Serious Expenditure Reforms India Needs
SERIOUS EXPENDITURE
REFORMS INDIA NEEDS
INTRODUCTION
The Government will be spending over Rs. 31 lakh crore in
the financial year 2019-20 (including about Rs. 3.5 lakh crore of off-budget/
below the line expenditure), roughly 15% of India’s GDP.
My note Expenditure Budget: How much and on what the
Central Government spends Rs. 31 lakh crore describes myriad programme
of development (centre sector schemes and centrally sponsored schemes), large
subsidy programme (food, fertiliser, LPG, loans etc.), mandatory transfers to
States, establishment, interest, investments and many others on which the
Government spends this big pool of resources. It also describes what programme
the Central Government has some control or discretion on and where it has only
to spend with hardly any control or discretion.
Whatever be the nature of central government expenditure
programme, it affects the economy, redistribution of incomes to poor people,
infrastructure building, financial markets, welfare of people and so on very
materially. It is in public interest that these expenditures are productive,
efficient and provide value for the money to the nation.
There are three core objectives of Government’s expenditure
policies and programmes.
First, to promote
economic growth with full employment of labour.
Second, to
provide a minimum standard of life for the poor people, providing adequate
income support particularly to who are not in a position to earn their own
livelihood.
Third,
produce and deliver all necessary public goods and services for assuring good
quality of life to all.
An assessment of the expenditure programmes and policies of
the Government of India from the perspective of these core objectives indicate
that, barring few which are very well designed and implemented, most of the present
expenditure programmes are too small and too poorly designed, targeted and implemented
resulting in considerable waste of resources.
A panoramic view of the current expenditure programmes leads
to an inescapable conclusion that fundamental and structural reforms are
necessary for making India’s expenditure programme deliver value for money and
achieve the three core objectives outlined above. It is extremely important in
view of the fact size and scope of the Government of India expenditure (Rs. 31
lakh crore or 15% of its entire GDP) is quite large for a still poor and
developing economy like India.
This Note discusses some large expenditure programme and
policies and propose a significant expenditure reform therein.
INVESTMENT IN PUBLIC SECTOR
ENTERPRISES
India has built a massive
public sector in last 70 years. Almost all these public sector enterprises
produce what are essentially private goods. Private goods and services are
those economic goods and services which can and should be competitively and
qualitatively produced by the private sector (there is no real rationale for
Government to produce these) and sold to consumers who buy these at their free will
for their consumption paying the value they consider as price for the goods and
services so purchased. For example, all transport services- taxis, buses,
airlines etc. can be and are run by private sector companies and firms.
There is no reason why railway
passenger and freight services cannot also be run by the private sector. Building
roads, though, is different than running taxi and bus services which are run on
these roads. Even roads business is now becoming private goods increasingly as
roads can now be structured to be privately produced. Likewise, railway freight
and passenger services, which are separate from railway line business can be
easily provided by the private sector. Dispensing petrol and diesel to cars and
other transport vehicles is purely and primarily a private sector business. One
can do similar examination of all the goods and services which public sector
enterprises produce which will lead to similar conclusion.
Production of private goods and services require use of
capital and labour. India is a developing country with deficient capital and
abundant labour. When the public sector produces such private goods, it uses much
more capital than what the private sector employs for producing equivalent
goods and services. Its’ cost of labour per unit of output is also far higher.
Use of more capital and higher cost of labour for same unit of good or service
produced compared to the private sector is a national loss. We need to put a
stop to this lack of productive deployment of resources in fact amounting to national
waste in many cases.
There is a general impression
that recognising this, the Government, is now in disinvestment mode and it is
aggressively disinvesting in and strategically selling public sector
enterprises. This is quite far from the truth. The Government is still making
a lot of investments. Even on net basis, there is larger investment
expenditure than disinvestment receipts in last two years.
In the year 2017-18, Rs. 90000
crore was invested in the equity of public sector banks. Other equity
investments included Rs. 685 crore in the Nuclear Power Corporation, Rs. 1800
crore in the Air India, Rs. 125 crore in the India Post Bank, Rs. 337 crore in the
Indian Telephone Industries, Rs. 500 crore in the EXIM Bank, Rs. 100 crore each
in India Infrastructure Finance Company Ltd and Industrial Finance Corporation
of India, Rs. 3880 crore in NABARD, Rs. 3249 crore in Metro Rail projects, Rs.170
crore in Minorities Development Corporation, Rs.43,418 crore in Railways, Rs.23,892
crore in the National Highways Authority, Rs. 125 crore in the Sagarmala
Company and Rs. 128 crore in Scheduled Caste Development Corporation.
In all, as per the Statement
on ‘Investment in Public Enterprises (Statement 26 in the Expenditure Profile, Expenditure
Budget 2019-20), a total of Rs. 1,69,290 crore of equity investment was
made by the Government of India in 2017-18. The revised estimates for 2018-19 inform
that equity infusion in public enterprises in 2018-19 was as large as Rs. 2,13,530
crore.
The budget estimates for
Government’s investments in equity of public sector enterprises for 2019-20 BE
is Rs. 1,86,125 crore.
Compared to these investment
commitments, the actual and estimated receipts from all the disinvestments in
the public sector entities, including some receipts like sale of enemy properties
etc. was only Rs. 1,00,045 crore in 2017-18, Rs. 85000 crore in 2018-19 and is
estimated at Rs. 1,05,000 crore in 2019-20 (though it is quite unlikely to be
achieved).
On net basis, the Government
of India made about 70% more investment in the equity of public sector enterprises
(including departmental undertakings) than total disinvestment receipts in
2017-18 (Rs. 1,69,290 crore investment as compared to 1,00,045 crore of
disinvestment receipts). In 2018-19, the scale of investment at Rs. 2,13,530
crore was nearly three times the scale of disinvestment of Rs. 85000 crore. The
picture in 2019-20 is not going to be any different.
The fact therefore is that the
Government is still making lot of equity investment in the public enterprises. Should
India be making so large investment in the public enterprises producing
essentially private goods, which the private sector can produce more efficiently.
Should the Government continue to be expanding its’ footprint in the business
of business?
Besides the quantum, the
quality of this equity investment is also a major issue. Bulk of the Government
equity investment in last three years (including the current one) is in three
sectors- public sector banks, railways and road construction. There is no return
on capital invested in these sectors for the Government. Other companies and corporations
also where the Government is making investments are also the ones which have no
ability to raise capital from the markets.
