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All new schemes need prior approval of Finance Ministry

Department of Expenditure has mandated that for all new schemes a concept paper should be prepared while seeking in-principle approval

Arun Jaitley
Arun Jaitley
Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Sep 05 2016 | 9:10 PM IST
In order to ensure efficient management of government money, the Finance Ministry has asked various ministries and departments to seek prior approval from it before initiating any new scheme.

In an office memorandum on 'appraisal and approval of public funded scheme and projects', Department of Expenditure has mandated that for all new schemes a concept paper should be prepared while seeking in-principle approval, holding stakeholder consultations, conducting pilot studies, etc.

It said that for projects or schemes involving cost of up to Rs 100 crore approval has to be sought from the secretary of the administrative department. For project cost between Rs 100-500 crore, the Minister will have to accord approval.

For those schemes/projects between Rs 500-Rs 1,000 crore, the projects have to be approved by the Minister in the administrative department and the Finance Minister. For those above Rs 1,000 crore, the clearance has to come from Cabinet.

The Expenditure Department said that over the years the Ministries have started operating small and multiple schemes which spread resources too thinly to realise any meaningful outcomes.

"...To ensure efficient management of public expenditure at all times, it is directed that henceforth no new scheme or sub-scheme will be initiated without the prior in-principle approval of the Department of Expenditure (DoE)," it said.

This will, however, not apply to the project announcements made in any Budget speech.

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In order to rationalise schemes, the government has brought down the number of central sector schemes to 300 and the number of centrally sponsored schemes to around 30.

The Finance Ministry has also asked the ministries and departments to merge, restructure or drop existing schemes that have become redundant or ineffective with the passage of time.

"The DoE reserves the right to merge, restructure or drop any existing scheme or sub-scheme in consultation with the administrative department concerned to enhance efficiency and improve economies of scale in the execution of government programmes," said the office memorandum.

It has also asked the ministries to prepare the statement of Budget estimates in accordance with the approved scheme architecture and any deviation would have to be earlier agreed by the expenditure department.

Stating that quality of scheme or project formulation is the key bottleneck leading to poor execution, the DoE said that for all new schemes a concept paper should be prepared while seeking in-principle approval.

"While submitting proposals of continuation of ongoing schemes, a careful rationalisation must be done through merger and dropping of redundant scheme," it said.

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First Published: Sep 05 2016 | 9:02 PM IST

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