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State Fiscal Reforms in India: Progress and Prospects

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Bank's first state report in 1996 on Orissa. ... This stock-taking report looks for feasible solutions across states. ... Poor states are showing fewer signs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: State Fiscal Reforms in India: Progress and Prospects


1
State Fiscal Reforms in IndiaProgress and
Prospects
  • November 23, 2004

2
Background and context
  • Banks first state report in 1996 on Orissa.
    Since then, it has authored 12 fiscal/economic
    reports on 9 states prepared 8 SALs in 5 states.
  • This stock-taking report looks for feasible
    solutions across states. It aims to share lessons
    of state-level fiscal reforms to date and
    suggests what more can be done.
  • It has a developmental focus.
  • Unlike our state reports, it also looks at
    cross-state/GoI issues the rules of the games

3
Structure of the Presentation
  • Introduction
  • Expenditure Restructuring
  • Reforms to Improve Expenditure Quality
  • Tax Reforms
  • The borrowing and grant regime.
  • Scenarios and conclusion

4
A. INTRODUCTION
5
State coverage
  • Focus is on the 16 large, general category states
    (93 of the population)
  • Within that, special focus on the 7 poorest
    states p.c incomes of less than Rs 10,000
    Bihar, Chattisgarh, Jharkand, Madhya Pradesh,
    Orissa, Rajasthan, UP.
  • The average per capita income in the poor states
    has fallen from 71 in 1980/81 to 54 of the
    All-India average in 1999/2000.

6
Average real per capita income growth
7
The state-level fiscal crisis of the 1990s
  • A slow secular deterioration in state fiscal
    performance over the 80s and 90s was catalysed
    into a crisis by the Fifth Central Pay Commission
    Pay Awards.
  • A sharp increase in spending alongside declining
    revenues led to much higher deficits and debt
    accumulation.
  • Off-budget liabilities also increased sharply.
  • Poor states saw the worst deterioriation.

8
State deficit and debt levels
9
State- level debt/GSDP poor and other states
10
The fiscal deterioration had a negative
developmental impact
  • Once one adjusts for the large increases in
    interest and pension payments, and for the large
    real salary increase, aggregate spending has
    continued the downward trend in state
    expenditure/GDP observed during the early
    nineties.
  • Real growth slowed or halted in priority spending
    areas such as education and health.
  • The quality of spending worsened as expenditures
    became more salary-intensive, especially in the
    poorer states.

11
Aggregate expenditure trends for Indias states
as a percentage of GDP
12
Recent years have shown signs of improved fiscal
performance.
  • The intensified revenue effort appears to be
    paying off.
  • The wage bill is being restrained.
  • Interest rates are falling also through
    debt-swap scheme
  • Liquidity has improved
  • There are success stories Haryana Karnataka.

13
But fundamental concerns remain.
  • The primary deficit has fallen, but revenue and
    fiscal deficits remain stubbornly high.
  • Debt levels continue to increase Indias states
    are the most highly indebted in the world.
  • Poor states are showing fewer signs of recovery.
  • Reform fatigue yet without further
    comprehensive reforms, the situation will only
    deterioriate.

14
Trends in state deficits
15
State fiscal deficit poor states and others
16
There is a broad consensus on reform objectives
  • To meet pressing developmental challenges, states
    need to
  • spend more in priority areas.
  • spend more effectively.
  • To finance the required spending increases, while
    at the same time reducing the deficit, states
    need to
  • restructure expenditure
  • reform tax policy and administration
  • This report asks what needs to be done by the
    centre as well as the states to achieve these
    objectives.

17
B. EXPENDITURE RESTRUCTURING
18
Salaries
  • Salaries make up 30 of spending.
  • A policy of hiring and and real wage restraint
    can deliver significant fiscal gains 2 of GDP
    in the next 10 years.
  • On pay restraint
  • Most public sector employees are overpaid
    relative to their private sector counterparts.
  • Another cross-the-board pay increase would undo
    whatever progress has been made in recent years.
  • Central leadership is key but states also have a
    role different states offer different terms to
    both existing and new employees
  • On hiring restraint.
  • VRS has not worked, but hiring requirements can
    be temporarily offset by attrition-led downsizing
    in other areas.