There would be no harm done to
the nation if this equity investment is stopped completely by the Government.
The first major expenditure reform, in the current juncture, is to stop
completely making any equity investment from the budget in the public
enterprises. The Government may end up saving Rs. 2 lakh crore on an average,
which is about 1% of GDP and about 7% of the entire Government of India budget.
REFORMING
AGRICULTURE ALLIED SECTOR PROGRAMMES
The Government
spends a lot of public funds on agriculture and food programmes. The Government
runs a plethora of development programmes and subsidy-based interventions aimed
at agriculture, food and farmers.
The Government
has launched several centrally sponsored schemes (CSSs) under three umbrella
schemes of Green Revolution, White Revolution and Blue Revolution.
The Expenditure Budget of the Department
of Agriculture, Cooperation and Farmers’ Welfare lists 18 Schemes/ Programmes/
Missions under the umbrella scheme of Green Revolution as line items from serial
number 17 to 35. Total allocation of Green Revolution is Rs. 12,560 crore in
2019-20. Incidentally, Green Revolution is not listed as a line scheme in the
budget of Department of Agriculture. All the major interventions in agriculture
are covered by these 18 schemes. It has important schemes like Rastriya Krishi
Vikas Yojana (RKVY) with allocation of Rs. 3745 crore, National Mission on
Horticulture with allocation of Rs. 2225 crore, and National Food Security
Mission (NFSM) with allocation of Rs. 2000 crore. This Umbrella also shields
small schemes National Project on Agro-Forestry (allocation Rs. 50 crore),
Sub-Mission on Plant Protection and Plant Quarantine (allocation Rs. 50 crore),
Integrated Scheme of Agriculture Cooperation (allocation Rs. 85 crore) and
Scheme of Information Technology in agriculture (allocation Rs. 40 crore).
Department
of Agriculture runs a total of 36 schemes with a separate budget allocation at
line level. It has allocation of Rs. 3500 crore under the Pradhan Mantri Krishi
Sinchai Yojana (PMKSY), also run as a centrally sponsored scheme (CSS). Thus,
in all there are 18 CSSs under the wings of Department of Agriculture.
For last two years, the
Government is also implementing a scheme of direct cash transfer programme to
farmers to relieve them of acute distress caused by low prices of commercial
agriculture crops, pulses and other food produce. This is budgeted under the Department
of Agriculture. For 2019-20, a provision of Rs. 75000 crore has been made under
the line Scheme- Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-Kisan).
Including PM-Kisan, the
Department of Agriculture, Cooperation and Farmers’ Welfare has a total of 8
schemes under the rubric of Central Sector Schemes. Other significant schemes
include Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana with allocation of Rs. 14000 crore,
Interest Subsidy for Short Term Credit to Farmers with allocation of Rs. 18000
crore and Market Intervention Scheme and Price Support Scheme (MIS-PIS) with
allocation of Rs. 3000 crore. Relatively minor schemes include Distribution of
Pulses to State/Union Territories for Welfare (allocation Rs. 800 crore), scheme
of Promotion of Agriculture Mechanisation for in-situ Management of Crop
Residue (allocation Rs. 600 crore) and Pradhan Mantri Annadata Aay Sanrakshan
Yojana (PM-AASHA) (allocation Rs. 1500 crore).
In all the budget of the
Department of Agriculture, Cooperation and Farmers’ Welfare for 2019-20 under
the developmental schemes group of Centrally Sponsored Schemes is Rs. 16,060
crore and that of Central Sector Schemes Rs. 1,13,800 crore. Total Budget is
Rs. 1,29,860 crore, which amounts to .64% of GDP.
Department
of Agriculture Research and Education under the Ministry of Agriculture and
Farmers’ Welfare also has a number of Central Sector Schemes (no CSS) although
its allocation is much smaller. It runs in all 17 Central Sector Schemes with
an outlay of Rs. 8,079 crore in 2019-20.
The
two Departments under the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers’ Welfare a total
of developmental outlay of Rs. 1,37,939 crore.
Ministry
of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying
We now
have a separate Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying with two
separate Departments- Department of Fisheries and Department of Animal
Husbandry and Dairying operating thereunder.
The
Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying implements an Umbrella Scheme titled
White Revolution. Its total allocation is small at Rs. 2240 crore in 2019-20.
But, it still has 12 schemes (three discontinued in this year) under this umbrella.
The largest scheme of National Livestock Mission has grand allocation of Rs.
480 crore. The next largest scheme of Livestock Health and Disease Control
programme has allocation of Rs. 475 crore. Rest of the schemes have thin though
quite evenly disbursed allocations. National Plan for Dairy Development has
allocation of Rs. 325 crore, Dairy Enterprise Development Progamme also has
allocation of Rs. 325 crore and Rastriya Gokul Mission has allocation of Rs.
302 crore. The smallest scheme is Agriculture Husbandry Infrastructure Development
Fund with allocation of Rs. 25 crore.
The
Government has started the largest Central Sector Scheme in Animal Husbandry
sector in 2019-20. The Scheme of National Animal Disease Control Programme for
Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) and Brucelloisis has allocation of Rs. 500 crore.
In
all, the developmental allocation under quite a few programme under the
Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying is measly Rs. 2740 crore.
Department
of Fisheries is a new Department in the Government of India. It also has an
Umbrella CSS under its belt- the programme of Blue Revolution with a total
allocation of Rs. 560 crore under two Schemes- the scheme of Integrated
Development and Management of Fisheries with an allocation of Rs. 550 crore and
the Fisheries and Aquaculture Infrastructure Development Fund with an
allocation of Rs. 10 crore. It has two autonomous bodies- Coastal Aquaculture
Authority and National Fisheries Development Board- with total allocation of
Rs. 85 crore, funded as Central Sector Scheme.
Two
Departments under the new Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying
together has total developmental programme allocation of Rs. 2825 crore!
Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food
and Public Distribution
Department of Food under the
Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution, in fact, has the
largest allocation relating to management of agriculture produce, most
importantly food economy.
It has total allocation of Rs.
1,92,240 crore or about .94% of the GDP- much higher than the allocation of the
two Ministries of the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers’ Welfare and the
Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying.
