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New
Delhi, March 22
Suggestions
by Dr. Raja Chelliah former member of the Planning Commission.
to use proceeds from the disinterment in public enterprises
to "retire public debt" to reduce the interest
burden of the Government has found support from economists.
Most
of the economists, who respond to PTI questionnaire on
the Budget proposals, are of the view that while the effort
of the Finance Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, to reduce
market borrowing by Rs. 25,500 crore in 1992-93 was commendable,
this was not enough to bring down interest payments substantially
in the years to come.
Interest
payment in 1992-93 Budget estimates have escalated to
Rs 32,000 crore forming 45 per cent of total revenue expenditure
compared to Rs 27,250 crore in the revised estimates for
the current year of 41 per cent of revenue expenditure
for the year.
Revenue
deficit had, therefore, to be kept at the same level in
the Budget for 1992-93 as in |
the Budget estimates of the previous year Rs. 13.882 crore
against Rs 13.854 crore.
Dr.
Chelliah has said that it the fiscal deficit was cut to
five per cent of GDP, while revenue deficit continued
to be around 2.5 percent, it would lead to a drastic setback
to capital formation by the Government sector. He has.
therefore suggested unorthodox ways of reducing revenue
deficit.
Commending
Dr. Chelliah's suggestion, Dr. Charan D. Wadhava of the
Centre for policy Research, says " large increases
in interest payments are making Finance Minister's task
of reducing revenue deficit much more difficult every
year".
While
agreeing with D.R. Chelliah's suggestion to use part of
disinterment proceeds for retiring higher cost debt, the
says "simultaneously, there is an urgent need for
partially restructed PSUs to generate more internal revenue
to reply their existing higher cost debts as well as increase
the diffident payments to the Union Government".
Dr.
J. D. Agarwal of the Indian Institute of Finance, however,
disagrees with Dr. Chelliah describing his suggestion
as "ill-founded". |