mangalore today
name
name
name
Wednesday, May 15
Genesis Engineersnamename

 

Looking For Reform Success, PM Modi Readies Electricity Rescue Plan


Mangalore Today News Network

New Delhi, Sep 18, 2015:  The government is preparing a rescue package for power utilities that owe crores of rupees, but Prime Minister Narendra Modi must first convince states to make politically hard choices as he seeks a victory for reforms needed to galvanise the economy.

 

delhi-power.


PM Modi, who has had mixed success pushing through his reform agenda since coming to power 16 months ago, has prioritised tackling a problem that is stifling bank lending needed for a revival in Asia’s third largest economy, three senior government sources with direct knowledge of the plan said.

Problematic utility debts account for a quarter of all restructured bank loans in the country.

In total, utilities owe Rs. 4.35 lakh crore. The government has identified about Rs. 1.5 lakh crore of debt held by financially stretched utilities as most at risk, one of the sources said, adding to the urgency to relieve a banking system weighed down by bad loans.

Under the proposal, the Centre wants to persuade state governments to take over some of their utilities’ debt.

In return, the electricity distributors would commit to re-investing interest savings in new lines and metering, improving billing and cutting rampant power theft, the sources said, declining to be named because the plan is not public.

To make it work, the distributors are likely to come under pressure to raise electricity tariffs for consumers. One top power ministry official said the proposal was "very close" to being finalised and that states with the biggest problems agreed to back it.

"The states have a very clear incentive to do this. The interest cost comes down significantly," he said.
By forcing tougher action at state level to ensure electricity is paid for and supplies are reliable, PM Modi hopes to avoid a backlash in parliament, where the opposition has already blocked other economic reforms this year.

Fixing power would temper criticism that PM Modi’s government is not doing enough to improve the lives of common Indians, having made election campaign promises to replicate his success in Gujarat and deliver 24/7 power across India.

As chief minister, Mr Modi transformed Gujarat’s power sector by lowering debt and clamping down on theft. Many consumers agreed to pay higher prices in return for round the clock power.

Utilities in India’s other states remain largely unreformed.

Though the Centre is convinced more Indians are willing to pay for electricity if offered reliable supplies, sceptics say it will be hard to force states to make people pay, when it risks alienating important vote banks, like farmers.

"Unless you make fundamental decisions in terms of running these (distributors) based on commercial decisions, you are just postponing the problem," said Arvind Mahajan, who heads KPMG’s energy practice in India.

A three-year restructuring launched in 2012 offered a moratorium on capital repayment in return for reform but failed to end losses because local governments resisted hiking tariffs and cutting theft.

There may be other costs to bear, too. The government may have to relax limits on the size of states’ deficits if they are to take over distributors’ debts, putting pressure on the country’s consolidated fiscal position as the government tries to improve finances.

PM Modi has made devolving political power a key plank of his agenda, confident individual states will increasingly compete to reform by themselves. After failing to pass legislation to make land purchases easier, for example, the central government is encouraging states to enact their own rules.

Six states have agreed in principle to take over some of their power distributors’ debts, one of the government sources said. But some others are far from convinced.

The chief secretary of Uttar Pradesh Alok Ranjan, said taking on utilities’ 42,000 crore rupees of debt would reduce the state’s interest burden by five percentage points but more than double its borrowings.

"We will have to deliberate a lot before taking a final call," said Mr Ranjan.


Courtesy: NDTV 


Write Comment | E-Mail To a Friend | Facebook | Twitter | Print
Error:NULL
Write your Comments on this Article
Your Name
Native Place / Place of Residence
Your E-mail
Your Comment
You have characters left.
Security Validation
Enter the characters in the image above