It said that the various flagship programmes and central
sector schemes along with more private sector
investments especially in agriculture, horticulture,
fisheries, animal husbandry and forestry will definitely
enhance production and the income of the people in
Tripura.
Tripura Deputy Chief Minister Jishnu Dev Varma, who
holds the finance, power and rural development
portfolios, said that the state is currently in a
comfortable position economically.
He said that the budget session of the Tripura
assembly will begin on March 17 and a growth
oriented budget for the 2022-23 fiscal year would be
tabled in the House.
"Our government (BJP govt) had begun in March 2018 with
a huge debt burden left by the previous Left government
but with efficient resource mobilisation and better tax
collection, the health of our economy is now much better
compared to four years ago," Dev Varma told IANS.
Writer and economist Sekhar Datta said that saddled with
a big debt burden and interest payment liability
exacerbated by reduced devolution from the Centre, the
Tripura government is planning to enforce a slew of cost
control measures to keep the finances of the government
steady.
He said: "As it is, the government had inherited a debt
burden of Rs 11,000 crores from the previous government
after coming to power in 2018 but over the past four
years the debt burden rose sharply up to Rs 17,000
crores till March last year and if anything, this has
risen further over the past year."
Datta told IANS: "Ahead of the budget session of the
state assembly a high level meeting to take stock of the
FRBM (Financial Responsibility and Budget Management)
was held earlier this week as per the central act of
2003 and an alarming picture emerged. What has rattled
the financial administration of the state is the fall in
devolution of central funds on grants-in-aid and even on
centrally sponsored schemes."
According to an action programme finalised in the recent
meeting, the state government will curb expenses on many
heads through specific measures, he said.
According to Datta they include austerity measures,
avoidance of land acquisition for projects, outsourcing
of service personnel should not be excessive, existing
manpower for the same job to be declared surplus,
mobilisation of extra-budgetary resources including off
budget borrowing, revenue generation areas would be
expanded.
Tripura University's (central varsity) Economics
Department head Professor Indraneel Bhowmik is very
optimistic about an improving economic situation in
Tripura in particular and in the country in general.
"As the GST collection was better in recent times in the
country, all the states including Tripura would be
benefited with this positive development. More
allocation in capital expenditure by the government
would boost growth," he told IANS.
Bhowmik, however, said that if the Russia-Ukraine
conflict continues instability would also persist. The
world economies will be affected including India.
Tripura University's Economics Department Professor Dr
Salim Shah said that prices of essential commodities
even in the rural areas have increased manifold leading
to harder living conditions for the common men.
"The unemployment rate increased hugely, economic
activities slowed down and there is no clinical symptoms
of better health for the economy during the Covid
pandemic crisis period," Shah told IANS.
He said that agriculture is the prime growth sector till
date, then electricity, gas and water supply, then
construction. Services and trade are in a poor state
till date.
"Growth rate of agriculture,forestry and fishing was
13.72 per cent in 2018-19 over 2017-18 and it has been
maintained in 2019-20 at 13.87. However, the rate
declined to 12.41 in 2020-21.
"The growth rate of secondary and industrial sector has
continuously declined during the last three years --
from 15.86 per cent in 2018-19 over 2017-18 to 13.96 per
cent in 2019-20 to only 8.57 per cent in 2020-21."
Shah said that for trade, hotels and restaurants,
growing sectors in Tripura in the recent past when the
state started getting importance as an international
business corridor, the growth picture is really gloomy
for the last 3 years -- with growth rates of 12.52 per
cent in 2018-19 to 11.13 per cent in 2019-20 to 5.10 in
2020-21.
The opposition Left parties however, blamed the state
government for the deteriorating Tripura economy through
bad governance and economic mismanagement.
The previous Left Front government's Finance Minister
and veteran CPI-M leader Badal Chowdhury said that the
BJP government as part of its economic mismanagement has
incurred huge expenses in the non-productive sectors.
"Tripura (during the Left regime) was first among the
few states in India that had enacted the FRBM. The Left
Front government was always careful in curbing wasteful
expenditure and had taken a series of measures to
generate revenue without burdening the people,"
Chowdhury told IANS.
An official document said that agriculture and allied
sectors have been playing a pivotal role in the Tripura
economy.
There has been a continuously declining relative share
of the industry and secondary sector over the years.
Relative share of the secondary sector to the state's
Net State Domestic Product (NSDP) has come down to 12.8
per cent from 24.1 per cent during the period from
2006-07 to 2015-16.
The composition and dynamics of the Gross State Domestic
Product (GSDP) also reveal the concern over employment
generation and accommodation of the educated youth in
gainful economic activities.
The adverse process of development of the state is well
reflected through the respective compound annual growth
rate of the various sectors -- 18.7 per cent for the
primary sector, 10.6 per cent for the tertiary sector
and 5.3 per cent only for the industrial sector during
2006-07 to 2015-16.
Source::: BUSINESS STANDARD,
dated 27/02/2022.