budget cycle to January-December from the existing April-March.
Earlier this year, the government advanced the Budget presentation by a month to February 1 with a view to completing the legislative approval for annual spending plans and tax proposals before the beginning of the new financial year. As a result, public expenditure started from April 1.
Till last year, the Budget was presented on the last day of February and it used to be passed by Parliament by mid-May.
And with the monsoon arriving in June, most of the schemes and spendings by states did not take off until October, leaving just half a year for their implementation.
The government also scrapped a nearly century-long practice of having a separate railway budget and instead merged it with the general budget.
It had also decided to scrap a distinction between plan and non-plan expenditures as the classification resulted in excessive focus on the former with almost equivalent neglect to items such as maintenance, which are classified as non-Plan.