Fiscal Health Index 2026

Context:
NITI Aayog released the Fiscal Health Index (FHI) 2026, evaluating the fiscal performance of Indian states (FY 2023–24) and highlighting inter-state variations in financial stability.

Key Highlights:

  • About the Index
  • Developed by NITI Aayog to assess fiscal soundness of states.
  • Moves beyond deficit metrics to a multi-dimensional evaluation framework.
  • Core Pillars of Assessment
  • Quality of Expenditure – Focus on capital vs committed spending.
  • Revenue Mobilisation – Internal tax and non-tax generation.
  • Fiscal Prudence – Deficit control and FRBM compliance.
  • Debt Index – Size and burden of liabilities.
  • Debt Sustainability – Ability to service debt over time.
  • Rankings (2023–24)
  • Top Performers: Odisha (1st), Goa (2nd), Jharkhand (3rd), Gujarat (4th), Maharashtra (5th).
  • Bottom States: Punjab (18th), Andhra Pradesh (17th), West Bengal (16th), Kerala (15th).
  • Expanding Coverage
  • Includes North-Eastern and Himalayan states considering structural constraints.
  • Arunachal Pradesh leads among these states.
  • Fiscal Trends
  • Shift toward capital expenditure and social sector spending.
  • State finances account for ~1/3rd of India’s public debt β†’ critical for macro stability.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Fiscal Health Index (FHI):
    • Composite index by NITI Aayog.
    • Evaluates state-level fiscal performance.
  • FRBM Act (2003):
    • Aims to ensure fiscal discipline.
    • Sets limits on fiscal deficit and debt.
  • Fiscal Deficit:
    • Gap between government expenditure and revenue.
  • Committed Expenditure:
    • Includes salaries, pensions, interest payments.
  • GSDP (Gross State Domestic Product):
    • Measure of state-level economic output.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Importance of State Finances
  • States are key drivers of infrastructure, welfare, and development spending.
  • Fiscal stress impacts national macroeconomic stability.
  • Key Challenges Identified
  • High committed expenditure reduces fiscal flexibility.
  • Weak own-revenue mobilisation increases dependence on Centre.
  • FRBM breaches due to persistent deficits.
  • Rising interest burden crowds out development spending.
  • Geographic constraints increase costs in hill/NE states.
  • Structural Concerns
  • Subsidy-heavy policies distort fiscal priorities.
  • Informal economy limits tax base expansion.
  • Policy Implications
  • Need for fiscal discipline and efficient spending.
  • Importance of data-driven governance and benchmarking.
  • Way Forward
  • Broaden tax base and improve GST compliance.
  • Rationalize subsidies and committed expenditure.
  • Prioritize productive capital expenditure.
  • Adopt medium-term fiscal frameworks.
  • Enhance transparency and accountability using tools like FHI.

UPSC Relevance:

  • GS Paper 3: Indian economy, fiscal federalism, public finance.
  • GS Paper 2: Governance, role of NITI Aayog.

 

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