A massive food subsidy
programme, costing over Rs. 150000 crore a year is implemented using interventions
like minimum support prices, procurement of cereals especially wheat and rice,
aimed at making consumer prices for wheat and rice almost free.
The allocation for Food
Subsidy for the year 2019-20 is Rs. 1,84,220 crore.
The Budget of the Department
of Food and Public Distribution provides for an allocation of Rs. 1,51,000
crore for Food Subsidy to Food Corporation of India under National Food
Security Act and an allocation of Rs. 33,000 crore under the programme of Food
Subsidy for Decentralised Procurement of Food grains under National Food
Security Act. These two subsidies essentially cater to the subsidisation of
wheat and rice.
In addition, it has a minor
provision of Sugar Subsidy payable under Public Distribution System, which is Rs.
220 crore for the year 2019-20.
The Department of Food also
implements quite a few (12) other Central Sector Schemes to take care of
expenditure involved in management of food and sugar operations. The largest
programme is for providing Assistance to State Agencies for intra-state movement
of foodgrains and FPS dealers margin under NFSA (allocation Rs. 4102 crore in
BY 2019-20.
There are quite a few
programme to take care of the problems in the sugar industry caused by
considerable over-production in last 2-3 years. There are eight schemes
connected with various facets of sugar mills- Scheme for assistance to sugar
mills, Scheme for creation and maintenance of Buffer Stock of Sugar, Scheme for
extending financial assistance to sugar mills for enhancement and augmentation
of ethanol production, Scheme for defraying expenditure towards internal
transport, freight, handling and other charges on export and so on. Total
allocation under these schemes is around Rs. 2500 crore.
The Department of Consumer
Affairs also manages a Price Stabilisation Fund aimed at reducing volatility in
prices of agriculture produce. This Fund has an allocation of Rs. 2000 crore
for FY 2019-20. The Department runs 11 Central Sector Schemes with total outlay
of Rs. 2176 crore. The largest programmes, other than the Price Stabilisation
Fund, is the Scheme of Consumer Awareness (Advertising and Publicity) with an
allocation of Rs. 62 crore and Strengthening of Weights and Measures
Infrastructure and Strengthening of regional reference standard laboratories
and Indian Institute of Legal Metrology.
Total budgeted expenditure
under the Ministry relating to agriculture is Rs. 186396 crore.
Department of Fertiliser
Department of Fertiliser under
the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertiliser is the Department dedicated for one
input of the agriculture economy i.e. fertilisers. The policies and programme
of the Department has led to production of high cost fertilisers in the country.
The way the Department operates the fertiliser subsidisation, it has also
contributed in distorting the nutrient use in the country as well.
Agriculture and allied sector
related interventions of the Government of India are truly spread in so many
Departments and Ministries of the Government of India.
The Department of Fertilisers
runs two Central Sector Schemes to support nitrogen- based fertilisers (Urea)
and other nutrients-based fertilisers (DAP etc.). The Urea Subsidy scheme has
separate line item provision for Payment of Indigenous Urea (allocation Rs.
43050 crore), Payment for Import of Urea (allocation Rs. 14049 crore) and
Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) in Fertiliser Subsidy, with a grand allocation of
Rs. 10 crore. As there is a negative provision for some recovery of Rs. 3480
crore, the net provision for Urea Subsidy is Rs. 53,629 crore in FY 2019-20.
The Central Sector Scheme of
Nutrient Based Subsidy has a total provision of Rs. 26,367 crore for FY
2019-20. It provides for Payment for Indigenous P and K Fertilisers (allocation
Rs. 15906 crore), Payment for imported P and K Fertilisers (allocation Rs.
10429 crore and a small scheme of Payment for City Compost (allocation Rs. 32
crore).
Total provision for supporting
fertilisers subsidy programme is Rs. 79,996 crore in 2019-20, or .39% of GDP.
Other Ministries and Departments
There are a number of other
programmes spread over several budget heads for supporting agriculture
interventions.
Department of Water Resources,
River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation under the newly created Ministry of
Jal Shakti has quite a few Central Sector Schemes for supporting irrigation and
a Centrally Sponsored Scheme- Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchai Yojana. Allocation under
these agriculture related schemes for FY 2019-20 exceeds Rs. 5000 crore.
The
CSS of Prime Minister Krishi Sinchai Yajana also has 10 separate line item schemes
under its umbrella.
Department of Commerce spends
around Rs. 500 crore for plantations related schemes and about Rs. 1000 crore
for agri-export and infrastructure related programme. Department of Land Resources
under the Ministry of Rural Development manages land and runs watershed
programme aimed at improving agriculture land productivity. Their allocation
for FY 2019-20 is Rs. 2047 crore.
A good part of the Mahatma
Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Programe and a part of National Livelihood
Mission is also spent on agriculture related operations. Assuming that about ½ of
these resources are spent on agriculture related operations, a amount of about
Rs. 35000 crore out of total outlay of MNREGA and NLM can be taken for spending
on agriculture.
There are quite a few other
Departments and Ministries which run schemes for benefit of agriculture and
farmers. Some of these are Ministry of Tribal Welfare, Ministry of Social
Welfare and Ministry of North Eastern Development. Let us assume this
expenditure is about Rs. 10000 crore only.
Agriculture related
allocations under these Ministries, not directly connected with agriculture as
such, but having significant impact through their own programme exceeds Rs. 52,500
crore.
Overall Central Government
expenditure on agriculture and allied sectors
Budget allocations described
above adds up to over Rs. 4.6 lakh crore. The Government runs in excess of 100
programme spread over several Ministries and Departments.
This scale of expenditure and multiplicity
of programme are all being implemented with the objective of raising
agriculture production and productivity, providing income support or reducing
cost of their produce for consumption and building agriculture infrastructure
and support services.
This scale of expenditure
amounts to about 16.5% of total central government budget for 2019-20. If we
exclude expenditure on interest, establishment and mandatory transfers of the
Finance Commission, the expenditure commitments of Rs. 4.6 lakh crore makes up
almost 33% of total discretionary budget of the Government of India.
States’ expenditure on agriculture
programme
This expenditure of the
Government of India is additional to the expenditure which the States incur from
their budget. Many of the central programme also require the States to put in
at least 40% of the cost of the programme. The states have their own programmes.
