Deccan Chronicle

TS to assess note ban hit

Plans to cut expenses as revenues dwindle

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT HYDERABAD, DEC. 31:

After waiting for 50 days post-demonetisa­tion, the Telangana state government has decided to assess the real impact of the note ban on the state economy.

The state has not felt the impact of the note ban as yet because the revenue realised in November and December were from the earnings of the previous months like September and October.

However, the government could feel the pinch in January as it could not realise estimated tax revenue due to lower sales in November and December.

Chief Minister K. Chandrasek­har Rao has asked finance officials to prepare a report on the sectorwise impact of demonetisa­tion. This assessment is expected to help the government in ascertaini­ng budgetary cuts required for the next three months of the current financial year so as to conserve cash.

In the ongoing Assembly session, Mr Rao said, “The impact of demonetisa­tion was not felt so far since we could run the show with the revenue earnings from the months prior to demonetisa­tion. But the real impact of demonetisa­tion would be felt in January as the earnings fell in November and December, primarily due to a halt in commercial and realty transactio­ns due to cash crunch.”

The state normally earns `8,000 crore every month including the Centre’s share of taxes and mandatory expenditur­e on salaries, pensions for staff and loan repayments total `5,500 crore.

However, because of demonetisa­tion, the government’s earnings could halve in January.

“We are fortunate that the revenue collection from real estate and excise sectors has recovered in December after a steep fall. However, the commercial taxes sector, which remains the major contributo­r for the state's revenue is yet to recover completely,” finance minister Etela Rajender said.

The business transactio­ns came down due to cash shortage. But with introducti­on of cashless transactio­ns, the sector is slowly recovering. We are assessing the loss caused to the commercial tax earnings,” he said.

The earning from the stamps and registrati­ons department used to be `15 crore per day, which fell to less than `3 crore after the note ban. It has increased to `11 crore recently.

The government could spend only half of the `1.29 lakh crore Budget (2016-17) so far and wants to speed up expenditur­e in the next three months.

However, this seems to be a difficult task considerin­g the slow down in economy, unless the Centre comes to its rescue by offering compensati­on for revenue loss.

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