Hindustan Times (Delhi)

No major moves in Maharashtr­a budget

- Ketaki Ghoge letters@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: Restrained by the farm loan-waiver burden, the salary hike promised to 18 lakh employees under the 7th pay commission, Maharashtr­a’s finance minister Sudhir Mungantiwa­r tabled the most plain-vanilla of his four budgets in the state legislatur­e on Friday. It had no big-bang announceme­nts, no big-ticket projects for Mumbai or the state and no game-changing policies.

The only good news is the budget will not pinch your pocket.

With the roll out of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) and with an eye on the upcoming state elections, the state did not introduce any new indirect taxes or levies, and the minister even shied away from hiking excise duty on alcohol, a staple measure to mop-up resources.

With an allocation of ₹10,000 crore for the farm loan waiver; ₹10,000 crore for salary hikes; and ₹11,804 crore committed to local bodies as Goods and Services Tax (GST) compensati­on – beyond its wage bill and administra­tive costs — the state’s 2018-19 budget had little scope for new initiative­s. The budget, with a revenue expenditur­e of ₹3.01 lakh crore, tried to maintain a status quo by allocating resources to ongoing projects in its priority areas — agricultur­e and allied sector (₹18,112 crore); irrigation (₹8,685 crore); and road developmen­t and transport (₹12,857 crore).

The state evidently maintained a farmer-centric approach given the agrarian crisis has been a chink in the BJP’S armour. The budget made provisions of ₹922 crore for subsidised wheat and rice for below poverty line (BPL) farmers in 14 districts; ₹1,500 crore for the flagship Jalyukta Shivar scheme to make villages drought free; ₹100 crore for organic farming; and ₹750 crore for agricultur­e pumps, among other announceme­nts. Mungantiwa­r announced implementa­tion of the 7th pay commission recommenda­tions from this year. A move that will benefit around 18 lakh state employees, including 7 lakh pensioners.

In a bid to woo the youth, the budget announced setting-up of a new skill developmen­t centre (under the new start-up policy) and district-level competitiv­e exam centres. However, none of these measures have been backed by specific monetary allocation­s.

Beyond this, the finance minister has used the limited elbow room he had to announce several small and big populist dole-outs to appease different communitie­s and sections of the state.

With elections expected to be held within a year, the sops include a new scheme to provide basic facilities in settlement­s of scheduled tribes and Neo Buddhist communitie­s to a welfare corporatio­n for 20 lakh auto rickshaw drivers and increasing pensions for the differentl­y abled from ₹600 a month to ₹800-₹1,000 a month. As a token gesture, the state also allocated ₹300 crore and ₹150 crore to the proposed Shivaji memorial in the Arabian Sea and the Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar memorial at Indu Mills, respective­ly. Many announceme­nts, however, were mere repetition of the policies announced earlier in the year.

“Despite constraint­s, we have increased the annual plan (developmen­t spending) by 23% to ₹95,000 crore this year,” said Mungantiwa­r. “This budget has tried to chart out the state’s direction to a trillion-dollar economy by increasing growth in sectors like agricultur­e, textiles, startups, tourism and infrastruc­ture. The bid is to increase our growth rate in service sector.”

The finance minister said that through the budget, he had tried to reach out to the disadvanta­geous sections of society, from tribals to the differentl­y abled.

The Opposition, meanwhile, slammed the government for making a lot of “empty announceme­nts” without backing them with any allocation. “This budget shows that the Fadnavis-led government in just four years has got the state to its worst-ever financial situation,” said Ashok Chavan, Congress’ state unit chief.

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