The biggest programme of supporting agriculture production is provision of
subsidised electricity (in some states, free electricity). This programme alone
costs the States over Rs. 100000 crore a year. The States also tend to provide
fiscal grants to write off the crop loans from time to time. There are no firm
estimates available of how much the States spend on agriculture and food
programme in a year. This expenditure is, however, not less than what the
Central Government spends.
Public expenditure on agriculture
in the context of gross value added
Entire gross value addition
(or GVA) taking place in agriculture is about 30 lakh crore at current prices (Rs.
30.47 lakh crore as per advance estimates for 2019-20 released by CSO on 7th
January, 2020).
Expenditure by the Centre on
agriculture related schemes is Rs. 4.6 lakh crore. The Government of India
spends over a whopping 15% of the GVA (Rs. 4.6 lakh crore/ Rs. 30.47 lakh
crore).
The Centre and the States
spend from their budgets amount exceeding Rs. 9 lakh crore a year which makes
up about 30% of the entire agriculture and allied sector GVA.
GDP is GVA plus taxation minus
subsidies. As the taxation of the sector is almost negligible, public
expenditure on expenditure should be exceeding 40% of agriculture and allied
sector GDP.
Such excessive expenditure is
too high a level of public expenditure on any one sector of economy.
Agriculture GDP is growing at an average of less than 2.5%. As population
growth in rural households is much higher than the national average of 1.1%,
the per capita income growth of farming households may barely be increasing by
about one percent a year.
Therein lies the fundamental fact of rural poverty,
most specifically in the farming households.
Need to have a careful look at
our current agriculture expenditure strategy
A very legitimate question to
be asked is why should the Government be spending so much on farming sector
which is neither leading to high growth of agriculture nor leading to improving
the income status of farming households.
There is too big a dependence
of rural households on agriculture and allied sector. About 50% of labour is
still in agriculture and allied sector. Agriculture output of comparable GVA in
most parts of the world is produced by one-fiftieth to one-tenth of labour.
Another public policy question of enormous legitimacy is- does India need to
change its agriculture and rural employment and income generation strategy and
programme?
Most of the programmatic
governmental interventions in agriculture field were designed to address the
issues of the first 20 years of India’s independence. India was a hugely food
deficit country. Droughts and famines used to recur with regular frequency.
Almost entire agriculture was rainfed. There was no movement of agriculture
produce even within the country. India had to go with begging bowl to many
countries seeking food assistance. PL 480 of the United States of America was
used to make India toe the American line to get the food aid. Prime Minister
Lal Bahadur Shastri used to call upon Indians to observe fast to save food to
provide millions of hungry stomachs some cereal to carry on with their lives.
In such circumstances,
bringing technological interventions to raise food production was quite good government
response. Inventions of high yielding varieties (HYV) of rice and wheat
provided that opportunity to India. Growing such varieties required assured
irrigation and use of supportive inputs like fertilisers and insecticides.
Understandably, India went for
making considerable investment in creating irrigation infrastructure, both
surface and underground. Ministry of Agriculture funded several programmes to
raise “production and productivity of crops”. Despite inefficiencies of public
system delivery, coverage of irrigation soared, use of fertilisers became almost
universal, HYVs of seeds replaced traditional low yielding varieties majorly
and use of tractors and other farm equipment became widespread.
Agriculture used to dominate
India’s GDP/GNI and its growth. Its growth volatility was so high that
sometimes it would make India’s GDP growth negative. Very soon after adoption
of new high yielding technology of agriculture very well supported by the
chemical inputs and irrigation, India’s GDP volatility started declining.
1979 was the last year when
India saw a negative growth of its Gross National Income. GNI declined by 5.1%
in FY 1979-80 thanks to agriculture growth volatility, which saw massive
degrowth of -11.9% GVA that year.
Agriculture GDP itself started
becoming less volatile. The last year when India witnessed 5% degrowth of
agriculture was 1979-80. It came very close to -4.9% in 2002-03, which was also
the last year when agriculture declined in India.
During last 40 years since
1979-80, India’s real agriculture GVA growth has been negative only 4 times
(1987-88, 1991-92, 1997-98 and 2002-03). Even in one of the worst ever rainfall
years like 2008-09 and 2014-15, India did not experience negative agriculture GVA
growth. It was low but positive growth of agriculture GVA at .4% in 2007-08 and
1.2% in 2014-15.
India today consistently
produces more wheat and rice than it consumes. India’s pulses production has
grown to meet roughly about 80-90% of its demand by now. India has been
consistently over-producing sugar, cotton and jute. It is only oil seeds, for
which India is consistently deficient in production.
India exports $35-$50 billion
of agriculture produce now. It’s import of agriculture products is around $20-25
billion. India is a consistent net agriculture exporter now. In 2018-19, India
was a net agriculture exporter of $14.7 billion.
The situation of agriculture
production has transformed totally. Yet, India’s programme of intervention in
agriculture and allied sector remain essentially what these programmes were in
1970s and 1980s. That is quite horrible and wasteful.
Taking States and Central
expenditure together, India spends over Rs. 250000 crore in subsidising inputs
of various types. Over Rs. 70000 crore are spent to subsidise fertilisers. Over
Rs. 100000 crore is spent in subsidising power for agriculture. Over 50000
crore is spent in subsidising interest payments on crop loans. Over Rs. 15000
crore goes for supporting subsidised seeds. Free irrigation cost is not even
counted. Other programmes- insurance subsidy, equipment subsidy etc. cost over
Rs. 35000 crore.
Such large-scale inputs
subsidisation does not promote the use of agriculture technology any longer.
Farmers have learnt enough about the seeds, fertilisers, crop loans,
electricity use and so on. In fact, on account of either free or highly
subsidised nature of the inputs supply, the farmers tend to overuse these.
Excessive use of free/subsidised electricity leads to over-drawl of water which
actually adversely affects farm productivity. This also acts as disincentive
for adoption of low water use technologies. Evidence of excessive use of urea,
other chemical fertilisers and indiscriminate use of insecticides etc. is
legion now. In fact, such excessive and indiscriminate use is leading to health
and environmental degradation. Cancer express trains run from some parts of
rural areas to the cities with cancer hospitals.
When the country does not need
these production technologies to be promoted any longer for higher agriculture
production, when these programmes are not succeeding in generating growth and
employment in agriculture, when these programmes are not facilitating the movement
of surplus labour from agriculture to non-agriculture, why run these programmes
at all?
