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The
Death of Fiscal Federalism? |
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Jun
6th 2005, C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh |
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The
crippling role of the debt burden in affecting the
finances of state governments in India has been noted
in the previous issue of MacroScan. The Twelfth Finance
Commission (hereafter TFC) specifically addressed
this issue, as one of its terms of reference specified
that ''the Commission may, after making as assessment
of the debt position of the States as on 31 March
2004, suggest such corrective measures as are deemed
necessary, consistent with macroeconomic stability
and debt sustainability.''
The
high interest payment obligations of States is one
of the principal reasons for the tremendous pressure
on their finances. Some attempt to reduce this pressure
has been made since September 2002 under the debt-swap
scheme of the Central Government, under which ''high-cost
debt'' (i.e. carrying an interest rate of 13 per cent
or above) on state plans or small savings could be
exchanged for market borrowings and small savings
securities, which at that point carried interest of
around 7 per cent.
Until March 2005, around Rs. 103,000 crore of state
government debt was swapped under this scheme. This
reduced the average interest rate paid by States to
some extent, and also changed the composition and
maturity profile of the debt, but not the overall
stock of the debt. However, the rather limited nature
of the swap has limited the beneficial effects for
the States.
Chart
1 >>
The TFC has introduced a package for debt reduction
with two main components. The first is the consolidation
of all State debt outstanding to the Centre on 31
March 2004, at an interest rate of 7 per cent to be
repaid over 20 years. The second, and much more problematic,
proposal is a new debt relief scheme linked to the
reduction in the revenue deficits of States.
Under this scheme, the repayments due on Central loans
from the current year to 2009-10 (after consolidation)
will be eligible for write-off, but the amount of
write-off of repayment will be linked to the abolsute
amount by which the revenue deficit is reduced in
each successive year over the entire period. A pre-condition
for eligibility to this scheme is the enactment of
fiscal responsibility legislation: thus the scheme
will be available to States only from the year they
''qualify'' by bringing in such a law. In turn, States
would increasingly seek market borrowing or borrowing
from other sources than the Centre, in line with another
recommendation of the TFC, that the Centre stop acting
as an intermediary for debt taken on by the States.
Table
1 >>
The rationale for these oppressive conditions is stated
as follows: ''As the states are increasingly exposed
to the markets for borrowing, their fiscal position
would be increasingly assessed by the markets. They
may be forced to pay higher than average interst rates
to cover additional risk if the publci finances are
not evaluated to be robust by the assessment of the
market. We are relying therefore on two mechanisms
for fiscal correction: self-evaluation under the Fiscal
Responsibility Act and exposure to the market.'' (page
84)
It is evident from Chart 1 that the role of the Centre
as creditor to the States has already declined quite
sharply over the past five years, and the value of
the central loand outstanding has fallen both in nominal
value terms and as a share of the total outstanding
debt of the States. This has not meant that the debt
burden of States has ben very much reduced – Table
1 indicates that a significant number of states still
have debt-GSDP ratios of more than 40 per cent and
interest payments amounting to more than 28 per cent
of revenue receipts.
Not context with requiring that states enact fiscal
responsibility legislation as a precondition for availing
of debt relief, the TFC has also specified what such
legislation should provide for ''at a minimum''! This
includes the following features:
-
eliminating the revenue deficit by 2008-09
-
reducing the fiscal deficit to 3 per cent of GSDP
or its equivalent defined as a ratio of interest
payments to revenue receipts
-
bringing out annual reduction targets of revenue
and fiscal deficits.
In
addition, the TFC states that ''States should follow
a recruitment and wage policy, in a manner such that
the total salary bill relative to revenue expenditure
net of interest payments and pensions does not exceed
35 per cent.'' The TFC even demands withdrawal of reduction
of the public sector: ''In the period of restructuring,
that is 2005-10, state governments should draw up
a programme that includes closure of almost all loss
making SLPEs (state level public enterprises).''
