Capex loan releases to states cross Rs 40,000 crore

ALSO READExperts moot ‘sin tax’ of 40% on demerit goods

The officials expect capital expenditure (capex) loan disbursements to states to reach around Rs 75,000 crore by September.

Reforms linked to capex loans

Out of the target of Rs 1.5 lakh crore for FY26, the Centre has already issued guidelines and conditionalities for Rs 1.4 lakh crore.

The Centre has linked two-thirds of capex loans earmarked for FY26 to governance reforms, including building municipal cadres, finance reforms, such as an integrated property tax portal, and urban land and planning reforms. Other conditions include achieving own capex growth and undertaking certain urban and rural infrastructure projects.

The Scheme for Special Assistance to States for Capital Investment (SASCI) has evolved from an initial Rs 12,000 crore in 2020-21 (during Covid-19) to Rs 1,50,000 crore in 2024-25, making the SASCI into a policy lever that incentivises critical reforms across states. Of the Rs 1,49,484 crore capex loans released to the states in FY25, half of that was for reforms or project-linked as outlined in the scheme.

The target for FY26 would also be met, officials said, adding that the states are now well prepared to take advantage of the scheme.

Push for digital agriculture and financial efficiency

Even though the capex support scheme of the Centre has been running for six years in a row, the Centre, for the first time, allocated Rs 6,000 crore as an incentive to states for digital public infrastructure for agriculture, including farmers’ registry and digital crop survey. The states would have to adopt digital systems for the development and maintenance of the state’s farmers’ registry to the state’s land record system, and to digitise and standardise the crop enumeration process using the digital crop survey programme.

ALSO READEdible oil imports may decline by 5% in 2024-25: Industry

To encourage efficiency in financial management, an amount of Rs 6,000 crore has been allocated to incentivise the states for onboarding 29 centrally sponsored schemes in the SNA SPARSH platform for the ‘just-in-time’ release of funds mechanism to curb the floating of funds. The states would also be required to operationalise the Aadhar-based direct benefit transfer (DBT) payment mechanism with the RBI and NPCI under all DBT schemes.