Deccan Chronicle

TS skips deficit limits via corporatio­n route

Debt burden of state has already crossed `2.22L crore

- L. VENKAT RAM REDDY | DC

The state government is setting up corporatio­ns to raise loans to fund its various flagship programmes.

Several corporatio­ns are being set up to beat the borrowing limits prescribed under the Fiscal Responsibi­lity and Budgetary Management (FRBM) Act and due to this, the debt burden of the state government is increasing manifold year after year.

The FRBM Act allows states to borrow up to three per cent of GSDP only. However, Telangana state was allowed to borrow up to 3.5 per cent because it is a revenuesur­plus state.

Despite availing of this maximum debt limit of 3.5 per cent, the state government is attempting to secure additional loans through the backdoor every year by setting up new corporatio­ns and giving bank guarantees to them to raise thousands of crores of rupees.

After the bifurcatio­n of erstwhile Andhra Pradesh in June 2014, the outstandin­g loans of the undivided state were divided between TS and AP. TS inherited a debt burden of `70,000 crore.

The TRS government in its 44-month rule has raised loans of `1.52 lakh crore.

Of this, `87,100 crore was raised as per the provisions of the FRBM Act (3.5 per cent of GSDP). But another `65,000

AFTER BIFURCATIO­N, the outstandin­g loans of the undivided state were divided between TS and AP. TS inherited a debt burden of `70,000 cr. The TRS government in its 44-month rule has raised loans of `1.52 lakh crore.

crore was obtained through setting up corporatio­ns.

The total debt burden of the state government has already crossed `2.22 lakh crore.

Servicing these loans has become difficult for the state government. The government needs to pay `11,138 crore as interest on loans of `87,100 crore that it has raised as per the FRBM Act. And then there is the interest on the `65,000 crore it has raised through the corporatio­ns it has created.

The government raised `24,000 crore through Kaleshwara­m Corporatio­n by guaranteei­ng the loan.

It raised `20,000 crore for Mission Bhagiratha through Telangana Water Grid Corporatio­n. It has lined up plans to raise another `10,000 crore this year to complete the project by June 2018. Interestin­gly, Mission Bhagiratha costs `42,000 crore and the entire amount is raised through loans, with the government not sanctionin­g anything in any annual budget so far.

It raised `10,000 crore through the Housing Corporatio­n for 2BKH housing scheme for the poor. It has lined up Devadula Corporatio­n to raise `20,000 crore loan for the Devadula, Sitarama, and Tupakulagu­dem irrigation projects.

It has devised plans to raise `20,000 crore through Palamur-Ranga Reddy Project Corporatio­n for constructi­on of the lift irrigation project.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India