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Explain how the Fiscal Health Index (FHI) can be used as a tool for assessing the fiscal performance of states in India. In what way would it encourage the states to adopt prudent and sustainable fiscal policies?

The Fiscal Health Index (FHI) initiative by NITI Aayog evaluates the fiscal health of eighteen major states through a composite index using data from the CAG, covering the Financial Year 2022-23.

FHI as a tool to assess fiscal performance of states

FHI uses uniform metrics-Tax Buoyancy, Debt-to-GSDP, Fiscal Deficit, Capex Share-allowing objective comparison across states.

Multi-dimensional Evaluation – Covers five pillars and reveal structural strengths and weakness

Measures states’ ability to mobilise resources through Own Tax Revenue (OTR) and Own Non-tax Revenue (ONTR). Eg – Higher OTR-to-GSDP ratio reflects stronger fiscal autonomy.

Measures Quality of Expenditure – FHI differentiates between capital expenditure and revenue expenditure. Eg – States like Gujarat and Karnataka show higher capex ratios.

Tracks Debt Sustainability – Assesses Debt-GSDP ratio, interest payment burden, and future liabilities. Eg – FHI flags high-debt states such as Punjab, Kerala, Rajasthan, and West Bengal.

Monitors Fiscal Deficit and Compliance with FRBM Limits – Shows whether states adhere to 3% fiscal deficit glide path.

Identifies Risk from Off-Budget Borrowings – Captures liabilities from power sector guarantees, state PSUs, and special purpose vehicles.

Highlights Best Practices – Eg- Top states-Odisha (67.8 score), Chhattisgarh, Goa-show strong non-tax revenue, low fiscal deficits, and high capital outlays

Role of FHI in Encouraging prudent and sustainable fiscal policies

Promotes Fiscal Discipline – Poor rankings push states to reduce deficits and unsustainable borrowing.

Incentivises Capital Spending – Encourages a shift from populist revenue expenditure towards productive capital outlay.

Supports Long-Term Planning – Aligns state finances with sustainable development goals and resilience-building.

Revenue Reforms-Stimulates states to improve tax buoyancy, and non-tax revenue mobilisation

Drives Structural Reforms like subsidy rationalization, reduction in revenue leakages etc.

Transparency & Accountability – Public scrutiny builds pressure on governments for fiscal prudence

Encourages Inter-State Competition – Rankings foster a competitive spirit to achieve stronger fiscal performance.

Strengthens Cooperative Federalism – Helps in Centre-State dialogue on shared fiscal risks and sustainability.

Boosts Investor Confidence – Strong fiscal performance signals creditworthiness, attracting investment.

Promotes Sustainable Borrowing Practices and enhances creditworthiness as better FHI improves a state’s credit rating.

Challenges

Data GapsCAG data of Financial Year 2022-23 used

Off-budget borrowings not fully captured in FHI.

Miss qualitative aspects such as governance quality, efficiency of welfare delivery etc.

Inter-State Structural Variations are not fully captured – Eg- Resource-rich states (Odisha, Chhattisgarh) naturally perform better in non-tax revenues

Competitive Populism reduces focus on fiscal discipline. Eg- farm loan waivers

Weak Enforcement – FHI rankings have no binding effect on policy behaviour.

By encouraging disciplined, sustainable, and quality spending, FHI can help realise the vision of Viksit Bharat@2047

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