Poll-bound States spent carefully while cutting debt


Poll-bound States: Fiscal Prudence While Cutting Debt

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Report RBI Study of State Budgets 2025 (annual publication)
Publisher Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
States studied (poll-bound) Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Puducherry (UT)
Debt reduction period 2021–22 to 2025–26 (Budget Estimates)
West Bengal debt/GSDP (2025–26 BE) 39% — highest among the five; down 4.7 pp from 2021 [S1]
Kerala debt/GSDP (2025–26 BE) 35.5% — reduced by 4.8 pp [S1]
Tamil Nadu debt/GSDP (2025–26 BE) 29.2% [S1]
Assam debt/GSDP (2025–26 BE) 28% [S1]
Puducherry debt/GSDP (2025–26 BE) 26% (UT status; receives higher Central transfers) [S1]
National average (states) Outstanding liabilities ≈ 27.5% of GDP as of March 2025 [S2]
High-debt benchmark 16 states at ≥30% outstanding liabilities (March 2025) [S2]
FRBM ceiling (typical) Outstanding liabilities ≤ 25–35% of GSDP (varies by state FRBM law)
West Bengal FRBM amendment Debt ceiling set at 38% of GSDP till 2029–30; fiscal deficit ≤ 3%, with 3.5% allowed in 2024–25 [S4]
Kerala FRBM status Among states projected to exceed 35% debt-GSDP ratio by 2026–27 [S4]
Committed expenditure burden Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu spend >60% on committed items (salaries, pensions, interest) [S4]
Discom off-balance-sheet risk State discom debt = ₹7,42,461 crore (2.7% of GDP, March 2024) [S2]
Enabling legislation State-level FRBM Acts; Article 293 of Constitution (borrowing by states with Centre's consent)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Fiscal / Administrative

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. RBI publishes "State Finances: A Study of Budgets" annually — the primary government source for state-level fiscal data in India. [S2]
  2. West Bengal had the highest debt-to-GSDP ratio (39%) among poll-bound states in 2025–26 Budget Estimates. [S1]
  3. Kerala reduced outstanding liabilities by 4.8 percentage points — the largest reduction among the five poll-bound states studied. [S1]
  4. Article 293 of the Constitution governs borrowing by state governments within India.
  5. As of March 2025, 16 states had outstanding liabilities ≥ 30% of GSDP. [S2]
  6. Total state outstanding debt as a share of national GDP was ≈27.5% as of March 2025. [S2]
  7. States with the highest outstanding liabilities nationally: Punjab (46%), Himachal Pradesh (44%), Arunachal Pradesh (42%). [S2]
  8. West Bengal amended its FRBM Act to permit a debt ceiling of 38% of GSDP until 2029–30. [S4]
  9. State discom debt = ₹7,42,461 crore (2.7% of GDP) as of March 2024 — a key off-balance-sheet fiscal risk. [S2]
  10. Puducherry is a Union Territory, not a state — its debt ratio (26% of GSDP) is not directly comparable to states due to different borrowing frameworks and higher central transfers. [S1]
  11. Committed expenditure (salaries, pensions, interest payments) exceeds 60% of revenue receipts in Assam, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu. [S4]
  12. The FRBM Act, 2003 (Centre) and parallel state FRBM Acts typically cap fiscal deficit at 3% of GSDP and set targets for debt reduction.
  13. 15 states had a higher fiscal deficit in 2024–25 than in 2005–06, indicating long-term structural fiscal deterioration nationally. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-II: Centre-State financial relations; federalism; role of Finance Commissions - GS-III: Government budgeting; fiscal policy; resource mobilisation; FRBM

Syllabus headings: - GS-II: Devolution of powers and finances up to local levels; challenges of federalism - GS-III: Effects of liberalisation on the economy; mobilisation of resources; growth, development and employment; government budgeting

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "Fiscal federalism in India is constrained more by political incentives than constitutional design." Critically examine with reference to state-level debt management and FRBM compliance. (GS-II/III) 2. "The RBI Study of State Budgets 2025 presents evidence that electoral cycles do not necessarily drive fiscal irresponsibility among Indian states. Analyse the factors that enabled poll-bound states to reduce debt while sustaining welfare expenditure." (GS-III) 3. "Off-balance-sheet liabilities of states, particularly discom debt, pose a systemic risk to India's federal fiscal architecture. Discuss the mechanisms available to the Centre to address this." (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
FRBM Act, 2003 and state FRBM Acts The legal ceiling framework within which all state debt reduction occurs
Finance Commission (15th & 16th FC) Determines states' share in central taxes and grants — direct determinant of fiscal space
Article 280, 292, 293 of Constitution Constitutional framework for Centre-state fiscal transfers and state borrowing
RBI's role as fiscal agent of state governments RBI manages state government accounts and WMA facilities under RBI Act
Discom debt and UDAY scheme Major off-balance-sheet contingent liability threatening state finances
Revenue deficit grants and capital expenditure loans Centre's instruments to shape state fiscal behaviour
Political business cycle theory Theoretical framework to evaluate whether elections drive spending surges
Fiscal federalism and cooperative federalism Broader GS-II theme of which this is a sub-topic

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing "fiscal deficit" with "outstanding liabilities": Fiscal deficit is a flow (annual gap between revenue and expenditure); outstanding liabilities are a stock (accumulated past borrowings). The article discusses stock reduction, not flow reduction.
  2. Treating Puducherry identically to states: Puducherry is a Union Territory with legislature — it has different borrowing powers and receives higher central transfers; its 26% debt-GSDP figure is not directly comparable to full states.
  3. Assuming West Bengal is fiscally sound because it reduced debt: West Bengal at 39% GSDP remains above most states and above RBI's stress threshold of 35%; debt reduction does not mean debt is low.
  4. Misattributing the RBI publication: The relevant report is "State Finances: A Study of Budgets" (RBI's annual publication) — NOT the RBI Annual Report or the Financial Stability Report; aspirants confuse these frequently.
  5. Ignoring off-balance-sheet risk: Headline debt-GSDP ratios exclude discom debt, guarantees, and SPV borrowings — states can appear fiscally prudent in headline numbers while having large hidden contingent liabilities.

11. Sources