PM Modi's Model State , Gujarat Heading For A Debt Trap
BY R.K.MISRA
Statistics are
like bikinis. What they reveal is suggestive but what they cover up is crucial,
goes a quote by Business Professor Aaron Levenstein.
Gujarat, in the
western part of India is a state where BJP has been in power for 27 years with
Narendra Modi as chief minister for 13 of them. Modi projected it as a model state and used it as a
springboard to become the Prime Minister in 2014.
The suggestive
part is that the cumulative public debt
of Gujarat has shot up to Rs three lakh crore(Rs 3,00,963 crore), as
per the revised estimates of 2020-21, the State Assembly was informed during the current budget session .
This is the last budget session of the present government as elections are due
in the state later this year.
Gujarat’s
cumulative public debt has ballooned to an all-time high of Rs 3,20,812 crore
for the current 2021-22 and will ,it is
estimated, shoot up to Rs 3,49,789 crore
by the end of the current financial year of 2022-23 .The public debt will be Rs 1,05,824
crore more than the total budget of Rs 2,43,965 crores for 2022-23 presented on
March 3.
According to
published reports of the government
statement in the State Assembly under the fiscal responsibility Act, 2005,
the state’s estimated public debt is
projected to touch an astronomical high
of Rs 4,49,810 crore by the end of
2024-25. When the BJP first came to
power in Gujarat in 1995, the public debt of the state was around Rs 10,000
crores.
However, the
crucial part that finance minister Kanu Desai left unsaid is that the state is staring at a veritable
debt trap as it has to pay 61 per cent of this astronomical amount of Rs
3,00,963 crore in the next seven years. This aspect has been brought out by the
Comptroller and Auditor General( CAG) in its report on the state’s finances
tabled in the Gujarat Assembly . In other words the state will have to
repay an estimated Rs 1.87 lakh crores
by 2028.
The report also
points out that while Gujarat’s Gross State Domestic Product(GSDP) has grown at
a Compounded Annual Growth Rate(CAGR) of 9.19 per cent between 2016-21,the
outstanding public debt has grown at a CAGR of 11.49 per cent. ”This calls for
a need to review debt sustainability of the state”, the CAG said.
The warning of
the CAG, however, does not seem to have registered with the finance minister
who stated in reply to a question in the assembly that Gujarat’s public debt
which stood at 28.48 per cent of Gross
State Domestic product(GSDP) in 2004-05,has fallen to 16.5 per cent as per revised
estimates of 2021-22. The total public
debt is within the limit of 27.1 per cent of GSDP. ”Our debt is Rs 3 lakh
crores but state’s financial health is good enough to enable us to borrow up to
Rs 4.5 lakh crores, if necessary”, the minister said.
Alas the
financial physician’s health certificate has not been able to come clean in the
audit watchdog’s scrutiny. The CAG has pointed out that during 2020-21,the
state understated it’s revenue deficit by Rs 10,997.93 crores and would
actually stand at Rs 33,525 crores if the items of shortfall in contribution to consolidated
sinking fund , non-discharge of interest liabilities and incorrect
classification are factored in.
The accumulated
losses of the State Public Sector Undertakings is another sob story. The CAG has put these losses at Rs
30,400 crores and taken note of the fact that the Gujarat government continues
to invest in bodies like the Gujarat State Petroleum Corporation(GSPC) and the Gujarat
State Road Transport Corporation(GSRTC) whose net worth has been completely
eroded. According to the CAG, Rs 1000 crores was invested in GSPC and Rs 469 crores in GSRTC whose net worth
stood in negative. Gujarat has 97 SPSUs, 64 government companies, 29 government
controlled companies and four statutory corporations.
Interestingly, the rise in Gujarat’s public debt kept loyal
company with the rising fortunes of chief minister Narendra Modi who took
charge of the state in October 2001,except for one difference. Modi’s fortunes
soared, Gujarat’s debts sank deeper by the year.
When Modi
assumed power in 2001-02,the actual debt was
Rs 45,301 crores and after he left for Delhi in 2014, the CAG put the
total debt of the state for 2015-16 at
Rs 2,21,090 crores.
Modi’s journey
to Delhi riding astride a decisive mandate is largely attributed to successful
‘marketing’ of a development model. The bi-annual Gujarat Global Investors
Summit were the cornerstone of this model
Beginning with the first one in 2003 up to the seventh one in 2015 the
Gujarat government declared it had signed a total of 51,378 memorandums of
Understanding(MOU) worth a total investment of a mind-boggling Rs 84 lakh
crores with the 2011 summit alone accounting for Rs 20.83 lakh crores in
proposed investment in the state. In the run up to the eighth summit
in 2017, the then state chief secretary, J.N. Singh claimed an
implementation rate of 66 per cent for the past seven editions.
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