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Higher tax mop-up has 12 states in Rs 4,000-cr fiscal surplus in Q1

While tax revenues rose 17.1% non-tax revenues rose 19.5%

Higher tax mop-up has 12 states in Rs 4,000-cr fiscal surplus in Q1

There has been a 25 per cent increase in e-returns filed this year at 27.9 million

Press Trust of India Mumbai
Driven by higher tax revenues and a sharp fall in expenditure, combined revenue receipts of 12 states grew at a robust 17.6 per cent in the three months to June against 11.1 per cent a year ago, leaving them with a fiscal surplus of Rs 4,080 crore.

These states have, in fact, budgeted a fiscal deficit of whopping Rs 1,14,160 crore for the current fiscal year, says a report by the domestic rating agency Icra.

Also, with revenue growth outpacing revneue spending, these states showed an unaudited revenue surplus of Rs 43,430 crore in Q1 as against a combined revenue deficit of Rs 11,890 crore as budgeted for the year.
 

"Given the steep contraction in capital spending, these 12 states showed an aggregate fiscal surplus of Rs 4,080 crore, which is in sharp contrast to a combined fiscal deficit of Rs 1,14,160 crore budgeted for the year," says Icra chief economist Aditi Nayar in a note.

While tax revenues rose 17.1 per cent, almost double of 9.6 per cent in the June quarter, non-tax revenues rose 19.5 per cent against 17.3 per cent a year ago, taking the overall revenue receipts growth to a high of 17.6 per cent.

Tax revenue and non-tax revenue account for around 78 per cent and 22 per cent, respectively of incremental revenue during the reporting three months and their tax revenue alone expanded by a healthy 16.5 per cent.

The agency said the numbers are only of 12 states-- Chhattisgarh, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Maharashtra -- because unaudited numbers are available only from them, she says.

On the contrary, their combined revenue expenditure declined to 10.3 per cent from 15.9 per cent, but revenue spending stood at 17.3 per cent of the budget 2018 estimates, nearly in line with the trend last year.

Again, their capital outlay contracted by a whopping 19.3 per cent as against a whopping 51.9 per cent increase a year ago, which was partly due to the late presentation of the 2018 budget following the assembly polls in Punjab and UP.

Excluding UP and Punjab, capex of other 10 states plunged to 6.2 per cent from 45.9 per cent and so the report warns that the takeover of debt of the state discoms by states under the Uday scheme will weigh on capex this year.

Spending trends shown by these states are in sharp contrast to high growth rates of 25.8 per cent and 40.3 per cent, respectively, in Centre's revenue and capex.

Combined revenue receipts and revenue expenditure of these states comprised a sizable 57.4 per cent and 57.9 per cent, respectively of the total revenue receipts and revenue expenditure of all the 29 states in the budget estimates, suggesting that this subset may be fairly representative of the underlying fiscal trends.

States' revenue receipts are taxes--sales tax/VAT (the period of data is pre-GST), excise duty, stamp duty and registrations fees, and states' share in the Central taxes, and non-tax revenues include states' own non-tax revenues and grants from the Centre.

In Q1, tax revenues stood of Rs 2,33,800 crore and accounted for nearly 80 per cent of their total revenue which stood at Rs 2,93,930 crore, and the balance 20 per cent came in from non-tax sources and stood at Rs 60,130 crore.

Provisional data for these states reveals weakness in capital expenditure despite healthy revenue growth, which improved to a robust 17.6 per cent. The pace of expansion of their total tax revenues rose sharply to 17.1 per cent to Rs 2,33,800 crore from 9.6 per cent.

As per Controller General of Accounts' data, total Central tax devolution to all 29 states rose to Rs 1,44,550 crore from Rs 1,22,210 crore, and the pace of growth of the same more than doubled to 18.3 per cent from 8.9 per cent.

The aggregate inter se share of states in the sub-set, in the Central tax devolution is 55.8 per cent for the 14th Finance Commission's award period. Assuming that these states have received 55.8 per cent of the total tax devolution to the states in both these time periods, and Nayar estimates that the Central tax devolution to this sub-set rose to Rs 80,660 crore up from Rs 68,190 crore a year ago.

Also, total tax revenues, excluding Central tax devolution rose to Rs 1,53,150 crore from Rs 1,315,00 crore and based on this, thse states' own tax revenue growth rose by 16.5 per cent from 10.1 per cent.

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First Published: Sep 05 2017 | 11:38 PM IST

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