There is still poverty and
misery in the farming households.
A very different approach is
needed for helping the poor farm households, for agriculture diversification
and for modernising our agriculture further.
Proposed restructuring of
agriculture programme
Production and productivity
programmes supported by free or cheap inputs need to be discontinued. Farmers
need to be supported with direct income support, flexibility of land leasing
and commercialisation of agriculture.
Agriculture needs to be
developed as a business. Exploiting farmers by emotional calls of annadata etc.
and delivery of free or subsidised inputs which end up depressing the final
prices need to go out of the window.
We should begin with two important legislative reforms which are absolutely necessary
in the agriculture sector to introduce modern agriculture and free up marketing
and distribution system for raising the realisations of the farmers.
First, give permission to the States which have proposed to adopt
or amend their land laws on the lines of Model Land Lease Law, as drafted and
circulated by NITI Ayog in 2016, and encourage all the remaining States
governed by the BJP to adopt this Law at the earliest. Second, abolish the Essential Commodities Act to eliminate
all controls over storage and distribution of agriculture commodities.
All the traditional production and productivity
enhancement programme of the Ministry of Agriculture and Ministry of Fisheries
and Animal Husbandry (Green Revolution, White Revolution and Blue Revolution)
should be phased out completely over next three years. The Government can, for
some transitory period, replace the present level of public expenditure on
these production and productivity programme by investment in land improvement,
farm mechanisation (most with farm equipment hiring) and promoting hiring of
agriculture services (on Uber/ Urban Clap model).
All agriculture input subsidies (seeds, fertiliser,
power and loans) should be progressively phased out in next three years by
providing compensating direct cash support to the farmers. During the phase-out
period, the system should switch over to a genuine Direct Benefit Transfer
(DBT) system to provide fertilizer purchase support to farmers based on their
acreage.
Minimum Support Prices (MSP) programme have lost their
relevance in the day and age of surplus production. Farmers need to get right
market signals to assess the demand for different agriculture produce. The government
expenditure under MSP programme should be replaced by a direct cash transfer
system for ensuring ‘income’ to farmers. FCI and other Government agencies to undertake
procurement of the food grains required for social security and nutrition
programme and also for necessary buffers from the market at prevailing prices.
It would be preferable if the Government were to tie it up in future markets
before the onset of cropping seasons as this would provide right signals to the
farmers.
The PM-Kisan programme should be withdrawn now as
the situation of agriculture distress has eased out now. It can be
re-introduced whenever there is pressure on rural incomes.
The game in agriculture needs to be completely
changed. The reforms suggested above would lead to first, stabilizing the expenditure
at current levels and later will get reduced gradually.
POWER SECTOR EXPENDITURES
Current scale of central government expenditures
Central Government expenditure on power sector is
not massively large. Actual expenditure of the Ministry of Power was Rs. 13975
crore in 2017-18 with RE of 2018-19 being Rs. 15625 crore. Ministry of Power’s BE
for 2019-20 is Rs. 15,875 crore. Budgeted Expenditure of Ministry of New and
Renewable Energy is Rs. 5255 crore for BE 2019-20. As establishment expenditure
is quite small, taken together, budgeted programme development expenditure is
only about Rs. 20000 crore.
There is some off-budget liabilities as well.
Ministry of Power spent Rs. 13,827 crore on Deen Dayal Upadhyay Scheme through fully
serviced bonds (FSBs) route in 2018-19. In addition, it spent Rs. 5504 crore on
Power Sector Development Fund projects raising money through FSBs. In all,
about Rs. 19200 crore was spent through off-budget borrowings in 2018-19. Final
expenditure details for 2019-20 are not still available. It might go to the
levels of last year.
Thus, the Central Government’s expenditure on power
sector development programme is estimated around Rs. 40000 crore a year.
The Central Government public sector enterprises
run their power generation, transmission and financing business. While a good
part of this businesses is commercial, some stresses have emerged which might
need to be dealt with soon.
Lot of contingent liabilities
The Government of India (Ministry of New and Renewable
Energy) has assumed contingent liabilities through Solar Energy Corporation of
India (SECI) as it has guaranteed payment of power supplied by the solar and
wind developers to the state utilities. There are some instances which have
come, most prominently in Andhra Pradesh, where the state utilities have not paid
for the renewable power supplied to them. It is likely that there is call soon
on the Central Government to make payments.
The state utilities buy power from the central
generation utilities. There are quite a few instances of payment not being paid
for power purchased from the central utilities. Some of these generating companies
have facilitated loans from the banks and power finance companies to the state
utilities to recover their dues by guaranteeing repayment to the financing
entities in case the defaulting state power utilities does not pay up. Power Finance
Corporation and Rural Electrification Corporation have also lent funds to the
state utilities under these arrangements. It is possible that there is default
on some of these obligations.
The state utilities have continued to make losses
and their accumulated losses have again crossed the pre-UDAY level. There is
talk of another UDAY, may be named differently- ADITYA?.
Need to change power sector strategy
The Central Government funds essentially some small
investment projects through the schemes it runs- Deen Dayal Gram Jyoti Yojana
funds separation of agriculture feeders, strengthens sub-transmission and
distribution infrastructure, and rural electrification. Investments in creation
of new substations, metering, provision of micro-grids, high tension and low-tension
lines etc. are funded through this Scheme. The other Schemes, like the
Integrated Power Development Schemes does the same thing in urban areas.
There is no strategic or developmental reason for
the Government of India to fund these small interventions. Normally, the state
utilities should be funding these small investments as well like what they do
for larger generation and transmission projects. The scale of expenditure is
also quite small compared to the investment which takes place in the sector.
Most of these investments are financially viable, with low pay back period,
only if the utilities can recover power charges producing and pricing power to
recover the cost.
The GoI does it so only to keep a lever over the
state governments.
The Government of India should stop providing these
investment support and focus on sector reforms instead.
Criticality
of power sector
Power
is extremely critical for India’s growth as well as for lifting the quality of
millions of her people. Over last two decades, private sector has come in the
generation of power majorly. Currently, most of the capacity addition in the
renewables (both wind and solar) is taking place in the private sector. Private
sector added considerable thermal power generation capacity for captive use and
also for selling power. Private sector had also ventured into hydro-power
generation in eighties and nineties, but has substantially stopped expanding in
the sector for several reasons.