19
Starting Basic Salary of a Primary School Teacher
20
Pensions
  • Growth in the pension bill can be contained by
    parametric and structural reforms.
  • Parametric reforms (to current Defined Benefit
    (DB) scheme)
  • As per RBI report
  • Crack down on abuse
  • Structural reforms (switch to Defined
    Contribution (DC) scheme)
  • Short-term fiscal cost for long-term gain
  • NPC of DC to government is two-thirds of DB scheme

21
Subsidies
  • Though subsidies are the normal focus of
    expenditure restructuring reforms, success on
    this front is much more difficult.
  • The failure of reform in the agricultural segment
    of the electricity sector illustrates the
    difficulties.
  • There are no assured paths to success, and
    institutional experimentation is needed.
  • Instilling commercial discipline into subsidized
    sectors is a sine qua non. In some areas,
    privatization might be the only way to do this.
  • The aim should be to manage and control rather
    than eliminate subsidies.

22
Public enterprise reforms
  • PE reforms will not provide large, immediate
    fiscal gains, but will prevent the need for
    budgetary support to loss-makers and the future
    build up of liabilities.
  • Political commitment and institutional capacity
    are critical to success.

23
C. REFORMS TO IMPROVE EXPENDITURE QUALITY
24
Improvements in customer satisfaction with
various services in Bangalore over a 10-year
period.
25
5 ways to improve the quality of expenditure
  • 1. Agency specific reforms, incl. an increased
    role for the private sector.
  • 2. Strengthening the enabling environment
  • Promoting citizen demand,
  • Increasing transparency
  • controlling transfers
  • Establishing/strengthening anti-corruption
    agencies
  • 3. Improving public expenditure management
  • Budgeting realistically and implementing the
    budget as announced,
  • Enhancing departmental accountability and
    flexibility.
  • Strengthening budgetary controls over open-ended
    obligations and capital projects,
  • Tightening accounting and auditing arrangements

26
Quality of expenditure (cont.)
  • 4. Capacity building is critical for reforms and
    performance.
  • 5. Improving the quality and increasing the
    quantity of productive expenditure go hand in
    hand it is not one or the other.

27
D. REVENUE REFORMS
28
Trends in states own revenues as a percentage of
GDP
29
Revenue Reform Objectives
  • To increase revenue
  • To broaden the tax base
  • To simplify the system and reduce corruption

30
VAT the most important revenue reform
  • The introduction of VAT should be on the basis of
    floor rather than uniform rates to avoid loss of
    revenue, preserve tax autonomy, and minimize need
    for compensation.
  • It would be better if all states introduced VAT
    at the same time, but no single government should
    have a veto.
  • Eliminating the tax on inter-state exports should
    be done regardless of VAT introduction
  • Taxation of services should be transferred to the
    states, and integrated with the VAT.
  • Even after state-level VAT introduction, Indias
    indirect tax system will still be very complex.
    The ultimate goal should be a unified
    centre-state VAT.

31
Other revenue reforms
  • The professions tax can be viewed as an income
    tax supplement potentially important, but
    currently neglected.With an increase in the
    constitutional ceiling and better administration,
    tax take could increase from 0.1 to 0.9 of GDP.
  • Well-known reform formula for SR
  • Transport tax cars and 2-wheelers are undertaxed
    relative to buses
  • Non-tax revenues have stagnated and need more
    policy attention from government.

32
Tax administration
  • Tax administration reforms are probably more
    important than tax policy reforms both to
    increase revenue and to reduce corruption -- but
    have received less attention.
  • Reducing discretion and official-taxpayer
    interaction functional CTD organization
    self-assessment with risk-based audit
    computerization citizen feedback.
  • Modernizing field enforcement and check posts.
  • Crack-down on evasion in excise.
  • Strengthening inter-jurisdiction revenue
    coordination.

33
E. BORROWING and GRANT REGIME
34
Borrowing current situation recent trends
  • Trends in composition of resource transfers over
    the 90s have been adverse for the states, who
    have received a greater share of their transfers
    in the form of debt, and a smaller share as
    grants.
  • The strengths of the sub-national borrowing
    regime are its ban on offshore borrowing, and
    limited history of bailouts. The weaknesses are
    the looseness of overall central control, and
    absence of market-based discipline, leading to
    excessive debt accumulation by states.

35
Resources other than own-revenue used by states
to finance expenditure
36
Reforms to the borrowing regime
  • The most important reform would be to introduce
    an aggregate borrowing cap and allow for greater
    flexibility over choice of borrowing instruments
    within that cap.
  • GoI has begun to move in that direction. Next
    steps could include
  • Formalizing the cap methodology, and publishing
    the individual, annual caps with the budget
  • Requiring all states to get credit-rating and to
    go to the market on their own at least if they
    want additional market access.

