Fiscal Tremors

The state government recently released a white paper on fiscal management and it has opened a can of worms. Tamil Nadu remains one of India’s most prosperous and administratively capable states. Its record in education, healthcare, industrialisation and social welfare has long distinguished it from many of its peers. Beneath these strengths, fiscal pressures have been simmering and are now approaching a point where they could significantly constrain the state’s future choices.

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There is no immediate fiscal crisis, nor is Tamil Nadu in a position of financial distress. The larger question is whether future governments will be able to sustain today’s commitments while continuing to invest for tomorrow.

White Paper’s Warning
The paper identifies four interlinked challenges: rising debt, weakening revenue mobilisation, growing fixed expenditure commitments and mounting liabilities in public-sector enterprises. Together they point to a gradual narrowing of the state’s room for fiscal manoeuvre.

The state’s economy is projected to exceed Rs 35 lakh crore, placing Tamil Nadu among India’s largest sub-national economies. Yet outstanding liabilities are estimated to approach Rs 10 lakh crore by 2025-26. Debt, by itself, need not be a cause for concern if it finances productive investment and remains within manageable limits. However, when a growing share of government revenues is absorbed by fixed commitments such as interest payments, salaries and pensions, less remains available for infrastructure, capital formation and developmental expenditure. Over time, this reduces the flexibility available to future budgets.

Rising Silver Tide
A less visible challenge is the state’s demographic transition. Tamil Nadu is ageing faster and over the next decade, the proportion of elderly citizens relative to the working-age population will rise steadily. Unlike cyclical downturns, demographic ageing gradually reshapes public finances. It will increase demands for healthcare, pensions and social protection, while a slower-growing workforce could constrain revenue growth. Future budgets will have to operate within this demanding environment.

Burden of Hidden Liabilities
Another area of concern is the balance sheets of state-owned enterprises. The power sector alone carries debt and accumulated losses on a scale that rivals the capital budgets of several departments combined. Transport undertakings continue to depend on recurring financial support to bridge the gap between operating costs and revenues. The combined debt of the state’s power, transport and civil supplies sectors has reached Rs 3.18 lakh crore. These obligations may not always appear in headline debt figures, but they ultimately represent claims on public resources. Fiscal sustainability therefore depends not only on controlling expenditure but also on improving the operational efficiency, financial transparency and accountability of public sector entities.

Present Choices Shape the Future
The state continues to possess a diversified industrial base, a large services sector and a broad consumption market. Yet its own-tax revenue as a share of GSDP has weakened relative to some comparable states. Better compliance, data-driven enforcement, digitisation of revenue administration and reduction of leakages can yield substantial gains without imposing additional burdens on citizens or businesses.

Fiscal crises rarely emerge overnight. Tamil Nadu still possesses significant advantages, including a diversified economy, relatively strong institutions and a tradition of administrative innovation. The white paper has highlighted how demographic change, committed expenditure and public-sector liabilities interact with one another. The decisions taken today will determine how much freedom governments retain to invest, innovate and respond to the challenges of an ageing society.

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