cover image: India’s Debt Dilemma - 1. Introduction I

India’s Debt Dilemma - 1. Introduction I

6 Jul 2024

Having averaged 60 percent of GDP in the 1980s, it rose to 70 percent in the 1990s and 80 percent in the 2000s. [...] Note: We use the shares of the Centre and States in total debt as weights to calculate weighted average maturity on the General Government outstanding stock, for Q3 2022-23, the shares are assumed to be the same as those for 2021-22. [...] Alternatively, the Office of the Comptroller and Auditor General and RBI have attempted to estimate contingent liabilities directly; as of March 2021, they put these at 2.5 percent of GDP for the Central Government and 3.7 percent of GDP for the States (Figure 15). [...] Similar results are obtained if instead of comparing the States which are below and above the median, we compare the values of these variables for the top one-third of the States for the increase in debt-to-GDP ratio with the bottom one-third of the States. [...] Debt reduction was 6.7 percent of GDP in the first episode, 16.9 percent in the second.23 The first episode followed a balance-of-payments crisis during which India signed up for an IMF program.24 The IMF loan was conditioned on fiscal consolidation designed to reduce the Central Government’s deficit from 8.5 percent of GDP in 1990-91 to 5 percent in 1992-93 (Chopra and Collyns 1995).
Pages
62
Published in
India

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