Distribution, barring some isolated cases of
privatisation, has remained almost entirely in the public sector, that too,
almost universally in the State Sector. The State Utilities generate and buy
power, sell or provide it free or at subsidised cost to large number of
consumers and consequently earn a hefty negative return on their business,
piling up large losses, averaging over Rs. 75000 crore a year (post state
government support).
UDAY programme was the fourth in last 20 years to
relieve the power sector utilities of the financial stress, which these
utilities keep building up regularly on account of the fundamental mismatch in
their revenues and costs. Every time the Government of India stepped in to
relieve the stress as the other end of the stress was in some central
government entities. In 1998, it was the input suppliers like Coal India,
Neyveli Lignite, Domodar Valley etc. (these were paid through by deducting from
States’ Normal Plan Assistance). In 2002-03, it was Securitisation of the dues
owned to power suppliers like NTPC, by issuance of bonds by these entities
subscribed by the State Governments further backed by some tightening of the
due payments in the form of letters of credit and payment security mechanism
enforced by RBI by deducting from the State Government accounts. By 2011-12,
the stress shifted to the Banks as they had kept lending to these bankrupt
utilities on the strength of state government’s guarantees. This was relieved
partly for some states by instituting the scheme of 50% of the Bank dues being
taken over by the State Governments by issuing their bonds to the Banks.
Finally, the remaining large uncovered stress of the Banking sector was sought
to be relieved by the Government of India by bringing the UDAY Scheme. The
Scheme provided for about 75% of the power utilities dues towards Banks being
taken over by the State Governments by issuing their bonds to the Banks. For
this, FRBM ceilings had to be relaxed for the States.
There is again stress building up in the power
sector as the State Governments, which are supposed to backstop the losses of
utilities and pay them cash for running their businesses, are not providing
support. The power utilities have again started delaying payments to generators
and inputs suppliers. This will get accentuated in the days to come.
Final Reform
Distribution
comprises two businesses. First is the power distribution infrastructure of
transformers, wire lines, metering and physical infrastructure. Second is the
supply of electricity, sourcing it from generators, to the consumers.
Transmission business, also comprising physical infrastructure of transmission
lines and transformers etc. has been segregated as a separate business from the
Generators (Powergrid is the principal transmission business in India. It was
earlier part of NTPC, the generator). Likewise, the physical distribution
business of the distribution utilities need to be separated from supply
business and broken down in manageable regional/ district/ city businesses. The
supply business needs to be privatised, with state utilities, becoming a
licensee in each of the supply area. The Government can run subsidised business
through such state utilities, including for agriculture consumers, if the
Government so like.
Distribution
business, so unbundled and re-organised, will bring considerable efficiencies
and prevent electricity theft. There is enough evidence to believe this
outcome. Delhi distribution privatisation has brought losses down from as high
as 60% to around 10% now, bringing so much of revenue in the system from what
leaked earlier.
The
Government would also be able to target its subsidies and support better. The
Government would also have the option to move over to Direct Benefit Transfers
to the consumers it intends to support. For example, agriculture consumers can
either be supplied subsidised power through the state distribution licensee or
the farmers can be provided DBT transfers, like in case of LPG subsidy, and
left free to buy their electricity needs from whichever source they consider
most efficient and convenient for them.
The Government would be well
advised to bring a new power sector reform programme asking the states to
privatise their distribution and supply business. This is necessary for the
States to be freed of this moral hazard of keeping power sector rates low for
agriculture and residential consumers and price it very high for the industrial
and commercial consumers.
The States will require
substantial incentivisation for cutting this umbilical cord. The Government of
India can agree to capitalise 25%-50% of the losses of the state utilities
which privatise the power sector distribution and supply entities. This may
require an outlay of about Rs. 2 lakh crore but that would be one time. If
accompanied by stoppage of all the investment support programme this
expenditure on part of the Central Government can be recovered in 5 years.
CENTRALLY SPONSORED SCHEMES
As explained my note last
week, the CSSs (separately listed
at Statement 4a, Expenditure Profile) are a bunch of schemes designed for
redistribution, economic growth, investing in social infrastructure and
improvement in human capital. The subjects where the Central Government
intervenes through these schemes are in the domain of the States as per
Constitutional Scheme of distribution of power. However, using authority given
under Article 282 of the Constitution, by providing grants for undertaking the
expenditures so desired by the Central Government, the States are
persuaded/nudged to take up these CSS, including by providing the counterpart
funding.
The CSSs are designed to serve different objectives.
Two major schemes
(classified as Core of the Core Schemes) National Social assistance Programme
(NSAP) and Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Programme
(MGNREGA) are essentially pure redistribution schemes. NSAP (outlay Rs. 9200
crore) reaches out to old, physically handicapped, widows and other sections of
society who are not in a position to earn enough to keep the body and soul
together. MGNREGA (outlay Rs. 60000 crore) provides a minimum wage insurance to
manual and unskilled workers unable to find remunerative work in the labour
market.
Four schemes in agriculture and allied area are designed
to be growth-oriented schemes- Green Revolution (outlay Rs. 12561 crore), White
Revolution (outlay Rs. 2240 crore), Blue Revolution (outlay Rs. 560 crore) and Pradhan
Mantri Krishi Sinchai Yojna (PMKSY) (outlay Rs. 9682 crore). Together, these
four schemes are budgeted to transfer a little over Rs. 25000 crore to the
States for undertaking interventions for boosting agriculture growth. There are
several other schematic interventions, which the Central Government makes in
agriculture and allied areas, which I will discuss later.
Major infrastructure intervention under CSS
umbrella are being made through four schemes of Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojna
(PMGSY) (outlay Rs. 19000 crore), Urban Rejuvenation Mission: AMRUT and Smart
Cities (outlay Rs. 13750 crore), Modernisation of Police Forces (outlay Rs.
3462 crore) and Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Rurban Mission (outlay Rs. 800 crore).
Rest of the schemes in the CSS stable are largely aimed
at improving human capital and quality of life. Amongst the major CSS schemes
in this category are Swachh Bharat Mission (outlay Rs. 12644 crore), National
Health Mission (outlay Rs. 33651 crore), National Education Mission (outlay Rs.
38547 crore), Mid-Day Meals in Schools (outlay Rs. 11000 crore), Integrated
Child Development Scheme or Umbrella ICDS (outlay Rs. 27584 crore), National
Livelihood Mission- Ajeevika (outlay Rs. 9774 crore) and Jobs and Skills
Development (outlay Rs. 7260 crore).
