New Delhi, Feb 26 (Inditop.com) Highlights of 2010-11 budget presented by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee in parliament Friday:

— National Social Security Fund created for workers in unorganised sector with allocation of Rs.1,000 crore

— Government to give Rs.1,000 for each National Pension Scheme account opened by workers in the unorganised sector

— Exclusive skill development programme for the textile sector

— Fifty percent hike in allocation for schemes for women and child development

— Rs.4,500 crore allocated for ministry of social justice and empowerment, a hike of 80 percent

— Rs.2,600 crore allocated for ministry of minorities affairs

— Rs.1,900 crore for Unique Identification Authority of India

— Rs.147,344 crore allocated for defence

— 2,000 youth to be recruited in central paramilitary forces

— Draft Food Security Bill prepared and will be put in the public domain

— Allocation on primary education raised from Rs.26,800 crore to Rs.31,300 crore

— Banking facilities to be provided to all habitations with a population of 2,000 and more

— Rs.66,100 crore allocated for rural development in 2010-11; Rs.40,100 crore for National Rural Employment Scheme; RS.48,000 crore for Bharat Nirman

— Rs.1,270 crore allocated for Rajiv Awas Yojna for slum dwellers, up from Rs.150 crore, an increase of 700 percent with the aim of creating a slum free India.

— Forty-six percent of plan allocations in 2010-11 will be for infrastructure development

— Coal Regulatory Authority to be set up to benchmark standards of performance

— Allocation for new and renewable energy sector increased 61 percent from Rs.620 crore to Rs.1,000 crore in 2010-11

— National Clean Energy Fund to be established

— Rs.200 crore allocated as special package for Goa to prevent erosion and increase green cover

— Government committed to growth of SEZs

— Four-pronged strategy for growth of agricultural sector

— Rs.200 crore to be provided in 2010-11 for climate-resilient agricultural initiative

— Involvement of private sector in grain storage to continue for another two years

— In view of drought and floods, debt repayment period extended to June 2010

— Five more mega food processing projects in addition to 10 existing ones

— FDI flows in April-December 2009 $20.9 billion

— FDI policy to be made more user-friendly with one comprehensive document

— Apex level financial stability council to be set up for banking sector

— Indian Banking Association to give additional licences to private players

— Provision for further capital for regional rural banks

— Roadmap for reducing public debt in six months

— Implementation of direct tax code from April 2011

— Government actively engaged in finalising structure of general sales tax regime; hopes to implement it from April 2011

— Rs.35,000 crore raised from divestment in 2009-10; will be higher in 2010-11

— New fertiliser policy from April 2010; will lead to improved productively and more income for farmers

— Economy stabilised in first quarter of 2009-10; strong rebound in second quarter; overall growth at 7.2 and could be higher when Q3 and Q4 are taken into account

— Export figures for January encouraging

— Hope to breach 10 percent growth mark in not too distant future

— Government set in motion steps to bring down food inflation

— Need to review stimulus package; need to make growth more broad-based

— India has weathered global economic crisis well; Indian economy in far better position than it was a year ago. In 2009 Indian economy faced grave uncertainty; delay in southwest monsoon had undermined agricultural production

— First challenge now is to quickly revert to 9 percent growth and then aim for double digit growth; need to make recovery more broadbased

— Second challenge is to make growth more inclusive; have to strengthen food security

— Third challenge is to overcome weakness in government’s public delivery mechanism; a long way to go in this