Business Standard

Compensate states that picked a borrowing option: Bihar

While Bihar, Gujarat, Karnataka, Tripura and Madhya Pradesh opted for the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) window, Manipur and Sikkim went for market borrowing

- DILASHA SETH

“DISPUTE RESOLUTION WILL TAKE ANOTHER 3-4 MONTHS. SIMILARLY, VOTING WILL ALSO NOT SERVE MUCH PURPOSE AS IT WILL MEAN MORE DELIBERATI­ONS, AND WILL RATHER DERAIL THE PROCESS. WHY SHOULD OTHER STATES SUFFER BECAUSE OF A FEW ” DISSENTING ONES SUSHIL KUMAR MODI

Deputy CM, Bihar

Opposition-ruled states are likely to pitch for voting or operationa­lising dispute in the upcoming GST Council meeting on September 19. However, Bjp-ruled states will press for release of money to them in order to tide over the current fiscal stress

Amid discord over goods and services tax (GST) compensati­on, Bihar deputy chief minister Sushil Modi said disbursal should begin for states that have opted for either of the two borrowing options proposed by the Centre.

He also proposed that consultati­on with dissenting states could be carried out separately.

This comes a day after Kerala finance minister Thomas Isaac pitched for voting in the GST Council if the Centre sticks to the two options it has proposed.

With at least seven Bhartiya Janata Party (Bjp)-ruled states having officially opted for either of the two compensati­on options proposed by the Centre,

Modi told Business Standard that holding further consultati­ons will further delay the compensati­on for states that have already decided.

Dissenting or opposition-ruled states are likely to pitch for voting or operationa­lising dispute in the upcoming GST Council meeting on September 19. However, Bjpruled states will press for release of money to them in order to tide over the current fiscal stress.

While Bihar, Gujarat, Karnataka, Tripura and Madhya Pradesh opted for the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) window, Manipur and Sikkim went for market borrowing. Tuesday was the official deadline for submitting options. However, finance ministry sources said the deadline is not cast in stone and if states’ responses come even a couple of days later, they will be considered.

“Dispute resolution will take another 3-4 months. Similarly, voting will also not serve much purpose as it will mean more deliberati­ons, and will rather derail the process. Why should other states suffer because of a few dissenting ones. States need money now to pay salaries and do routine spending,” said Modi. “The Centre can sit with the dissenting states and hold further talks if it wants. The borrowing process for states that have already opted for either option one or two should not get delayed further,” he added.

Isaac, who is recovering from Covid, on Tuesday called the nonpayment of full GST compensati­on an ‘act of fraud’ by the Centre. He tweeted, “Calamities are often acts of nature, demonetisa­tion was an act of man and Covid an act of God, maybe. But non-payment of full GST compensati­on is an act of fraud by GOI. Shameful is the manner in which arguments are being shifted with the single objective of non-payment of full compensati­on.”

On the Centre’s argument that full compensati­on will be paid even in case of the first option (but will be deferred), Isaac said, “Deferring half the compensati­on for better times, ipso facto, is deferring public expenditur­es to better times. It is the surest way of deferring future good days.”

The finance ministry has estimated that there would be a compensati­on requiremen­t of ~3 trillion for states and the compensati­on cess would be around ~65,000 crore for the current financial year, leaving a gap of ~2.35 trillion. Of this gap, ~97,000 crore is on account of the

GST structure and the remaining due to the lockdown to arrest the spread of Covid-19.

It offered two solutions to the state government­s. The first is that states take a ~97,000-crore window, to be worked out with the RBI, or borrow ~2.35 trillion from the markets to be facilitate­d by the central bank.

The amounts will be paid by the compensati­on cess which will be extended beyond June 30, 2022. However, states will have to bear the interest burden if they decide to borrow the entire ~2.35 trillion shortfall.

In case of the second option, proposed extension of cess will be used for paying only the principal amount and not the interest.

In case of voting, the Centre would need the support of 19 states. The National Democratic Alliance (NDA) is ruling in 16 states out of 29 with Jammu and Kashmir — a union territory – under the President’s rule.

On the other hand, even if all the states combine, they do not have the power to take a decision, as 75 per cent votes are required to ratify the decision.

Under normal circumstan­ces, when each of the states and the Centre vote on an issue, the Union government can block the decision of the majority on its own. But it will take as many as 12 states to do the same.

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