The problematic theoretical framework and lack of
recognition of socio-economic reality that are embedded
in these conditions are truly disturbing. The macroeconomic
problems with a rigid fiscal responsibility framework
that specifies what are finally only arbitrary limits
to revenue and fiscal deficits are now well know across
the world and are even becoming evident in India within
the first year of such legislation been enacted.
These rigid numerical constraints are not just awkward
an unnecessary but also pro-cyclical, since they operate
to intensify and prolong slumps and even convert them
into depressions. They are also foolish, since they
can prevent important and socially necessary public
expenditure which is required to improve current welfare
and future growth prospects. There is no reason to
keep capital expenditure within some predetermined
numerical limit, since even debt sustainability depends
upon the relation between the interest rate and anticipated
return from public investment. So restricting capital
account deficits to 3 per cent of GSDP makes little
sense.
In addition there is the issue of social returns,
which appear to be completely ignored by the TFC.
In requiring the States to keep the salary bill within
a prespecified limit, and demanding the closure of
loss-making public enterprises, the TFC is ignoring
the social role that can be played by public employees
and even loss-making public enterprises that fulfill
some social functions.
Let us consider what precisely such conditions will
entail for the state governments. Remember also that
the revenue raising capacity of the States is limited,
more so since the Centre has taken upn itself all
power to tax service sector incomes. If revenue deficits
are to be progressively reduced and broguht down to
zero, this necessarily means that revenue expenditures
wil have to be cut. In most states, by far the largest
item of expenditure on the revenue account is in fact
that for salaries. It is completely wrong to see these
as unnecessary or unproductive expenditures, since
these are for who are to provide the important public
services that everyone acknowledges to be essential.
Since state governments are responsible for almost
all of the expenditures that affect the quality of
life of ordinary citizens on the ground, from infrastructure
and sanitation to health and education, preventing
expenditure on wages and salaries for those who would
perform these functions is bizarre in the extreme.
The role of the Finance Commission, as envisaged by
the Constitution, is to deal with and prevent state
governments from running up large revenue deficits,
by ensuring a distribution of fiscal resources between
Centre and States that would allow the States to fulfill
their social and constitutional responsibilities within
their means. However, successive Finance Commission
have failed to achieve this. And a substantial part
of the problem is that the Cnetre itself has failed
on the revenue mobilisation front, especially since
the early 1990s, such that central transfers to the
States have been falling as a share of GDP.
In this context, instead of confronting this problem
and addressing the central issues of inadequate revenue
generation by the Centre and its adverse implications
for state finances, what the TFC has done is effectively
to sound the death knell of fiscal federalism. State
governments are to be forced into the same neoliberal
economic policy straitjacket that the Centre has chosen
to function within. They are to be prevented from
exercising their own options with respect to how much
revenue and capital spending they can undertake; they
are to be limited in terms of how many people they
can employ and how much they can be paid; they are
to close down loss-making state-owned enterprises
even if these are contributing to the public good;
they are to be forced to turn directly to unintermediated
market borrowing or accessing loans from mutlilateral
insitutions that also carry similar conditionalities,
and so on.
All in all, this amounts to a direct attack on the
fiscal autonomy of states, and therefore in effect
a betrayal of the spirit of the Constitution, which
recognises the possibility of different economic approaches
by different state governments.
It is ironic – but also alarming – that the social
and political fallout of such apparently ''technocratic''
decisions is not recognised. Depriving people of necessary
public services and reducing the possibilities of
sustained development are not only likely to make
those at the helm of particular state governments
unpopular. They are also likely to increase disaffection
with the entire national supposedly federalist system
and thereby encourage extremely dangerous separatist
tendencies.
The evident reaction of people in many parts of the
European Union to a similar project should provide
a telling example. The ''Growth and Stability Pact''
which specified similarly foolish fiscal constraints
upon EU member governments has created higher unemployment
and levels of economic activity well below potential,
and has led to a popular backlash which is increasingly
questioning the entire project.
The reason is that the policies – and even the proposed
Constitution - were seen as driven by corporate interests
and operating against the interest of people and the
broader social good, which cannot be calculated in
terms of market principles. Policy makers in India
should take note: there is no reason why such policies
should not lead to similar backlash in our own federal
structure.
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