37
Debt restructuring debt relief
  • Debt-restructuring is consistent with shifting to
    flexibility within a cap.
  • Debt relief (HIPS) is more problematic
  • Problems of moral hazard
  • Creditor more indebted than debtor.
  • Goals of debt relief can be achieved by cash
    grants
  • Any shift to debt relief should be accompanied by
    irreversible, structural changes in the borrowing
    regime.

38
Legislation to control borrowing
  • India has gone down the autonomous route to
    FRAs in a federation (US, Canada, Australia),
    rather than the coordinated route (Brazil)
  • 5 states have passed FRAs. Experience so far is
    mixed.
  • For FRAs to work, there needs to be buy in
    internal commitment and external pressure.
  • GoI can play a critical role here by monitoring
    state performance against their own fiscal
    responsibility legislation.

39
Grants current situation and recent trends
  • Federal transfer system is progressive, but only
    moderately so.
  • It is becoming more progressive over time.
  • Opinions are divided on how to reform the grant
    regime it is also institutionally complex there
    are various reform options reforms will in any
    case be incremental.

40
P.C. revenues for the major states, 2001/02
(normalized)
41
State revenues before and after transfers (formal
and FCI), 2000/01
Note Per capita subsidy implicit in Food
Corporation of India procurement of food produce
(from World Bank, 2004e) added to formal
transfers from GoI.
42
Transfers from GoI to the poor states as a
percentage of total transfers
43
Possible policy reforms to the grant regime
  • De-link block grants and loans
  • Eliminate hidden transfers (e.g. farm
    procurement, CST)
  • End reliance on projected deficit levels for FC
    grants (gap-filling).
  • Introduce a Representative Tax System to provide
    a revenue floor.
  • Rationalize CSSs.
  • Strengthen reform-linked schemes.
  • Reforms to increase GoI tax/GDP ratio

44
Institutional reforms
  • Make Finance Commission a permanent body.
  • Give central agency mandate to collate and
    improve state-level fiscal data
  • Overhaul role of Planning Commission.
  • Make role of external funding agencies consistent
    with fiscal federal reforms e.g. use donors to
    facilitate state reforms

45
F. SCENARIO AND CONCLUSION
46
Reform scenario results
  • The scenarios conducted show that it is possible
    with the reforms presented in the report to
    eliminate the state-level revenue deficit by
    2007/08 while protecting/enhancing capex and
    non-wage OM.
  • The scenario results suggest four points
  • The situation today is more favourable than 5
    years ago.
  • State-level fiscal adjustment and empowerment can
    be achieved as a joint centre-state project.
  • Achievement of fiscal adjustment for the poorer
    states is possible only with successful central
    tax reforms.
  • Esp. for poorer states, revenue balance implies
    large primary surplus, and more scope for
    increasing capex than non-wage OM.

47
Conclusion the report in 13 messages
  • EXPENDITURE
  • A policy of hiring restraint (zero net hiring)
    and real wage restraint can deliver significant
    fiscal gains.
  • Growth in the pension bill can be contained by
    parametric and structural reforms.
  • There are no sure paths to subsidy reduction, but
    better subsidy management and more commercial
    discipline in subsidy-receiving sectors are
    critical.
  • The quality of spending can and must be improved

48
Conclusion (cont).
  • REVENUE
  • VAT introduction should be voluntary, and on the
    basis of floor rates.
  • Tax base of the states should be increased by
    service taxation and enhancement of the
    professions tax limit.
  • Tax administration reforms are more important
    than tax policy reforms, though they have
    received less attention.

49
Conclusion (cont.)
  • TRANSFERS loans grants
  • States should be given more borrowing flexibility
    within firmly established global caps.
  • Reforms to the grant system should aim to make it
    both more progressive and more performance-oriente
    d.
  • In a fiscally stressed system, an increase in the
    GoI tax/GDP ratio is critical, especially for the
    poorer states.
  • INSTITUTIONS
  • A central agency should be given the mandate to
    collate and improve state-level fiscal data.
  • The plan-non-plan distinction should be
    abolished.
  • Adoption of fiscal responsibility legislation by
    all states,and its monitoring by GoI and external
    agencies, will provide important institutional
    backing for state-level fiscal reforms.

50
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