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
- Core claim: States facing assembly elections in 2026 — Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, and Puducherry — consistently reduced outstanding liabilities as a share of GSDP between 2021 and 2025–26 while maintaining development expenditure. [S1]
- Significance: Challenges the political narrative that Opposition-ruled states are fiscally irresponsible; backed by RBI's Study of State Budgets 2025. [S1][S2]
- UPSC relevance: Intersects GS-II (federalism, Centre-State fiscal relations) and GS-III (government budgeting, FRBM compliance, public finance).
- Conceptual hook: Demonstrates that electoral cycles ≠ fiscal profligacy — a recurring empirical debate in Indian public finance.
2. Why in the News
- January 27, 2026 — The Hindu reported that RBI Study of State Budgets 2025 data showed poll-bound states reduced debt-to-GSDP ratios by up to 4–5 percentage points since 2021, even as political rhetoric accused Opposition governments of fiscal recklessness. [S1]
- Assembly elections scheduled in Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, and Puducherry in 2026 — the same states that came to power around 2021 during COVID-19 lockdown. [S1]
- The RBI's annual State Finances publication (2025 edition) served as the empirical anchor for the report. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
- 2003 — Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act enacted at Centre; states subsequently enacted their own FRBM Acts, typically capping fiscal deficit at 3% of GSDP and outstanding liabilities at 25–35% of GSDP.
- 2021 elections — Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, and Puducherry held elections; winning parties inherited fiscal stress compounded by COVID-19 pandemic (tepid economic activity, high welfare spending).
- 2020–21 — Centre relaxed FRBM limits for states to 5% of GSDP (fiscal deficit) to support COVID mitigation, but also imposed conditionalities tied to power-sector reforms.
- Post-2021 — Poll-bound states began reducing outstanding liabilities while sustaining development expenditure; this multi-year trend is documented in RBI Study of State Budgets (annual series). [S2]
- PRS India's State of State Finances (2024–25 and 2025 editions) corroborate RBI data, providing comparable cross-state metrics. [S3][S4]
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
- Poll-bound states reduced outstanding liabilities as share of GSDP by 4–5 percentage points despite post-COVID revenue shocks, signalling improved debt sustainability. [S1]
- Reduction in debt servicing burden (interest payments) creates fiscal space for capital expenditure — positive for state GDP multipliers.
- However, West Bengal at 39% GSDP and Kerala at 35.5% remain above the 35% threshold that RBI flags as a stress zone, with Kerala projected to stay above it through 2026–27. [S4]
- 15 states had fiscal deficits in 2024–25 higher than in 2005–06, indicating structural revenue-expenditure mismatches across the country. [S2]
Fiscal / Administrative
- States kept development expenditure intact even while cutting debt — suggesting expenditure reprioritisation rather than across-the-board austerity. [S1]
- Committed expenditure (salaries, pensions, interest) consuming >60% of revenue receipts in Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu leaves little fiscal flexibility. [S4]
- Off-balance-sheet liabilities (discom debt, SPV borrowings) are not captured in headline debt-GSDP ratios, understating true fiscal stress. [S2]
- Central government's relaxations under FRBM (power sector reforms linkage, interest-free loans exclusion, NPS contributions) inflated nominal fiscal deficits without worsening underlying debt trajectories.
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 293 of the Constitution: states may borrow within India upon the security of the Consolidated Fund; Centre's consent required if a state has outstanding loans from Centre.
- State FRBM Acts set binding (though frequently amended) ceilings; West Bengal amended its Act to raise the debt ceiling to 38% of GSDP till 2029–30. [S4]
- 14th Finance Commission expanded the states' share in central taxes to 42% (from 32%), improving revenue buoyancy, which aided debt reduction post-2021.
Ethical / Governance
- The RBI data counters partisan narratives — a neutral, evidence-based rebuttal to claims of fiscal irresponsibility by Opposition-ruled states.
- Demographic heterogeneity matters: states are in "varied demographic stages" — younger states have higher developmental spending needs vs. ageing states with pension/healthcare burdens (cited in article). [S1]
- Transparency of RBI's annual Study of State Budgets provides a standardised, comparable fiscal dashboard for all states.
Historical
- Electoral cycle and fiscal expansion is a well-documented pattern globally (Nordhaus political business cycle theory); Indian evidence from this RBI study contradicts the pre-election spending surge hypothesis for these five states.
- Post-COVID period (2020–22) saw an exceptional fiscal expansion that is now being consolidated — the 2021–26 debt reduction represents a structural correction phase.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- November 2024 — PRS India released State of State Finances 2024–25, noting Kerala and West Bengal among states projected to exceed 35% debt-GSDP by 2026–27. [S3]
- October 2025 — PRS India released State of State Finances 2025, updated cross-state fiscal comparisons. [S4]
- 2024–25 — Centre continued offering interest-free capex loans to states (₹1.5 lakh crore under scheme), incentivising capital spending without adding to revenue deficits.
- March 2024 — State discom outstanding debt stood at ₹7,42,461 crore (2.7% of GDP), flagged by RBI as a contingent liability risk. [S2]
- January 27, 2026 — The Hindu article highlights RBI Study of State Budgets 2025 data showing poll-bound states' fiscal prudence, triggering public debate on electoral economics. [S1]
- 2026 — Assembly elections due in Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal; fiscal positioning of incumbent governments becomes a political economy issue.
7. Prelims Hooks
- RBI publishes "State Finances: A Study of Budgets" annually — the primary government source for state-level fiscal data in India. [S2]
- West Bengal had the highest debt-to-GSDP ratio (39%) among poll-bound states in 2025–26 Budget Estimates. [S1]
- Kerala reduced outstanding liabilities by 4.8 percentage points — the largest reduction among the five poll-bound states studied. [S1]
- Article 293 of the Constitution governs borrowing by state governments within India.
- As of March 2025, 16 states had outstanding liabilities ≥ 30% of GSDP. [S2]
- Total state outstanding debt as a share of national GDP was ≈27.5% as of March 2025. [S2]
- States with the highest outstanding liabilities nationally: Punjab (46%), Himachal Pradesh (44%), Arunachal Pradesh (42%). [S2]
- West Bengal amended its FRBM Act to permit a debt ceiling of 38% of GSDP until 2029–30. [S4]
- State discom debt = ₹7,42,461 crore (2.7% of GDP) as of March 2024 — a key off-balance-sheet fiscal risk. [S2]
- 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]
- Committed expenditure (salaries, pensions, interest payments) exceeds 60% of revenue receipts in Assam, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu. [S4]
- The FRBM Act, 2003 (Centre) and parallel state FRBM Acts typically cap fiscal deficit at 3% of GSDP and set targets for debt reduction.
- 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
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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
- [S1] "Poll-bound States spent carefully while cutting debt" — The Hindu, January 27, 2026, Page 12 (article excerpt provided as primary source) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] State Finances: A Study of Budgets — Reserve Bank of India (annual publication page) — https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/AnnualPublications.aspx?head=State+Finances+%3A+A+Study+of+Budgets — (Tier 1)
- [S3] State of State Finances 2024–25 — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/files/budget/State_of_State_Finances-2024-25.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S4] State of State Finances 2025 — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/files/budget/SOSF_2025.pdf — (Tier 1)