Most of the 30 CSS listed in the Union Budget
Expenditure Profile have several more sub-schemes, operating as distinct
schemes in practice. There are in all about 150-200 distinct schemes operating
under 30 CSS. Rationalisation of CSS has been a subject of interest, debate and
conflict for many decades now.
14th Finance Commission had envisaged that
the Central Government would reduce the plethora of CSSs after a much larger
share of central taxes (42%) was recommended to be transferred as untied
devolution to the States. However, the temptation of the Central Government to
keep interfering in the subjects allocated to the States is so large that this
did not happen. After some downsizing of CSS in 2015-16 and raising of the
share of States counter-part funding, the CSSs have come back in full force as
the preferred mode of development intervention by the Centre. The actual
expenditure under CSS was 2.85 lakh crore in 2017-18, which has gone up to Rs.
3.05 lakh crore in RE 2018-19 and to Rs. 3.32 lakh crore in 2019-20.
The agriculture sector schemes have been discussed in
the second section of this Note. For the reasons mentioned there, these four
schemes need to be replaced by income transfer schemes.
The set of schemes which are designed to provide
social security have become quite complex. Most states have their own scale of
payments and most states scale of payments are much higher than the central
government. The selection and eligibility criterion also differ a lot causing
considerable confusion. The Central Government also runs a lot of social
security schemes as Central Sector Schemes.
The only segment of society which needs to be helped
by the State on social consideration are the people who cannot earn their
livelihood on account of any reason- being physically and mentally handicapped,
being too old and being socially dependent (widows, orphaned children and the
like). It would be really helpful if the Government were to have a census of
all these people who cannot earn their livelihood by their labour. The
Government of India can come up with one single social security programme to
provide an appropriate level of assistance by cash transfer to their account. This
will bring enormous simplicity in the Government’s expenditure programme and
would deliver appropriate level of assistance right in the hands of needy people
avoiding leakages, wastages and delays.
Like social security, there is lot of duplicity in
centrally sponsored schemes and central sector schemes in health, education and
other human capital interventions. It would raise the productivity and results
of the schemes if the Government were to consolidate and focus on key
interventions in these areas rather than dissipating energy in so many small
interventions.
DEBT REDUCTION TO REDUCE INTEREST EXPENDITURE
In 2017-18, interest payment
at Rs. 528900 crore out of total budgetary expenditure of the Government at Rs.
2141973 crore was at 24.6% of total expenditure. This has seen minor decline in
the year 2018-19 as per the provisional numbers released. In this year, net
interest payments amounted to Rs. 582675 crore out of total expenditure of Rs.
2311422 crore exceeding 25% of total expenditure at 25.21%.
Expenditure on interest
payments is the largest head of payment and a little less than 25% of total
expenditure of the Government of India. About 1/4th of all the
resources which the Government of India raises every year, tax, non-tax and
debt all taken together, goes only to service interest on the debt and
liabilities undertaken by the Government of India in previous years. This is an
extra-ordinary large pre-emption of resources.
Something needs to be done to
control interest expenditure. There is only one way. If a way can be found to sharply
reduce the stock of debt and liabilities, the interest outgo can be contained.
The Government of India has
investments in non-financial companies, financial companies and it owns lot of
land. Market capitalisation of listed CPSEs exceed Rs. 10 lakh crore. There is
large market capitalisation in financial entities like LIC and SBI, which alone
may probably be worth 10 lakh crore. Indian Government and CPSEs hold large
chunk of land and buildings, which are also not less than Rs. 10 lakh crore
worth.
It is impossible to sell these
assets and possibly not very desirable also.However, there is one very good way
to monetise these and also improve their profitability.
The Government can create
three sovereign wealth funds- one for non-financial companies, another for the
financial companies and the third one for land holding and buildings owned/held
by the Government.
If the value in these three
sets of assets is around Rs. 30 lakh crore, the Government can create the
sovereign wealth companies at 20% equity and 80% debt structure. These three sovereign
wealth companies, when transferred all the shares and assets held can raise
debt equivalent to 80% to pay the Government close to Rs. 24 lakh crore for
retiring the Government debt. This will bring down the interest cost by close
to 1/3rd of today’s cost, a savings of more than Rs. 2 lakh crore. The
Government would also continue to hold 100% equity of the three sovereign
wealth funds.
These three fund companies
should be handed over to professionals to manage, like what happens in GIC or
Tamasek of the Government of Singapore. The professional managers can be given
simple objective to deliver. They must manage the assets so as to deliver a 10%
rate of return over the equity holdings of the Government. This would assure
the Government a steady income of Rs. 50000-60000 crore a year, which is more
than what the Government gets by way of dividends today. Over the years, the
Government can further monetise by selling stakes in the sovereign wealth
funds.
OTHER EXPENDITURE REFORMS
For other expenditure reforms
we need to look closely at the Central Sector Schemes, which has total expenditure budget of Rs. 8.71 lakh crore.
This includes entire subsidies budget of Rs. 3.39 lakh
crore and bulk of capital expenditure of Rs. 3.02 lakh crore. Remaining
expenditure budget of Rs. 2.3 lakh crore constitute the major part of the rest
of discretionary expenditure. Additionally, an expenditure of Rs. 1.27 lakh crore (Rs. 3.57 lakh
crore minus Rs. 2.3 lakh crore), under the Other Central Expenditure and Other
Transfers also constitute some kind of discretionary expenditure of the Central
Government.
There are some possibilities
of expenditure reforms in this group of expenditure.
First, the Government can reform the petroleum subsidy
programme. The LPG subsidy (provision Rs. 29,500 crore) and kerosene subsidy can
and should be eliminated over a three-year period.
Second, the Government would be well advised not to go
for providing equity and other support to the BSNL and MTNL for taking 4G
spectrum and incur expenditure on network creation. A lower cost option might
be for the BSNL to buy-out Vodafone-Idea, which can probably provide 4G network
and lot of customers without any cost to the BSNL and the Government.
Third, most of the expenditures under Central Sector
Schemes are quite small. There are 235 line item schemes in the Central Sector
Schemes where allocation for 2019-20 is less than Rs. 50 crore. An impact analysis
of these schemes can lead to elimination of quite a few of them.
