Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

TRS’S welfare schemes to increase state’s burden

- Srinivasa Rao Apparasu srinivasa.apparasu@htlive.com

GOODWILL Rythu Bandhu helped the party win state polls will likely increase govt burden

HYDERABAD: Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) president K Chandrasek­har Rao returned as chief minister last December powered by a slew of welfare schemes implemente­d during his first stint. The same schemes are, however, expected to create a huge burden on the state exchequer as they have raised expectatio­ns that they will either be upgraded or extended to more people.

For instance, there is a proposal to hike the amount of financial assistance being provided to nearly 57 lakh farmers under the Rythu Bandhu scheme, which earned the TRS much goodwill in the December 7 assembly elections. Such a move will likely increase the government’s annual burden to ₹15,000 crore from ₹12,000 crore, according to official estimates.

Likewise, the chief minister has promised to double pension for senior citizens, the differentl­y abled, widows and single women, the schemes having been a big factor in the TRS poll victory. Not just that, he has promised to reduce the age limit for old-age pension from 60 to 57 years. This will likely increase the annual expenditur­e on pensions from ₹11,600 crore to nearly ₹25,000 crore. The TRS has also promised to waive crop loans up to ₹1 lakh. During KCR’S earlier stint, such waivers cost the government about ₹17,000 crore.

The estimate is that this time, too, the waivers will cost the exchequer the same amount. The quantum of outstandin­g loans is being assessed, a senior government official said, declining to be named.

Several ongoing welfare schemes will continue, KCR has said. These include the Kalyan Lakshmi and Shadi Mubarak schemes that have a total annual allocation of ₹1,450 crore in the 2018-19 budget; the sheep distributi­on scheme that costs ₹5,000 crore; the ₹600-crore KCR Kits scheme, under which essentials are provided to a mother and her new born; and Rythu Bima (life

to complete ongoing irrigation projects like Kaleshwara­m lift irrigation scheme

will be needed to provide drinking water supply to every

will be needed to rollout the revised pension scheme

to complete its promise of constructi­ng double-bed room houses for poor

expenditur­e to waive off crop loans

a year is additional burden on the

STATE’S HEALTH

is Telangana’s estimated revenue surplus

is the state’s GSDP in 2017-18

insurance for farmers) that requires ₹976 crore.

The government will also have to fulfil its promise of constructi­ng two-bedroom houses for the poor at a cost of ₹17,660 crore, apart from completing the ₹80,000 crore Kaleshwara­m lift irrigation scheme and the ₹40,000 crore Mission Bhagiratha scheme to provide drinking water to every household. The TRS has also promised unemployme­nt allowance from the next financial year.

Other promises include filling up around 70,000 vacancies in government jobs and raising the retirement age of employees from 58 to 61 years. The government is also expected to hike salaries as per the recommenda­tion of the pay revision commission, but how much it will cost has yet to be ascertaine­d. state exchequer to implement Rythu Bandhu scheme, which will help 57 lakh farmers

for sheep distributi­on scheme

needs to be spent to keep Kalyan Lakshmi and Shadi Mubarak (payment of Rs 1 lakh to newly-wed couples of poor families) scheme afloat

for KCR Kits scheme to provide material for new-born infant and mother

for Rythu Bima (life insurance for farmers) in the state’s outstandin­g borrowings in 2017-18

Financial experts much fiscal prudence will be required to implement all these schemes. According to the first full-fledged budget of the state government presented in March 2015, the estimated revenue surplus is only ₹531 crore. Yet, the government started implementi­ng its welfare schemes.

According to E Revathi, a professor of economics at the Centre for Economic and Social Studies, KCR could implement the welfare schemes without much difficulty because revenues from Hyderabad and its surroundin­g districts of Ranga Reddy and Medak could be spent within Telangana. “In the combined Andhra Pradesh, the revenues from Hyderabad were being siphoned off to other regions,” she said.

As per the Telangana State Economic Survey, Hyderabad, Ranga Reddy a n d Medak accounted for about 45% of the Gross State Domestic Product, which has been growing at an average of 9%. Telangana’s GSDP at current prices increased from ₹5,05,849 crore in 2014-15 to ₹7,32,657 crore in 2017-18.

“There has been a consistent growth in state revenues, particul arl y f r om e xci s e due t o huge increase in liquor sales, stamps and registrati­on due to a spurt in real estate activity and share in the GST. This enabled the TRS government to spend on welfare schemes and also infrastruc­ture projects,” K Muthyam Reddy, retired professor in economics from Osmania University, said.

Reddy, however, added that the state government had borrowed indiscrimi­nately to take up flagship schemes like Mission Bhagiratha and Mission Kakatiya, as well as the irrigation projects. According to budgetary figures, outstandin­g borrowings went up from ₹70,000 crore in 2014-15 to ₹1.7 lakh crore in 2017-18. Debt servicing on the loans shot up from ₹7,557.50 crore in 2015-16 to ₹11,138.60 crore in 2017-18. It is expected to go up to ₹22,280 crore by the next assembly elections.

The financial advisor to the Telangana government, GR Reddy, said the successful implementa­tion of welfare schemes was a fact and people were getting benefits. “How the government could implement has been reflected in the government’s budget documents. There is no secret about it,” he said.

Telangana Congress spokesman Syed Nizamuddin said the TRS government would need about ₹2.5 lakh crore per year. With the present revenue from all sources being less than ₹1.5 lakh per annum, clarity was needed on how the huge deficit of over ₹1 lakh crore would be covered, he said. “Will the TRS borrow more funds to run the state? Will it increase taxes, sell off government assets or hike tariffs?” he asked, and demanded the government bring out a white paper.

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