Advertisement
Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh are the other states which have been permitted to borrow the extra amount.
The government had in May decided to link grant of additional borrowing permission to states with reforms undertaken by them to facilitate ease of doing business.
The reforms stipulated in the category include completion of first assessment of ”District Level Business Reform Action Plan”.
Related Articles
Advertisement
“5 states have so far completed the stipulated reforms in the Ease of Doing Business. These states have been granted permission to mobilize additional financial resources to the tune of Rs 16,728 crore through open market borrowings,” the Ministry said in a statement.
To meet the extra fund requirements of states on account of COVID-19 pandemic, the Centre had in May decided to raise the borrowing limit of the states by 2 per cent of their Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP), over and above the 3 per cent limit set under the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act.
However, states were required to complete four specific reforms — implementation of ”One Nation, One Ration Card” system, ease of doing business reforms, urban local body/utility reforms and power sector reforms — by February 15, 2020 to get the benefits.
Such states would get the facility of additional borrowing equivalent to 0.25 per cent of their GSDP for completing each reform. Under this facility, additional borrowing of up to Rs 2.14 lakh crore is available to the states on completion of all the four reforms.
“So far 10 states have implemented the One Nation One Ration Card system, 5 states have done Ease of Doing Business reforms, and 2 states have done local body reforms,” the Ministry added.