How Finance Ministers Over The Years Ended Their Budget Speeches

Budget speeches may be long and boring affairs, but India's finance ministers have often ended them in interesting ways

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Budget speeches may be long and boring affairs, but India's finance ministers have often ended them in interesting ways

All we want to know about on the budget day is if items of everyday use have become cheaper or dearer and, if we may get to save a bit on income tax. Everything else is just noise. 

To inject a bit of excitement on this budget day, we scanned through Budget speeches down the years. We found finance ministers—some of them luminaries, some not so much— injecting history, humour and literary flourishes in their speeches. We found that they always found a way to go out on a high note, like great stage performers do. 

Here, some milestone speeches from finance ministers, over the years, and how they have concluded their speeches.

R. K. Shanmukham Chetty, 1947

The first Budget of Independent India was presented by R. K. Shanmukham Chetty on 26 November, 1947. It was at a time when the country was going through the pangs of Partition with communal clashes breaking out in many parts and then there was the war with Pakistan raging in Kashmir. Chetty, while presenting budget at a tough time, had this to say in conclusion:

"If India, just risen from bondage, is to realise her destiny as the leader of Asia and take her place in the front rank of free nations, she would require all the disciplined effort her sons can put forth in the years immediately ahead. The willing help and co-operation of all sections of the community is required in maintaining peace and order, in increasing production and in avoiding internecine quarrels whether between communities or between capital and labour. I am sure my appeal for this help and co-operation will not go in vain.” 

 

C. D. Deshmukh, 1951

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