CONCLUSION
Central Government expenditure
at Rs. 31 lakh crore is quite large. Expenditure reforms have not been looked
at in our country from a strategic perspective. Most of the expenditure
programme, especially in agriculture and allied sector, are funding needs of
40-50 years earlier making no real contribution to growth today. Too much
public sector and very high levels of equity infusion in such enterprises even
now when there is no need for producing these private goods in the public sector
today claim large resources of the Government.
Serious expenditure reforms
are called for.
The reforms proposed in this
Note:
First, on
net basis, the Government of India made about 70% more investment in the equity
of public sector enterprises (including departmental undertakings) than total
disinvestment receipts in 2017-18 (Rs. 1,69,290 crore investment as compared to
1,00,045 crore of disinvestment receipts). In 2018-19, the scale of investment
at Rs. 2,13,530 crore was nearly three times the scale of disinvestment of Rs.
85000 crore. The picture in 2019-20 is not going to be any different.
India should not be making so large
investment in the public enterprises producing essentially private goods, which
the private sector can produce more efficiently. The quality of these equity
investment is quite suspect. Bulk of the Government equity investment in last three
years (including the current one) is in three sectors- public sector banks,
railways and road construction. There is no return on capital invested in these
sectors for the Government.
The Government should stop
completely making any equity investment from the budget in the public
enterprises. The Government may end up saving Rs. 2 lakh crore on an average a
year, which is about 1% of GDP and about 7% of the entire Government of India
budget.
Second, Central
Government’s budgetary allocations in agriculture and allied fields adds up to over
Rs. 4.6 lakh crore in the year 2019-20. The Government runs in excess of 100
programme spread over several Ministries and Departments. This scale of
expenditure amounts to about 16.5% of total central government budget for
2019-20. If we exclude expenditure on interest, establishment and mandatory
transfers of the Finance Commission, the expenditure commitments of Rs. 4.6
lakh crore makes up almost 33% of total discretionary budget of the Government
of India.
Entire gross value addition
(or GVA) taking place in agriculture is Rs. 30.47 lakh crore at current prices.
The Government of India spends over a whopping 15% of the agriculture GVA on agriculture
related programme.
Production and productivity
programmes supported by free or cheap inputs need to be discontinued. Farmers can
be supported with direct income support, flexibility of land leasing and
commercialisation of agriculture. Agriculture needs to be developed as a
business.
Two important legislative reforms- giving permission to the States adopt or amend their land
laws on the lines of Model Land Lease Law and abolishing the Essential Commodities Act to
eliminate all controls over storage and distribution of agriculture commodities
are very much called for.
All the traditional production and productivity
enhancement programme of the Ministry of Agriculture and Ministry of Fisheries
and Animal Husbandry (Green Revolution, White Revolution and Blue Revolution)
should be phased out completely over next three years. The Government can, for
some transitory period, replace the present level of public expenditure on
these production and productivity programme by investment in land improvement,
farm mechanisation (most with farm equipment hiring) and promoting hiring of
agriculture services (on Uber/ Urban Clap model).
All agriculture input subsidies (seeds, fertiliser,
power and loans) should be progressively phased out in next three years by
providing compensating direct cash support to the farmers. During the phase-out
period, the system should switch over to a genuine Direct Benefit Transfer
(DBT) system to provide fertilizer purchase support to farmers based on their
acreage.
Minimum Support Prices (MSP) programme have lost their
relevance in the day and age of surplus production. Farmers need to get right
market signals to assess the demand for different agriculture produce. The government
expenditure under MSP programme should be replaced by a direct cash transfer
system for ensuring ‘income’ to farmers. FCI and other Government agencies to undertake
procurement of the food grains required for social security and nutrition
programme and also for necessary buffers from the market at prevailing prices.
It would be preferable if the Government were to tie it up in future markets
before the onset of cropping seasons as this would provide right signals to the
farmers.
The PM-Kisan programme should be withdrawn now as
the situation of agriculture distress has eased out now. It can be
re-introduced whenever there is pressure on rural incomes.
Third, Central Government’s expenditure on power sector
development programme is estimated around Rs. 40000 crore a year (including Government’s
off-budget expenditure largely in the form of Fully Serviced Bonds). There are
lot of contingent liabilities and stresses in addition.
The Government would be well
advised to bring a new power sector reform programme incentivising the states
to privatise their distribution and supply business. The States will require
substantial incentivisation for cutting this umbilical cord. The Government of
India can agree to capitalise 25%-50% of the losses of the state utilities
which privatise the power sector distribution and supply entities. This may
require an outlay of about Rs. 2 lakh crore but that would be one time. If
accompanied by stoppage of all the investment support programme this
expenditure on part of the Central Government can be recovered in 5 years.
Fourth,
Reform the Centrally Sponsored Schemes.
Fifth, Government
of India has investments in non-financial companies, financial companies and it
owns lot of land with total valuation exceeding Rs. 30 lakh crore. The
Government can create three sovereign wealth funds- one for non-financial companies,
another for the financial companies and the third one for land holding and
buildings owned/held by the Government.
The Government can create the
sovereign wealth companies with 20% equity and 80% debt structure. These three sovereign
wealth companies, when transferred all the shares and landed assets held can
raise debt equivalent to 80% to pay the Government close to Rs. 24 lakh crore
for retiring the Government debt. This will bring down the interest cost by
close to
1/3rd of today’s cost, a savings of more than Rs. 2 lakh
crore. The Government would continue to hold 100% equity of the three sovereign
wealth funds.
These three fund companies
should be handed over to professionals to manage. They must manage the assets
so as to deliver a 10% rate of return on the equity holdings of the Government.
This would assure the Government a steady income of Rs. 50000-60000 crore a
year, which is more than what the Government gets by way of dividends today. Over
the years, the Government can further monetise by selling stakes in the
sovereign wealth funds.
Sixth, a
close scrutiny of over 700 programmes run as Central Sector Schemes, over 200
programmes run as Centrally Sponsored Schemes and another over 100 programmes
run as Other Central Expenditure and Other Transfers would lead to
rationalisation, consolidation and closure of several of these programmes. There
are also clear pickings like phasing out LPG subsidy, not investing in bailing
out BSNL and so on which can be undertaken.
Subhash Chandra Garg
January 31, 2020 New Delhi
Great insight sir
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