City
Epaper

Bengal's revenue behind national average: RBI study

By IANS | Updated: December 17, 2023 16:30 IST

Kolkata, Dec 17 West Bengal is behind the national average in terms of state’s own revenue or gross ...

Open in App

Kolkata, Dec 17 West Bengal is behind the national average in terms of state’s own revenue or gross state domestic product (GSDP) percentage, as per the recent findings of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on state finances.

Both in terms of state’s own tax revenue and the non-tax revenue, as per the RBI findings, West Bengal is behind the national average.

According to it, the percentage of state’s own tax revenue of the GSDP for West Bengal is just five per cent which is lower than the national average seven per cent.

The situation in case of non-tax revenue is more pathetic as regards West Bengal. As per the findings, the percentage of state’s non-tax revenue of the GSDP for West Bengal is just 0.4 per cent which is lower than the national average 1.2 per cent.

As per the RBI findings, the state government’s current spending for infrastructure development as a percentage of GSDP is just two per cent.

Economists are of the opinion that following this factor is fallout of the heavily state excise-dependent state’s own tax revenue structure in West Bengal. According to them, a healthy state’s own tax revenue component in any state is dependent much on big-ticket investment both in the manufacturing as well as the services sector.

This is exactly the area where West Bengal is lagging behind other major states and economists are of the opinion that the state’s internal policies as regards to land procurement and granting of special economic zone (SEZ) status, are mainly responsible for the drought in big ticket investment.

Economists feel, West Bengal government’s policy on “no state-role in land procurement for industry” is making the operators in manufacturing sectors averse towards making investment in the state. Considering the fragmented land-holding nature in West Bengal, it is virtually impossible for investors requiring huge plots of land at one-go for a project to interact with individual land-owners for the purpose of land purchase without any kind of state intervention in the process.

Similarly, economists say, it is the West Bengal government’s reluctance to grant fresh SEZ status in the state, that big ticket investers in the services sectoris ark shying away from investments.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalAndhra Pradesh Fire: Six Dead, Eight Injured in Massive Blaze at East Godavari Fireworks Unit

TechnologyNITI Aayog unveils roadmap on AI to empower 490 million informal workers

InternationalRajnath Singh arrives in Sydney to boost defence ties

HealthMadhya Pradesh cough syrup tragedy: Chhindwara CMHO removed amid public outrage

EntertainmentPooja Bhatt takes a trip down memory lane, shares a still from her movie "Tamanna"

International Realted Stories

InternationalChina's silent invasion: US Congress warns of China's illegal Indo-Pacific expansion

InternationalOutgoing French PM Lecornu underscores political will to pass budget

InternationalWorld Bank flags rising poverty levels in Pakistan

InternationalECP to hold Punjab local government elections in December 2025

InternationalIndia and Denmark solidify Green Strategic Partnership, accelerate clean energy transitions