To provide a comparative analysis of fiscal healthacross Indian states through standardized metrics.
To identify areas of strength and concernin states’ fiscal management practices.
To promote transparency, accountability, and prudent fiscal managementthrough empirical assessment.
To assist policymakers in making informed decisionsaimed at enhancing fiscal sustainability and resilience.
Salient Points
Issuing Authority: NITI Aayog
Scope of Analysis: The FHI analysis covers eighteen major states that drive the Indian economy in terms of their contribution to India’s GDP, demography, total public expenditure, revenues, and overall fiscal stability.
Data Source: The composite Fiscal Health Index has been developed using data from the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG), covering the Financial Year 2022-23.
Measurement: The index is predicated upon five broad categories:
Revenue Generation and Mobilization: Assessment of states’ own revenue receipts, tax buoyancy, and non-tax revenue generation.
Expenditure Management and Prioritization: Evaluation of efficiency in expenditure allocation, prioritization of capital expenditure, and adherence to fiscal discipline.
Debt Management: Analysis of states’ debt-to-GSDP ratios, interest payment burdens, and overall sustainability of debt portfolios.
Fiscal Deficit Management: Measurement of states’ fiscal deficit as a percentage of Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) and adherence to statutory limits.
Overall Fiscal Sustainability: Composite analysis of revenue, expenditure, deficit, and debt indicators to gauge long-term fiscal health.
Key Findings
Rankings:
First Place: Odisha (Highest Score: 67.8)
Second Place: Chhattisgarh (55.2)
Third Place: Goa (53.6)
Last Place (18th): Punjab (10.7)
Rajasthan’s Rank: Rajasthan secured the 12th position with a score of 28.6.
Top Performers: Odisha, Chhattisgarh, and Goa excel in Debt Index, Debt Sustainability, and Revenue Mobilization.
Revenue Mobilization: Odisha, Jharkhand, Goa, and Chhattisgarh effectively mobilize non-tax revenue (average 21% of Total Revenue).
Aspirational States: Punjab, Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, Kerala face fiscal challenges like poor debt sustainability and high deficits.
Capital Expenditure: High allocation (27%) by Odisha, Goa, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh; Low allocation (10%) by West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, Punjab, Rajasthan.
Debt Concerns: West Bengal and Punjab face growing debt burdens and increasing debt-to-GSDP ratios.