Saturday, August 22, 2015

Why Andhra Pradesh needs Special Category Status..?

*** Information in this post is extracted from "Teaching and Research Associate, Gujarat National Law University, Gandhinagar" and http://planningcommission.gov.in/ website. ***

What is "Special Category Status" means..??

The decision to grant special category status to States lie with the National Development Council composed of the Prime Minister, Union Ministers, Chief Ministers and members of the Planning Commission, who guide and review the working of the Planning Commission. Initially, three states namely Assam, Nagaland and Jammu & Kashmir were accorded special category status and later on eight other states were also given special category status namely: Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Uttarakhand, Tripura, Himachal Pradesh, and Sikkim and thus the list is now increased to eleven. 

The bases on the basis of which NDC decides whether a State should be accorded special status or not includes: hilly and difficult terrain; low population density and or sizeable share of tribal population; strategic location along borders with neighboring countries; economic and infrastructure backwardness and non-viable nature of state finances. At the time of resource allocation by the centre to States, these special category States are at a beneficial position. After the Report of Fifth Finance Commission, a formula was fixed for the distribution of resources between the states. This formula was named after the then deputy Chairman of Planning Commission Dr. Gadgil Mukherjee. 

The Gadgil-Mukherjee Formula adopted by consensus in 1991 was made the basis for the distribution of tax revenue and grants during 8th Five Year Plan (1992-97) and has since been in use. Among states, the distribution of tax revenue and grants is determined through the formula accounting for population (25%), area (10%), fiscal capacity (47.5%) and fiscal discipline (17.5%). The Finance Commission and the Planning Commission are bodies entrusted with the work of transferring the resources from the Centre to the States. 

The Planning Commission allocates funds to states through central assistance for state plans. Central assistance can be broadly split into three components: Normal Central Assistance (NCA), Additional Central Assistance (ACA) and Special Central Assistance. Normal Central Assistance favours special category states and they get 30% of the total assistance while the other states share the remaining 70%. NCA is in the form of 90% as grants and 10% loans for special category states, while the ratio between grants and loans is 30:70 for other states. There is no fixed formula for Special Central Assistance and it depends on the basis of the state’s plan size and previous plan expenditures. Besides this, special category states enjoy concessions in excise and customs duties, income tax rates and corporate tax rates as determined by the government. 

The Planning Commission also allocates funds for ACA for the purpose of assistance for externally aided projects and other specific project. The Finance Commission is entrusted with the work of distribution of central tax revenues among states. The Finance Commission also recommends the principles governing non-plan grants and loans to states. In order to achieve the status of a special category state, a state has to project itself as socioeconomically or strategically vulnerable state however it is ironical that a number of states are demanding their names to be included in the list of special category states in order to exploit the numerous benefits conferred to states which are accorded this special status by NDC. 

Distribution of Central Plan Assistance: General and Special Category States


A major change happened when in the dispensation of plan assistance, plan loans were delinked from plan grants after the recommendations of the Twelfth Finance Commission. Since the implementation of delinking of plan loans from plan grants, a review of criteria on the basis of which grants are distribute across states has also become more relevant because the principles on which loans should be given and the principles on which grants should be given are entirely different. In particular, loans can be given based on capacity to utilize and service the loans efficiently while grants should be given based on needs.

Finance Commission Criteria and Plan Grant Criteria

One of the terms of reference to this Working Group has asked us to examine the case for adopting the Finance Commission resource allocation formula for the inter se allocation of plan grants. There is a major difference in the objectives that guide the formulation of resource transfers undertaken by the Finance commission and that by the Planning Commission although there is also a clear inter-connection between the two streams of resource transfer. In the case of Finance Commission, the objective is to make allocations such that fiscal capacities are equalized with a view to enabling the states to provide public services and merit services at equal standards to all citizens in the state provided that comparable tax effort is made by the states. In other words, differences in the service standards should be due largely to deficiency in own tax effort and not due to deficiency in fiscal capacity. In determining the interse shares, at any point of time fiscal capacity is taken to be given. Plan grants in combination with borrowed resources aim at the developmental effort of the state. The objective is to change the fiscal capacity itself. Plan grants therefore must aim at reducing the differences in fiscal capacity: larger transfers should be given to states with lower development levels. Since per capita incomes is generally taken as summary indicator of the level of development, it should be the main determinant in the case of plan grants: lower the per capita income higher the transfer. However, deficiency in development effort should not be rewarded. 

