Mumbai: States have budgeted 36 per cent higher capital expenditure during this financial year, which may lead to a sharp rise in their fiscal deficit to Rs 8.4 lakh crore, a report said Friday.
Registering an increase of 34.1 per cent from the pre-pandemic (FY20) levels, 26 large states, excluding Assam, have spent Rs 5 lakh crore in capital expenditure, or Rs 1.3 lakh crore more than they had spent in FY20, shows an Icra analysis of these states’ budgets.
According to the agency, these 26 states are on course to spend Rs 6.8 lakh crore or 35.8 per cent more this fiscal in capital expenditure (capex) over FY22 when it stood at Rs 5 lakh crore. As much as 72 per cent of the incremental Rs 1.8 lakh crore capital push is led by UP, Maharashtra, Bengal, Odisha, Andhra and Haryana.
In the previous fiscal, the capex push was led by Bihar, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Telangana, Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh.
The combined capex of these 26 states is budgeted to expand by an impressive 35.8 per cent to Rs 6.8 lakh crore in FY23, on top of the 34.1 per cent or Rs 5 lakh crore they spent in FY22. In FY20, they spent Rs 3.7 lakh crore in capex, while FY21 was a washout due to the pandemic, the agency said.
The report also notes that with this aggressive capex push, these states will also see their fiscal deficits widening sharply to Rs 8.4 lakh crore in FY23, from Rs 6.3 lakh crore in FY22, and much higher than Rs 4.8 lakh crore in FY20.
However, deficit was higher in FY21 at Rs 7.9 lakh crore due the higher pandemic expenses and lower revenue.
In FY22 these states had much narrower revenue and fiscal deficits. While revenue deficit was similar to the pre-Covid level, fiscal deficit exceeded the FY20 level on account of higher capex.
In budget estimates for FY23, these 26 states have pegged their revenue receipts, revenue expenditure and capital expenditure at Rs 35.8 lakh crore, 36.9 lakh crore and Rs 6.8 lakh crore, respectively. These numbers are 19.8 per cent, 19.7 per cent and 35.8 per cent higher than FY22 levels, according to the report.
Deficit levels in FY22 were smaller than the revised budget estimates as combined revenue receipts and revenue expenditure were equivalent to 97 per cent and 93 per cent, respectively, compressing their aggregate revenue deficit to 41 per cent of the revised estimates.
With aggregate capex at 90 per cent of the revised estimates, their combined fiscal deficit stood at 75 per cent of the same in FY22.
But the FY22 fiscal deficit is higher than the pre-Covid levels as combined revenue deficit of these states at Rs 1 lakh crore in FY22 is in line with the revenue deficit in FY20.
PTI