Govts
austerity plan to save Rs3,000 crore this fiscal
New Delhi: The Finance Ministry has drawn up a
detailed austerity plan through which it hopes to effect
expenditure savings to the tune of Rs.3,000 crore during
the current fiscal.
For
a start, it is targeting autonomous bodies' under
various Ministries, such as the University Grants Commission
, Port Trusts, the Council for Scientific and Industrial
Research , the Indian Council of Agricultural Research
and the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences.
According
to North Block officials, while funds released to individual
Ministries always lapse in the event of their not being
utilised during the course of a financial year, there
is no such check on autonomous bodies constituting the
second tier' of spending.
According
to Finance ministry officials, there are many cases of
Ministries releasing fresh funds to these bodies year
after year, despite substantial unutilised balances from
earlier years lying with them and parked as deposits with
banks. The Ministry has now asked all Ministries concerned
to complete a detailed review of all such cases by October
31 and, pending such a review, not to make further releases
in such cases. The responsibility of regulating releases
of funds in these cases has been vested with the Financial
Advisers.
Also,
it has been decided to review the existing system of providing
100 per cent deficit grants to autonomous bodies. For
those bodies that have the potential of raising resources,
it is proposed to reduce deficit grants in a graded manner
by 5 per cent in successive years.
The
other major austerity initiative mounted has been to undertake
a thorough review and evaluation of all ongoing programmes
and schemes, both Plan and non-Plan, to determine their
continued relevance. The whole exercise is to be completed
by the end of the current calendar year.
The
Finance Ministry has also mandated a 10 per cent cut in
the budgetary allocation for non-Plan, non-salary expenditure,
which includes overtime allowance and honorarium.
Specifically,
a 10 per cent reduction in the consumption and allocation
of funds for expenditure on petrol and travel has been
proposed, along with utmost economy' in use of staff
cars and other official vehicles.
The
Ministry has further imposed a ban of foreign travel for
study tours, seminars and workshops funded by the Government,
except for annual and other formal meeting of bilateral
or multilateral bodies. Such of official delegations,
where foreign travel is unavoidable, would be restricted
to the `bare minimum'.
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Indo-UAE non-oil trade touches $7.14
billion
Abu Dhabi: Indo-UAE non-oil trade has witnessed a jump
of 66.6 per cent to $7.14 billion in the 2003-2004 fiscal,
with Indian exports to the UAE alone accounting for a
53 per cent rise to $5.08 billion.
Among
Indian exports to the UAE that showed a big rise, were
gems and jewellery, textiles, electronic goods, transport
and equipment. Indian imports of UAE products, totalling
$2.06 billion, included precious and semi-precious stones,
gold, organic chemicals and goods.
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