
Ad hocism and political expediencies damage GHMC
The Hindu
Ad hocism and political expediencies damage GHMC
The general body and council meeting of the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation on February 20 passed the annual budget estimate of the corporation which stood at ₹7,937 crore. This is close to 19% jump from the revised budget estimates for 2023-24, and 27.5% higher than the original estimates for the year.
Another unmissable component of the latest budget estimate is the sum allocated for debt servicing. From the ₹450 crore allocations for interest and principal repayment for the year 2023-24, the amount under debt servicing has gone up to ₹1,012 crore in the revised estimates, which is a 125% jump. ₹₹₹
From the debt-free, surplus status in 2013-14 when the Telangana manifested as a separate State, the GHMC is now neck deep in debts, with the total borrowings over the past nine years crossing ₹6,300 crore. A major portion of the loans, over ₹4,250 crore, was availed for the Strategic Road Development Plan (SRDP), under which a total 42 structures were planned and executed/ are being executed at various locations across the city. Of these, 33 components, most of them flyovers and underpasses to circumvent the traffic gridlocks at junctions, have been completed and inaugurated.
Loans of close to ₹1,500 were availed for regular road maintenance, which was handed over partly to private agencies. It is pertinent to mention here that this is the first time ever that GHMC borrowed for road development and maintenance. Earlier, capital expenditure on traffic easing structures would be the State government’s responsibility.
The council, dominated by BRS corporators and supported by the friendly MIM members, kept mum about the heavy borrowings by the corporation and lack of financial support from the then State government. Though the BJP won considerable number of seats in 2020 elections, council meetings were repeatedly disrupted, and adjourned at the slightest provocation without any meaningful discussions till the recent Assembly elections.
The government is also the biggest defaulter of the GHMC, when it comes to non-payment of property tax, and devolution of assigned revenues such as Professional Tax, Motor Vehicle Tax, and others.
The corporation is now heavily banking on grants from the State government. Funding from the government to the tune of ₹1,200 crore each is shown under both Revenue receipts and Capital receipts, respectively under the heads of ‘compensation to GHMC for debt servicing’ and ‘capital grants from State government’.













