Why in News?
- Recently, RBI released its annual study of state-level budgets.
Why State level budgets matter?
- The understanding of state government finances is becoming more and more important.
- That’s because of few broad reasons,
- States now spend one-and-a-half times more than the Union government and,
- They employ five times more people than the Centre.
- These two trends mean that states have a greater role to play in determining India’s GDP than the Centre.
- States are also the bigger employment generators than Centre.
- It is crucial to understand their spending pattern.
- If their combined expenditure contracts from one year to the other, then it will bring down India’s GDP.
- Since 2014-15, states have increasingly borrowed money from the market, a trend captured in the fiscal deficit figure.
- In fact, their total borrowing almost rivals the borrowing by the Union government.
- This trend has serious implications on,
- The interest rates charged in the economy,
- The availability of funds for the businesses to invest in new factories, and
- The ability of the private sector to employ new labour.
Why Fiscal Deficit Matters?
- Suppose there is only Rs 100 in the economy that is available in the form of investible savings.
- This money could be borrowed either by,
- Private businesses (to invest in a new or existing venture) or
- By the government (to make roads, pay salaries etc.).
- Businesses borrow Rs 50 and
- the central government borrows Rs 50.
- State governments also start borrowing, say Rs 20,
- Then private businesses will have only Rs 30 left to borrow.
- Then this Rs 30 would come at a higher interest rate,
- It is because the same number of people would be now vying for less money.
- That is why economy observers and businesses fuss over the fiscal deficit number the most.
- States borrowing more raises concerns especially when they borrow to the meet unexpected policy goals such as farm loan waivers.
- Each year’s borrowing (or deficit) adds to the total debt.
- Paying back this debt depends on a state’s ability to raise revenues.
- If a state, or all the states in aggregate,
- Find it difficult to raise revenues,
- a rising mountain of debt, captured in the debt-to-GDP ratio,
- could start a vicious cycle wherein states end up paying more and more towards interest payments
- Instead of spending their revenues on creating new assets that provide better education, health and welfare for their residents.
- State government finances have become more important not only for India’s GDP growth and job creation but also for its macroeconomic stability.
- That is why, the 14th Finance Commission had mandated prudent levels of both.
- Fiscal deficit (3% of state GDP) and
- Debt-to-GDP (25%) that must not be breached.
What RBI found in its study?
- The report has found, except during 2016-17, state governments have regularly met their Fiscal deficit target of 3% of GDP
- This should allay a lot of apprehensions about state-level finances, especially in the wake of,
- Extensive farm loan waivers that many states announced,
- UDAY scheme for the power sector which added extra burden as it was put on state budgets,
- Under UDAY, state governments had to take over the debts of power distribution companies (discoms).
- However, any relief on the fiscal deficit front is of limited value because,
- Most states ended up meeting the fiscal deficit target not by increasing their revenues,
- but by reducing their expenditure and increasingly borrowing from the market.
- In 2017-18 the Fiscal deficit for all states had breached the 3% (of GDP) mark.
- In the very next year, states reduced the Fiscal deficit by 109 basis points and brought it down to just 2.4%.
- But the bulk of this cut was achieved by cutting expenditure and that too capital expenditure.
- It hurts the states’ capital budget allocation for key social and infrastructure sectors.
What are its impact on National Economy?
- The RBI’s report states that the reduction in overall size of state budgets likely worsened the economic slowdown.
- There has been a reduction in the overall size of the state budget in 2017-19.
- This retarding fiscal impulse has coincided with a cyclical downswing in domestic economic activity and may have inadvertently deepened it.
- It is noteworthy that 2017-18 saw India’s GDP growth rate decline to 7.2% and it has been declining since.
- Possibly the most worrisome observation by the RBI is that,
- While states have met their fiscal deficits, the overall level of debt-to-GDP has reached the 25% of GDP prudential mark.
- A slightly stringent criterion as prescribed by the FRBM Review Committee with the revised debt target of 20% will put most of the states above the threshold warns the RBI.
- The trouble is states have found it difficult to raise revenues.
- States’ revenue prospects are confronted with,
- Low tax buoyancies,
- Shrinking revenue autonomy under the GST framework and
- Unpredictability associated with transfers of IGST and grants.
- Unrealistic revenue forecasts in budget estimates thereby leave no option for states than expenditure compression in even the most productive and employment-generating heads.
Source: The Indian Express