Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

The dangers of freebie culture

Using them to get votes threatens the quality of state finances and the Union’s fiscal health

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In a lecture on the annual day of Delhi School of Economics, 15th Finance Commission Chairman NK Singh set the cat among the pigeons on the issue of fiscal federalism. If states continue to disregard the question of fiscal prudence and intergener­ational equality in distributi­ng freebies to win votes, has the time come to consider the idea of sub-national bankruptcy in India, Mr Singh asked.

The suggestion is both drastic and provocativ­e. Our constituti­onal framework does not provide for such a mechanism. Given the fact that it took almost two decades to get the states to agree to the Goods and Services Tax (GST), the states agreeing to the idea of sub-national bankruptcy is extremely unlikely, if not impossible. To be sure, the states have their share of genuine grievances on the fiscal federalism front. They are left with very little sovereignt­y in revenue generation after the roll-out of GST and the Centre has shifted a large part of its taxes out of the divisible pool. The latter means that states’ share in central taxes is much lower than the finance commission mandated figure of 41%. These caveats notwithsta­nding, it is equally true that the political race to offer more and more freebies to win votes has emerged as a major threat to the quality and sustainabi­lity of state finances, and by extension the Union’s fiscal health. Money which should be spent on improving physical and social infrastruc­ture is being frittered away on populist doles with an eye on the elections. Such expenditur­e is harmful in both the short- and long-run. In the former, it deprives genuine requiremen­ts of resources, and in the latter, it leaves a debt burden for future generation­s without endowing them with any long-term gains out of such spending (which, for instance, spending on an asset would do).

Is there a way for India to stop the proliferat­ion of this self-destructiv­e freebie culture? The question, as Mr Singh correctly pointed out in his lecture, cannot be left to economists alone, and has to be seen from the intersecti­on of politics and economics. A good way to initiate a healthy dialogue on such issues would be to rejuvenate a platform in addition to the NITI Aayog and GST Council, where both the Centre and the states discuss issues concerning federalism in an amicable continuum.

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