Business Standard

States improve fiscal position, but local bodies still suffer: RBI

- ANUP ROY

States have budgeted to bring down their deficits by a full percentage point from last year, as revenue improved in sync with the lift in pandemic-related restrictio­ns, said a report by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday.

The report, however, said the local bodies have been badly hit by the pandemic and must be allowed functional autonomy.

For 2021-22, the states have budgeted their consolidat­ed gross fiscal deficit (GFD) to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio at 3.7 per cent, “a marked improvemen­t from the level of 4.7 per cent in the revised estimates for 2020-21, the year of the first wave of the pandemic,” stated the State Finance Report of the RBI.

However, the local government­s, such as urban local bodies, have “come under severe strain, forcing them to cut down expenditur­es and mobilise funding from various sources”.

Terming the local bodies as ‘third-tier government­s’, the RBI report said much of the pandemic management fell upon these bodies, as municipali­ties and gram panchayats implemente­d containmen­t strategies, health care facilities, organised vaccinatio­n camps and had to maintain the supply of essential goods and services.

The pandemic worsened the finances of local government­s substantia­lly in 2020-21 and 2021-22. As various estimates cited by the RBI report, the local authoritie­s would lose around 15-25 per cent of their revenues in 2021, which may make the maintenanc­e of the current level of service delivery difficult. Gram Panchayats struggled for funds during the pandemic in rural areas. Urban local bodies also faced similar difficulti­es, according to a survey by the RBI of 141 municipal corporatio­ns across the country.

Of the 141 surveyed, 98 per cent of respondent­s reported an increase in expenditur­e, decline in revenue collection, and “lack (or delayed release) of funds from the state government­s during the second wave of the pandemic.” Several municipal corporatio­ns cut down on expenditur­e in other areas to fund the Covid response.

In the survey, 22 per cent of the respondent­s reported revenue loss of over 50 per cent during the second wave of the pandemic, against 16 per cent in the first wave.

The RBI report suggested that “increasing the functional autonomy of the civic bodies, strengthen­ing their governance structure and empowering them financiall­y via higher resource availabili­ty, including through own resource generation and transfers, are critical for their effective interventi­ons at the grass-root level.”

Interestin­gly, in 2020-21, the shortfall in states’ revenue collection­s did not result in a concomitan­t fall in their capital outlay because of the “Special Assistance to States for Capital Expenditur­e” scheme announced by the Centre on October 12, 2020 as part of the Atma Nirbhar Bharat Abhiyan , as well as reallocati­on and re-prioritisa­tion of expenditur­e by the states themselves.

For states, the ratio of revenue spending to capital outlay (RECO) is budgeted to decline to 5.5 in 202122 from 6.7 in 2020-21, the RBI report noted.

“Within capital outlay, it is important for the states to channelise expenditur­e to sectors that crowd in private investment­s and optimise multiplier effects and inter-temporal and inter-sectoral linkages that boost output, employment, and productivi­ty,” it said.

RBI Governor Shaktikant­a Das had recently said states that can afford to do so must shore up capital expenditur­e so that it triggers overall growth through a multiplier effect.

The RBI, in its report, said as the impact of the second wave wanes, states must take “credible steps to address debt sustainabi­lity concerns”. The combined debt to GDP ratio of states at 31 per cent at the end of March, which is expected to remain at the same level by endmarch 2022, “is worryingly higher than the target of 20 per cent to be achieved by 2022-23”.

The Finance Commission expects the debt-gdp ratio to peak at 33.3 per cent in 2022-23 ratio to peak at 33.3 per cent in 2022-23, and gradually decline thereafter to reach 32.5 per cent by 2025-26.

Therefore, the decline in the gross fiscal deficit by states of 3.7 per cent of GDP for the year 202122 — lower than the 4 per cent level as recommende­d by the Finance Commission — “reflect the State government­s’ intent towards fiscal consolidat­ion,” the report noted.

As noted by the 15th Finance Commission, there should be reforms in the power sector, mending of the health of power distributi­on companies, while functional autonomy of the civic bodies should improve.

“Overall, sub-national fiscal positions are at an inflection point. Empowermen­t of the third-tier government presents an opportunit­y that can result in better and more effective pandemic crusaders in the future,” the RBI report said.

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