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Rural Development - the main casualty
By S. Swaminathan
The irony of governance in a federal polity is that while
esoteric debates dominate in the realm of fiscal policy, more and
more States are getting entrapped in irretrievable fiscal
constraints. The familiar refrain at the Centre is about how to
usher in a new regime of fiscal responsibility regardless of how
the correction of deficits will impact on economic growth and
employment. At the level of the States there is the eternal quest
for funds through the ``devolution route'' even if over the last
two decades, many State governments have driven themselves into
financial bankruptcy through a combination of reckless non-
development expenditure (including indiscriminate subsidies for
the non-deserving sections of the population) and total
indifference to efficient resource mobilisation. Much of the
high-decibel harangues on fiscal responsibility will make little
difference to the States as long as they remain unwilling to
practise a semblance of financial discipline. If the issue is
that of political vulnerability, there is little prospect of
laggard States exerting their fiscal muscle.
All this has become an obvious reality. But what seems to have
been obscured from the public eye is the fact that the major
adverse consequence of fiscal mismanagement at the State level
has been the acute starvation of development funding suffered by
the rural areas. Contrary to all the solicitude for rural
development articulated by many successive governments at the
National and State levels, the resource constraints have hurt the
rural population the most. Far from a digital divide producing
new forms of social frustration, there already exists an enormous
rural-urban disparity which the distortions of fiscal policy
continue to aggravate.
Annual Plan shortfalls
At a time when globalisation has become a red-herring in the
development debate in the country, it would be instructive to
look at how many State governments (and not only the chronically
backward States) have found it difficult to spend the funds that
they had themselves earmarked for their annual Plans. Mr. Arun
Shourie, Union Minister of State for Planning and Programme
Implementation, informed the Lok Sabha on November 22 that
``while most of the States have not been able to fully utilise
the outlay approved in their discussions with the Planning
Commission, there has been a huge gap between the approved outlay
and expenditure in case of States such as Uttar Pradesh and
Bihar.''
The Minister rightly attributed the mismatch between Plan outlay
and actual expenditure to the inability of the States ``to raise
the projected level of States' own resources.'' There is another
aspect to it which is the failure of delivery mechanism in many
States that accounts for shortfalls in spending. The more
worrisome aspect of the slippages in Government spending is that
these occur more in the schemes relating to rural development
(roads, schooling, supply of drinking water, sanitation and
public health) than elsewhere.
As the accompanying Table shows, in Bihar, Orissa, Uttar Pradesh
and West Bengal, over the period 1997-2000, shortfalls in Plan
expenditure have been chronic. At the other end of the spectrum,
in Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Kerala
the fulfilment of Plan outlays has been commendable whether or
not additional resources mobilisation (ARM) has been
accomplished. There are grounds for believing that even in these
``progressive'' States, the escalation in public debt has been of
a high order, eroding fiscal viability.
Dismal scenario
The Table also sets out data on utilisation of total funds
available for States during the three years, 1997-2000, on
various schemes coming under the purview of the Union Ministry of
Rural Development.
The data were furnished by the Union Minister, Mr. M. Venkaiah
Naidu, to the Rajya Sabha on November 22. The figures of funds
available include the States' own resources.
Answering the main question relating to West Bengal, Mr. Venkaiah
Naidu said that the State ``utilised Rs. 554 crores out of total
available funds of Rs. 816 crores during 1997-98, Rs. 546 crores
out of Rs. 850 crores during 1998-99 and Rs. 612 crores out of
Rs. 880 crores during 1999-2000.''
Here again, Bihar, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa,
Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, besides West Bengal, have fared
none too well giving room for serious doubts about the State
governments in question addressing the vast unmet needs of the
rural population.
What is striking about the data is that outlays on rural
development have been so meagre considering that in most of these
States, the rural population constitutes 70 per cent or more of
the total population.
Unless the States have other components of Plan expenditure
benefitting the rural population (and not included in the data
set out by the Minister), the impression is inescapable that
rural India has been thoughtlessly victimised in the name of
developmental planning (or what remains of it in the new
dispensation of liberalisation). In the name of fiscal
responsibility, are further inequities likely to be heaped on the
rural masses?
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