Gadgil-Mukherjee Formula: 

A Review The Planning Commission used to provide developmental grants to states as part of an overall assistance package. This package was determined as a composite of loans and grants. The relative ratios of loans and grants were different for the special category states as compared to the general category. For the general category states, assistance was 30 percent grant and 70 percent loan. For the special category states, 90 percent of assistance was given as grant and 10 percent as loan. The expenditure side of state budgets may be divided into four parts: non-plan revenue expenditure, plan revenue expenditure, plan capital expenditure, 26 and non-plan capital expenditure. The first and second components combined to give the revenue account of a state, which pertains to recurrent (revenue) expenditures. Plan assistance was meant for the second and third components taken together. In the initial stages, when plan assistance was conceived of in terms of an overall package, the expectation was that nearly 30 percent of the plan would actually be in the nature of recurrent expenditures and 70 percent would pertain to capital expenditures. In accordance with such an expectation, the grant to loan ratio in plan assistance was fixed as 30 and 70 percent of total plan assistance. It was expected that all capital expenditures would be met by borrowing and by surpluses on revenue account. As such no capital grants were envisaged for the general category of states in plan assistance. The position of the special category states was different in the sense that from the 90 percent that they were getting as grant, 30 percent could be allocated for the revenue component of the plan, and the balance of 60 percent could then emerge as a capital grant. In practice however the relative claim of recurrent expenditure continued to increase and has become on an average 60 percent of plan outlay in the case of general category states. Borrowing thus basically finances capital expenditure, in the general category states. In fact, it is not only that there are no capital grants, but also that a substantive part of current expenditures are also being financed by borrowing. The overall dispensation of (normal) plan assistance can be summarised according to special and General category states, and according to grants and loans as indicated in below table. Two other channels of plan assistance are additional central assistance (ACA) and external assistance. Both were given on the same terms and conditions as normal plan assistance prior to a change in the terms and conditions for transmission of external assistance. After the recommendations of the Twelfth Finance Commission, external assistance is passed on to the states, as additional central assistance on back to back basis that is, on the same terms and conditions as the original external assistance.



The Planning Commission allocates aggregate (normal) plan assistance among states under a set of criteria called the Gadgil-Mukherjee Formula. The original formula has been subjected to changes from time to time and the present version is referred to as the National Development Council (NDC) revised Gadgil-Mukherjee Formula. As noted, the GadgilMukherjee Formula works in two stages. First, 30 percent of total assistance money is earmarked for the special category states. This may be distributed among these states on the basis of their plan size and past plan expenditures, without using any explicit criteria. The remaining 70 percent are distributed among the general category states according to a set of criteria with relative weights. These criteria have been summarised in Table 4.2. A comparison can also be made between the alternative versions of the formula, as it has changed over time. The Planning Commission does not publish the actual shares of states either criteria-specific or aggregate as is done by the FC. The shares may change under each criterion, as more recent data on income, tax effort, etc., become available. However, as far as population is concerned, only 1971 population is used.


Notes: 1. Fiscal management is assessed as the difference between states’ own total plan resources estimated at the time of finalising Annual Plans and their actual performance, considering latest five years. 2. Under the criterion of the performance in respect of certain programmes of national priorities the approved formula covers four objectives, viz.: (i) population control; (ii) elimination of illiteracy; (iii) on-time completion of externally aided projects; and (iv) success in land reforms. 

The important elements in this formula relate to factors of population, deviation of income from mean income, distance of income from highest income, and other factors reflecting fiscal discipline and achievement of national objectives. Due to the very high weight given to the population factor, which allocates equal per capita shares to all states, dispensations under the Gadgil Formula are only mildly progressive. When the original Gadgil Formula for the distribution of central assistance for State Plans was approved by the National Development Council in September 1968, it was agreed that the requirements of Assam, Jammu & Kashmir and Nagaland should first be met out of the total pool of central assistance. For the three annual plans immediately preceding the application of Gadgil Formula, the share of Assam, Jammu & Kashmir, and Nagaland in total plan assistance was 9.26 percent. For the Fourth Plan (1969-74) when the Gadgil Formula was first applied, an amount was earmarked for these three states, but their share averaged to a little above 11 percent. For the Fifth Plan, the share of these states was a little 15 percent. For two annual plans (1978-80), the share of these states became a little more than 16 percent. When the Fifth Plan was formulated, this list was extended to include Himachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Sikkim and Tripura, making eight states in all. It is only since 1980 that the share of Special Category states was predetermined at 30 percent. In 1990, the number of special category states was increased to 10 with the inclusion of Arunachal Pradesh and Mizoram. 

The main weaknesses in the application of the Gadgil-Mukhjerjee Formula in its various mutations are summarised below: 
i. There is no explicit basis for a 30 percent earmarking for the Special Category states. 
ii. Shares determined on the basis of tax effort and fiscal discipline indexes are unscaled implying that if a large state like Maharashtra and a small state like Goa had the same tax effort ratio, they will get the same share regardless of their size. This would lead to a very large per capita share for Goa compared to that for Maharashtra, for example, for the same tax effort. 
iii. The link between plan schemes/projects and plan assistance has been lost, leading to a severing of a link between costs and benefits, and lack of effective project based monitoring; and 
iv. The 30:70 grant to loan ratio has long become irrelevant if the 30 percent grant ratio was meant to cover revenue expenditure on plans. 
v. There are no objective criteria for the distribution of 30 percent earmarked share among the special category states.

Why Andhra Pradesh Needs Special Category Status..?

Will continue in my next post..!!