Himachal Pradesh presents Rs 3,586 crore smaller budget for 2026-27

Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu presented a Rs 54,928 crore budget for 2026-27 on Saturday, down Rs 3,586 crore from Rs 58,514 crore last year. He blamed the Centre's discontinuation of the revenue deficit grant, causing an average annual loss of Rs 8,105 crore. Salary deferrals for six months were announced for ministers, MLAs and senior officials to address financial strain.

Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu presented his fourth budget for 2026-27 on March 21, 2026, during the ongoing assembly session in Shimla. The outlay stands at Rs 54,928 crore, a Rs 3,586 crore reduction from Rs 58,514 crore in 2025-26—the first time the budget size has shrunk. Sukhu attributed this to the Centre's discontinuation of the revenue deficit grant (RDG) following the 16th Finance Commission's recommendations, resulting in an average annual loss of Rs 8,105 crore. The state received Rs 48,630 crore in RDG from 2020-21 to 2025-26, which he said should have risen to at least Rs 10,000 crore yearly adjusted for inflation and time value of money. Budget estimates project revenue receipts of Rs 40,361 crore against expenditure of Rs 46,938 crore, yielding a revenue deficit of Rs 6,577 crore. Revised estimates for 2025-26 show revenue at Rs 44,537 crore and expenditure at Rs 54,349 crore, with a deficit of Rs 9,812 crore. The state anticipates 8.3 per cent growth this fiscal, with per capita income at Rs 2,83,626. To tackle the crisis—blamed partly on prior government's mismanagement—Sukhu announced six-month salary deferrals: 50 per cent for the CM, 30 per cent for Dy CM and ministers, 20 per cent for MLAs and advisors, 30 per cent for Chief Secretary and Principal Secretaries, and 20 per cent for Secretaries and Heads of Departments. He criticised the opposition BJP for not raising the RDG issue with the Centre, stating, “History will never forget them.”

Related Articles

South African Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana presents the 2026 budget, highlighting debt stabilisation, social grants, and infrastructure investment.
Image generated by AI

South Africa unveils 2026 budget focusing on debt stabilisation

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana presented the 2026 National Budget on 25 February 2026, announcing debt stabilisation at 78.9% of GDP and the withdrawal of proposed tax increases. The budget allocates R292.8 billion for social grants with increases for recipients and commits R1.07 trillion to infrastructure over the medium term. Reforms aim to enhance economic growth and public service efficiency amid a projected 1.6% growth for 2026.

A Comptroller and Auditor General report tabled in the Telangana assembly highlighted the state's strained finances in 2024-25, including budget underutilisation, poor revenue collection and rising debt. The government spent only 80% of its projected revenue and capital expenditure budget.

Reported by AI

India's Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) has reported revenue arrears of ₹4,884.86 crore to the Bihar government as of March 31, 2023. Of this amount, ₹1,430.32 crore has been outstanding for more than five years. The report, tabled in the Bihar Legislature on February 26, 2026, also points to financial mismanagements across several departments.

Chile's Ministry of Hacienda sent a decree to the Comptroller General to cut $17.581 million from the Transient Emergency Fund for reconstruction after the Viña del Mar fires. The cut equals 3.5% of the $502.069 million budgeted for this year. It is part of a larger $150.379 million reduction in public treasury spending.

Reported by AI

Following initial controversy over education cuts outlined in Hacienda's April 21 memo, Chile's Treasury revealed the full scope: urging 22 ministries to eliminate 142 social programs and cut 260 others for $6 billion in savings in the 2027 budget. The proposal, tied to Finance Minister Jorge Quiroz's tax reform push emphasizing full employment as the ideal social policy, has drawn sharp criticism from scientists, unions, and opposition leaders.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline