Zato Sumi
President, National Peoples Youth Front Dimapur
The state have witnessed alarming fiscal condition particularly the persistent and worsening fiscal deficit .Lets logically observed the report of the past five years fiscal deficit ,which reflects serious lapses in financial management and raises critical questions about the state’s economic sustainability.
Over the last five years, Nagaland has consistently failed to maintain fiscal discipline as mandated under the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) framework. Instead of adhering to the prescribed limit of 3% of Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP), the state has repeatedly exceeded this threshold. The situation reached a critical point in 2024–25, when the fiscal deficit reportedly surged to an unprecedented level of over 8% of GSDP—more than double the permissible limit. Such a sharp rise is indicative of uncontrolled expenditure, weak financial planning, and lack of accountability.
This persistent deficit highlights the state’s overdependence on financial assistance from the Government of India. With a significant portion of revenue coming from central transfers, Nagaland has failed to develop a robust internal revenue system. The inability to strengthen state resources reflects a lack of vision and commitment toward achieving economic self-reliance.
Furthermore, a large share of government expenditure continues to be absorbed by non-productive commitments such as salaries, pensions, and interest payments. While these are necessary obligations, the disproportionate allocation leaves minimal scope for developmental initiatives, infrastructure growth, and employment generation. This imbalance is gradually pushing the state into a cycle of deficit without meaningful economic expansion.
Equally concerning is the absence of concrete fiscal reforms over the years. There has been little to no visible effort to improve tax administration, curb leakages, or enhance public expenditure efficiency. Instead, the state appears to rely increasingly on borrowings to bridge the gap, thereby escalating the overall debt burden and placing future generations at risk. The state’s inability to generate its own revenue is the root cause of its fiscal crisis. Nagaland’s own tax revenue remains pathetically low at approximately 5.5% of GSDP—the lowest among all Indian states. Over 85% of revenue comes from central transfers, leaving the state’s fiscal stability completely vulnerable .The recent attempt to bring down the fiscal deficit to 3% in the 2025–26 budget, while welcome, appears unrealistic without a clear and actionable roadmap. Fiscal correction cannot be achieved through projections alone; it requires decisive structural reforms, strict expenditure control, and improved revenue generation mechanisms.
The government must Undertake immediate and transparent fiscal reforms, Strengthen internal revenue generation systems. Rationalize non-essential expenditure, Ensure accountability and efficiency in public spending. Develop a long-term strategy for sustainable economic growth.
With the 16th Finance Commission discontinuing revenue deficit grants and shifting to performance-based incentives, the era of unconditional bailouts is ending. The Nagaland government must immediately enforce spending caps, aggressively pursue revenue mobilization, and root out corruption before the state faces an irrevocable financial collapse.