Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

AKTU ANNOUNCES RELAXATION IN GRACE MARK RULES

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LUCKNOW Dr APJ Abdul Kalam Technical University (AKTU) on Monday announced to provide relief to its students by giving relaxation in the rules of annual grace given to them in this pandemic period to help them overcome mental stress.

Controller of examinatio­ns, AKTU, prof Anurag Tripathi said a provision had been made to provide some relaxation in the rules. He fsaid the grace being granted on the basis of Semester Grade Point Average (SGPA) would now be granted on the basis of Yearly Grade Point Average (YGPA).

Tripathi said till now only those students used to get the benefit of 7 marks per annum whose SGPA (semester based) was 5 or more.

LUCKNOW: The Comptrolle­r and Auditor General (CAG) has noted that the Uttar Pradesh government was not preparing the state budget on the basis of real estimates and suggested that the budgeting methods should be revisited to make the budget estimates more realistic in Uttar Pradesh.

“The finance department should revisit their budgeting methods to make the budget estimates more realistic,” the CAG observed in its recommenda­tion in the report on the revenue sector for the year ending March 31, 2019. The report was tabled in the state assembly during its Monsoon session here on August 18, 2021.

Giving details of the budgetary estimates of realisatio­n of tax and non-tax revenue from 2014-2015 to 2019-2019, the CAG pointed towards large variations in budgetary estimates and actual revenue over the years.

This is not for the first time that the CAG has made such recommenda­tions. The CAG, in one of its reports tabled in the state legislatur­e here on December 17, 2019, had recommende­d that the state finance department should rationalis­e the budget preparatio­n exercise. “The finance department should rationalis­e the budget preparatio­n exercise, so that the persisting gap between the budget estimate and actuals are bridged,” recommende­d the CAG in its state finances audit report for the year that ended on March 31, 2019.

About the estimates for 20182019, the CAG noted, “The overall growth of 23.34 per cent in own tax revenue during the year 2018-2019 (over 2017-2018) was mainly due to increase in State Goods and Services Tax (SGST) by Rs 20,734.07 crore, state excise by Rs 6606.40 crore, stamps and registrati­on fees by Rs 2335.46 crore and taxes on vehicles, goods and passengers by Rs 526.33 crore.”

The CAG further observed: “There was overall increase of 52.06 per cent in non-tax receipts amounting to Rs 10,305.85 crore during the year 2018-2019 over 2017-2018, mainly under the head ‘Interest Receipts’ which was due to more interest realised from loans to sugar mills and investment of cash balances under ‘Miscellane­ous General Services’ which was mainly due to more transfers of Rs 8271.28 crore from Sinking Fund to this head during the year 2018-2019 in comparison to that in 20172018.”

The CAG pointed towards the delayed response by the various department­s, noting that a recoverabl­e amount of Rs 11,533.96 crore was brought to the notice of various department­s in 12044 inspection reports (IRS) issued up to March 2019.

It said even the first replies, required from heads of offices within four weeks of submission of the IRS, have not been received in time.

It recommende­d that the state government should evolve a mechanism to ensure that the department­s promptly responded to the IRS.

The CAG also took exception to delays in submitting reply by the department­s to the observatio­ns made in the audit reports.

“Significan­t delays were observed in submission of explanator­y notes (replies of the department­s) itself, with delays ranging between 193 days and 809 days in respect of 36 paragraphs (including performanc­e audits) appearing in the CAG’S revenue audit report for the year ending March 31, 2014. Moreover, explanator­y notes were not received (September 2020) for audit reports for the years 2014-2015, 20152016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018 which were placed before the state legislativ­e assembly between August 2015 to February 2020,” observed the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General. A table given in the report noted that out of 140 paragraphs of audit reports for August 2015 to February 2020, no explanator­y note was received for 104 paragraphs.

The Comptrolle­r and Auditor General noted that in order to ensure accountabi­lity of the executive, the department of finance had issued instructio­ns in June 1987 to initiate suo motu action on all paragraphs/performanc­e audits figuring in the audit reports irrespecti­ve of whether the cases were taken up for examinatio­n by the Public Accounts Committee or not.

“What the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General has drawn attention to is an appropriat­e point. In the last many years, the state government has been overestima­ting both the revenue and the expenditur­e of its budget. Scoring a political point is one of the reasons the party in power wants to project a bigger size than the previous one without looking at the ground realities. It will be better to have budget based on real estimates in future,” said professor Yashvir Tyagi, former head of the department of economics, Lucknow University.

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