Deccan Chronicle

Dalit Bandhu a tough nut to crack in Budget ’22-’23

KCR promises to allocate `20,000 cr to Dalit Bandhu

- L. VENKAT RAM REDDY | DC HYDERABAD, DEC. 15

All eyes are on Dalit Bandhu scheme as the finance ministry is set to begin budgetary exercise this week for 202223. Chief Minister K. Chandrashe­kar Rao had promised to allocate

`20,000 crore to Dalit Bandhu every year in the budget from 2022-23. However, mobilising such a huge amount of funds for a single scheme poses a major challenge to the finance department as the gap between income and expenditur­e of the state government has already widened due to increased expenditur­e on welfare schemes.

Official sources in the finance department said the state government was already spending nearly 85 per cent of its own tax revenues on welfare schemes. They said the average expenditur­e on welfare schemes per month had now increased to `5,022 crore.

Of this, the expenditur­e on Rythu Bandhu remains the highest at

`1,233 crore as the government spends nearly

`15,000 crore on Rythu Bandhu.

If the Chief Minister’s promise is fulfilled, then Dalit Bandhu will beat Rythu Bandhu with the highest allocation of

`20,000 crore. He promised to spend `20,000 crore every year on Dalit Bandhu for the next seven years to cover all 17 lakh Dalit families in the state to extend `10 lakh financial assistance to each Dalit family.

Official sources said the government had been spending `977 crore per month on Aasara pensions, `921 crore on free power to agricultur­e and other sectors, `435 crore on crop loan waiver scheme, `208 crore on Rythu Bima, `196 crore on subsidy rice, `250 crore on sheep distributi­on, `208 crore on industrial incentives,

`27 crore on KCR Kits and `567 crore on miscellane­ous schemes.

The government is depending on loans and grants-in-aid from the Centre to meet additional expenses as 85 per cent of the state’s own tax revenues are being spent on welfare schemes. This year (2021-22), the government has decided to take loans of

`47,500 crore through open market borrowings. Of this, the government already mobilised

`28,500 crore by November end. It can mobilise just `19,000 crore in the remaining four months of this fiscal (December-March).

Finance minister T. Harish Rao requested the Centre to increase FRMB limit from 4 per cent to 5 per cent in June this year which will enable the state government to mobilise an additional `12,000 crore. But there has been no response from the Centre so far. The grants-inaid from the Centre also came down drasticall­y putting more financial pressure on the state government.

The state government has estimated to get

`38,000 crore toward grants-in-aid from the Centre in the Budget

2021-22. But what Telangana got was just

`5,000 crore in seven months till October-end. Officials expect to get another `5,000 crore maximum in the remaining five months. This leaves a deficit of `23,000 crore to the state government.

 ?? — PAVAN ?? MLA J. Geeta Reddy pays tribute to former chief minister of undivided Andhra Pradesh K. Rosaiah at a remembranc­e meet. Political leaders, bureaucrat­s and people from across fields were also present at JRC Convention in Hyderabad on Wednesday.
— PAVAN MLA J. Geeta Reddy pays tribute to former chief minister of undivided Andhra Pradesh K. Rosaiah at a remembranc­e meet. Political leaders, bureaucrat­s and people from across fields were also present at JRC Convention in Hyderabad on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India