ADB India Economic Bulletin June 2003 Volume I, Number 2
Asian Development Bank | June 2003
Abstract
A federation like India the responsibility of a large consolidated fiscal deficit amounting to 9.3% of GDP in FY2002 rests equally with the state governments. Controlling the fiscal situation of the central government thus addresses only a part of the problem. Fiscal responsibility at the subnational levels is generally achieved in two ways: an autonomous bottom-up approach where each state initiates fiscal reforms; and a top-down approach where each state is subject to an uniform set of rules to ensure a degree of fiscal discipline monitored by a central authority. In a federation like India where most states face large fiscal deficits, a coordinated approach under central surveillance may be the best way forward. Fiscal consolidation at the state level using such a top-down approach is being attempted through the Medium-Term Fiscal Reform Program for states, negotiated between the central government and several state governments. It features incentives for state fiscal reforms through performance-linked transfers from the central government.
Citation
Asian Development Bank. 2003. ADB India Economic Bulletin June 2003 Volume I, Number 2. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/6316.Keywords
Economic Development
Economic Infrastructure
Economic Policies
Regional Economic Development
Microfinance Programs
Public Finance
Local Financing
Financial Stability
Financial Sector Regulation
Macroeconomic
Macroeconomic Analysis
Macroeconomic Framework
Macroeconomic Models
Macroeconomic Performance
Macroeconomic Planning
Macroeconomic Policies
Macroeconomic Reform
Macroeconomic Stabilization
Enterprises
Financial aid
Economies in transition
Local Finance
Local Government
Insurance Companies
Banks
Social Equity
Social condition
Economic dependence
Economic assistance
International monetary relations
International monetary relations
International trade
National accounting
Market
Social responsibility of business
Accounting
Personal budgets
Cost and standard of living
Bank accounts
Credit control
Regulatory reform
Banks and banking
Exchange
Comparative economics
Index number
Monetary policy
Value analysis
Adjustment cost
Transaction cost
Conditionality
International relations
Show allCollapse