Deccan Chronicle

Big projects yield no cash, hits state plans

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Mission Bhagiratha and the Kaleshwara­m project account for a major chunk of bank guarantees given by the state government for raising loans.

These projects are not in a position to repay the debt as the government is not imposing user charges.

These bank guarantees have now become an obstacle for the government to auction bonds through the RBI.

The Centre wants to treat bank guarantees as part of state government debt, which the Telangana state government is strongly opposed to.

This has led to a situation whereupon the Centre is halting the state government’s bid to auction bonds in 2022-23.

The state government created the Kaleshwara­m Irrigation Project Corporatio­n Ltd to raise funds for the constructi­on of Kaleshwara­m Lift Irrigation Project (KLIP), Telangana Drinking Water Supply Corporatio­n Ltd to raise funds for Mission Bhagiratha and Telangana State Water Resources Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Corporatio­n Ltd to fund other irrigation projects.

Official sources said that the government has spent

`70,000 crore on Kaleshwara­m and `40,000 crore on Mission Bhagiratha. Over

90 per cent of these funds were mobilised through bank guarantees.

The government’s contention was that both these projects would be able to repay the debt on their own once they become fully operationa­l. Water from both projects is supplied free to the users. It may be recalled that government­s in the undivided Andhra Pradesh were imposing water cess on farmers which was scrapped by the Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS) government in 2014.

Mission Bhagiratha water is generating some revenue only in municipal corporatio­ns, municipali­ties and from industries. Consequent­ly, the state government is forced to repay the debts on behalf of the corporatio­ns.

These loans come under off-budget borrowings by the government, which stood at `1,05,006 crore by the end of 2021-22 fiscal.

The government proposed to go in for another

`40,000 crore off-budget borrowings in the current fiscal taking the total to

`1,45,455 crore by the end of 2022-23.

The Centre now wants to treat the overall off-budget borrowings as part of state government debt and allow auction of bonds in the open market to raise fresh loans in

2022-23 only for the remaining portion of its eligibilit­y as under the FRBM Act, which makes it clear that state’s debt burden should not exceed

25 per cent of its GSDP. The state government's total debt burden, including budget and off-budget borrowings by the end of

2022-23, will increase to

`4,75,44 crore, of which

`3,44,792 crore are budget borrowings and `1,45,456 crore are off-budget borrowings.

The government has proposed to raise `59,672 crore through auction of bonds this fiscal, which has been halted by the RBI.

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