Addressing the first meeting of NITI Aayog's Governing Council, comprising of state chief ministers, Modi said the country needs to move away from "one size fits all" schemes, and forge a better match between the schemes and the needs of the states.
He announced setting up a sub-group of state chief ministers to "study the 66 Centrally Sponsored Schemes and recommend which to continue, which to transfer to states, and which to cut down."
In the 11th Plan Period, the total provision for central scheme stood at over Rs 6.6 lakh crore, while the number of such schemes was reduced from 147 to 66 last year. At one point of time, there were as many as 360 such schemes, but their number has come down over a period of time.
Sources said government has plans to reduce the number of central schemes to 10 so that states could get more flexibility to incur expenditure on development works as per their requirement and not as per schemes designed by Centre.
Also Read
At present, states are allocated money under central schemes for various development works like roads, sanitation, education and other social welfare schemes by the Centre. States have to spend the money allocated as per guidelines.
The decision to set up the sub-group under the NITI Aayog was taken here during the meeting of the Government Council, chaired by Modi with all chief ministers on its board.
At today's meet, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister O Panneerselvam pitched for higher flow of funds from the Centre to the states and demanded flexibility in the design of the flagship programmes and limiting the state's share to 25 per cent for such schemes.