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Public Debt

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Article 292 of the Indian Constitution states that the Government of India can borrow amounts specified by the Parliament from time to time. Article 293 of the Indian Constitution mandates that the State Governments in India can borrow only from internal sources. Thus the Government of India incurs both external and internal debt, while State Governments incur only internal debt.

As per the recommendations of the 12th Finance Commission, access to external financing by the States for various projects is facilitated by the Central Government, which provides the sovereign guarantee for these borrowings. From April 1, 2005, all general category states borrow from multi-lateral and bilateral agencies ( World Bank, ADB etc.) on a back-to-back basis viz. the interest cost and the risk emanating from currency and exchange rate fluctuations are passed on to States. In the case of special category states ( North-eastern states, Himachal, Uttarakhand and J&K), external borrowings of state governments are given by the Union Government as 90 per cent loan and 10 per cent grant.

This note explains the coverage of the ‘Public Debt’ of the Central Government of India.

In India, total Central Government Liabilities constitutes the following three categories;

[i] Internal Debt.

[ii] External Debt.

[iii] Public Account Liabilities.


Public Debt in India includes only Internal and External Debt incurred by the Central Government. Internal Debt includes liabilities incurred by resident units in the Indian economy to other resident units, while External Debt includes liabilities incurred by residents to non-residents.

The major instruments covered under Internal Debt are as follows:

Analysis of India’s public debt is contained in quarterly reports published by the Ministry of Finance available in the link http://finmin.nic.in/reports/Public_Debt_Management.asp . Statistics and analysis related to public debt are also available at various publications of the Reserve Bank of India at http://www.rbi.org.in

The concept of ‘adjusted debt’ of Government was introduced in the status report titled Government Debt: Status and Road Ahead issued in November 2010. Adjusted debt indicates the debt amount after factoring in the impact of external debt at current change rate and netting out Market Stabilization Scheme and NSSF liabilities not used for financing Central Government deficit. While analyzing the general Government debt (consolidated debt for Central and State Governments), 14 days T-bills investment by States and Central loans to State Governments have also been netted out to avoid double accounting. However, this concept of adjusted debt is not reported in the quarterly reports.

The Government of India has been publishing a number of documents detailing overall debt position of the country, consolidated data relating to public debt, debt management strategies of Central Government Debt, etc. These publications include an Annual Government Debt Status Paper (since 2010), Debt Management Strategy document (2015) and Handbook of Statistics on Central Government Debt (since 2013). It has now been decided to consolidate all these publications into ‘Status Paper on Government Debt’ Report to bring complete Government Debt and its Management related information at one place. The first such report was released on 21 October 2016.

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