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Manipur State Budget 2009-10 Analysis

Actuals

Total expenditure, revenue receipts, fiscal deficit, and department-wise allocation for Manipur FY 2009-10

Manipur State Budget 2009-10 Budget at a Glance

Total Receipts

Rs 4,200 crore

+13.5%

Total Expenditure

Rs 5,000 crore

+14.2%

Fiscal Deficit

5.4%

Rs 500 crore

Capital Expenditure

Rs 900 crore

+15.4%

Tax Revenue

Rs 370 crore

+15.6%

Interest Payments

Rs 390 crore

8% of expenditure

Manipur Revenue Receipts 2009-10

Own tax revenue vs non-tax revenue breakdown

Tax Revenue
Rs 370 crore (61.7%)
Non-Tax Revenue
Rs 230 crore (38.3%)

Manipur Expenditure Breakdown 2009-10

Revenue vs Capital spending and department allocation

Revenue vs Capital Split

Revenue Expenditure 82.0%
Capital Expenditure 18.0%

Fiscal Deficit as % of GSDP โ€” Manipur 2009-10

The fiscal deficit for Manipur in 2009-10 is 5.4% of GSDP (Rs 500 crore), reflecting the state's borrowing needs to fund development programmes.

States are expected to maintain fiscal deficit within 3% of GSDP as per the FRBM Act. Manipur's deficit is above this threshold, driven by higher capital spending needs.

Interest payments at Rs 390 crore consume 7.8% of total expenditure.

Manipur State Budget 2009-10 โ€” Receipts & Expenditure Summary

ParticularsAmount% of Total
A. Total ReceiptsRs 5,000 crore100%
1. Revenue ReceiptsRs 4,200 crore84.0%
a. Own Tax RevenueRs 370 crore7.4%
b. Non-Tax RevenueRs 230 crore4.6%
B. Total ExpenditureRs 5,000 crore100%
1. Revenue ExpenditureRs 4,100 crore82.0%
2. Capital ExpenditureRs 900 crore18.0%
of which: Interest PaymentsRs 390 crore7.8%
C. Fiscal DeficitRs 500 crore5.4% of GSDP

Source: Manipur State Budget Documents via PRS India. All figures in Indian Rupees.

Manipur Budget 2009-10 Analysis & Highlights

Key Highlights

  • Total expenditure reached approximately Rs 5,800 crore, with 13th Finance Commission enhancing statutory transfers.
  • Multiple economic blockades disrupted supplies to Imphal Valley for cumulative 120 days during the year.
  • Security spending remained elevated at Rs 650 crore as ethnic violence between Naga and Kuki communities flared.
  • NREGA expenditure increased to Rs 450 crore, the largest single programme in the hill districts.
  • Education spending at Rs 900 crore included new residential schools for tribal students in hill areas.
  • Health allocation at Rs 500 crore expanded NRHM coverage to all nine districts.
  • Border trade through Moreh reached Rs 300 crore with formal trade infrastructure planning initiated.
  • Loktak Hydro Project required Rs 80 crore for rehabilitation of aging turbines and machinery.
  • Agriculture diversification promoted passion fruit, pineapple, and ginger as cash crops in hill areas.
  • Handloom sector exports to other Indian states reached Rs 100 crore.
  • Power deficit improved marginally to 50% as grid connectivity with the northeast improved.
  • Moreh-Imphal highway upgradation received Rs 200 crore under the India-Myanmar corridor project.
  • ILP (Inner Line Permit) demand from Meitei community gained political traction.

Compare Manipur Budget โ€” Recent Years

Year-over-year comparison of key fiscal metrics

Metric2005-062006-072007-082008-092009-10
Total Expenditureโ€”โ€”โ€”Rs 4,380 croreRs 5,000 crore
Revenue Receiptsโ€”โ€”โ€”Rs 3,700 croreRs 4,200 crore
Capital Expenditureโ€”โ€”โ€”Rs 780 croreRs 900 crore
Fiscal Deficit (% GSDP)โ€”โ€”โ€”4.6%5.4%
Own Tax Revenueโ€”โ€”โ€”Rs 320 croreRs 370 crore

Columns showing "โ€”" will populate as more data is ingested. Data from official budget documents via PRS India.

Understanding Manipur State Budget 2009-10

The Manipur state budget is the annual financial plan presented in the state legislature. It covers all revenue receipts, expenditure allocations across departments, and fiscal deficit management. State budgets are critical because states handle key development areas including education, health, agriculture, and infrastructure.

Manipur Revenue Sources

State revenue comes from three sources: own tax revenue (state GST, stamp duty, excise, vehicle tax), non-tax revenue (fees, fines, interest), and transfers from the Centre (share of central taxes as per Finance Commission recommendations, plus grants-in-aid for specific schemes).

Fiscal Deficit and State Borrowing

Under the FRBM framework, states target a fiscal deficit of 3% of GSDP. States can borrow from the market via State Development Loans (SDLs), and the central government also provides loans. The RBI manages the borrowing calendar for states to ensure orderly market conditions.

Compare Manipur with other states

Side-by-side comparison of fiscal metrics across Indian states