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Public Expenditure Management: Objectives, Challenges and Reforms | UPSC Notes

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Public Expenditure Management: Objectives, Challenges and Reforms

Public Expenditure Management is the process through which the government plans, allocates, spends and monitors public resources to achieve economic and social objectives. In the post-liberalisation period, the role of the Indian state has become more complex. The government is expected to maintain fiscal discipline, support economic growth, build infrastructure, provide welfare, reduce inequality and respond to emerging challenges such as climate change, health crises and external shocks. Therefore, budget-making is no longer only about increasing expenditure; it is about ensuring that public money is spent in a disciplined, priority-based and outcome-oriented manner.

Main Objectives of Public Expenditure Management

  • Fiscal discipline – expenditure control 
  • Allocation of Resources –it must be consistent with policy priorities with focus on strategic allocation 
  • Operational Management – it must be good and efficient which must lead to minimising cost per unit of output. It will also improve effectiveness by achieving the desired outcomes.

Challenges to Public Expenditure Management

  • Challenges Related to Fiscal Discipline 
    • Fiscal discipline means keeping government expenditure under control so that fiscal deficit, public debt and interest burden remain manageable. 
    • High fiscal deficit pressure
      • The government has to spend on welfare, subsidies, infrastructure, defence, salaries and pensions. This creates pressure on the fiscal deficit, especially when revenue collection is not sufficient.
        • Rising committed expenditure
          • A large part of expenditure is already fixed in the form of interest payments, salaries, pensions, defence expenditure and subsidies. This reduces the freedom of the government to adjust expenditure according to changing priorities.
            • Subsidy burden
              • Food, fertiliser, petroleum-related and other subsidies put pressure on the budget. If subsidies are not well targeted, they increase expenditure without proportionate benefits.
            • Debt and interest payment burden
              • Higher borrowing increases public debt. In later years, a large amount of government revenue is used for interest payments, leaving less money for development expenditure.
        • Populist expenditure pressures
          • Loan waivers, free electricity, free water and other populist measures may increase expenditure without creating long-term productive assets. This weakens fiscal discipline.
    • Fiscal consolidation often achieved through expenditure compression — cutting capital investment rather than reforming revenue or subsidies
      • Result: fiscal deficit numbers improve on paper while productive public investment declines
    • Off-budget borrowings — through public sector enterprises, food corporation, fertilizer bonds — conceal true deficit 
    • FRBM targets have been repeatedly revised, suspended, or missed — undermining fiscal credibility 
  • Challenges Related to Allocation of Resources 
    • Allocation of resources means distributing public funds according to national priorities such as growth, welfare, equity, infrastructure and human development. 
      • Difficulty in balancing growth and welfare
        • The government has to spend on infrastructure, industry, defence and economic growth, but also on poverty reduction, health, education, nutrition and social security. Balancing both is a major challenge.
      • Revenue expenditure dominating capital expenditure
        • A large share of public expenditure goes into salaries, subsidies, pensions and routine administration. This leaves limited funds for capital expenditure on roads, railways, irrigation, hospitals, schools and other productive assets.
          • Revenue expenditure — salaries, pensions, subsidies, interest — dominates budgets
          • Capital expenditure — infrastructure, public investment — systematically crowded out
        • Recent capex push (2021 onwards) is positive — but structural revenue expenditure bias persists 
      • Regional imbalance
        • Public expenditure must reduce regional inequalities, but backward regions often receive inadequate investment or are unable to utilise funds effectively. This creates uneven development.
      • Competing sectoral demands
        • Different sectors such as agriculture, health, education, defence, infrastructure, environment and social welfare compete for limited budgetary resources. Prioritising among them becomes difficult.
          • India spends only 1.5–2% of GDP on health and ~3% on education — below comparable countries 
            • Yet outcomes are poor relative to even this low spending — ASER learning outcomes, health indicators 
            • Spending misallocated toward infrastructure rather than service delivery — buildings without teachers
          • Gender, tribal, and regional imbalances in social spending — allocations not reflecting need
          • Nutrition, sanitation, mental health — chronically underfunded despite developmental significance
          • Paradox: insufficient spending AND poor allocative efficiency within existing spending
      • Fragmentation and duplication of schemes
        • Too many schemes with overlapping objectives lead to scattered expenditure. This reduces the impact of public spending and makes resource allocation less strategic.
          • Each scheme has separate guidelines, reporting, and funding norms — administrative overload
          • States must match central funding — poorer states cannot match, better-off states benefit more
          • Government spending on too many things too thinly — violating allocative efficiency 
  • Challenges Related to Operational Management 
    • Operational management means ensuring that allocated funds are spent efficiently, economically and effectively to achieve desired outcomes. 
      • Underutilisation of funds
        • Many ministries and departments are unable to fully spend the funds allocated to them due to delays in approvals, tendering, land acquisition, clearances and weak administrative capacity.
      • Cost and time overruns
        • Infrastructure and development projects often face delays and cost escalation. This reduces the efficiency of expenditure because more money is spent for delayed benefits.
      • Leakages and poor last-mile delivery
        • Funds may not fully reach the intended beneficiaries due to corruption, ghost beneficiaries, duplication, weak monitoring and poor implementation.
      • Weak outcome orientation
        • Expenditure is often judged by how much money is spent, not by what results are achieved. For example, higher spending on education does not automatically ensure better learning outcomes.
      • Poor monitoring and evaluation
        • Many schemes lack strong real-time monitoring, social audit, third-party evaluation and corrective feedback. As a result, inefficient schemes continue without timely reform.
          • Expenditure is tracked; outcomes are not — a fundamental operational efficiency failure
          • Outcome Budget (2005) and Performance Budgeting — introduced but remain superficial exercises
          • No systematic program evaluation — ineffective schemes continue receiving funds
          • Third-party evaluation of government programs is rare and not linked to budget decisions
          • Real-time expenditure tracking — PFMS (Public Financial Management System) — improving but incomplete
          • Parliament scrutiny — PAC and Estimates Committee — is post-facto and inadequate for real-time correction
          • Zombie schemes — programs with demonstrably poor outcomes surviving indefinitely
      • Weak local-level capacity
        • Panchayats and urban local bodies often lack trained staff, technical capacity and planning ability. This affects the effective use of funds at the grassroots level.
      • Weak Implementation Capacity 
        • India’s administrative and implementation machinery is a binding constraint on expenditure efficiency
        • Understaffed and undertrained state and district level bureaucracy
        • Vacancy positions in key departments — health, education, agriculture — impair service delivery
        • Complicated procedural requirements — procurement rules, audit norms — slow spending
        • Risk aversion among bureaucrats — fear of CAG and vigilance scrutiny discourages decision-making
        • Large amounts of funds allocated but not utilized — particularly in poorer states
        • Absorptive capacity — the ability to productively spend allocated funds — is a major constraint

Way Forward

Fiscal Discipline 

  • The government should keep expenditure within sustainable limits so that fiscal deficit, public debt and interest burden remain manageable.However, fiscal discipline should not mean cutting essential welfare expenditure. The aim should be to reduce wasteful expenditure and improve the productivity of public spending.
    • Strengthening the Fiscal Rules Framework 
      • Establish an independent Fiscal Council — on lines of UK’s Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) — for objective fiscal assessment and FRBM compliance monitoring
      • Reform FRBM Act — make escape clauses time-bound and subject to parliamentary approval
      • Mandate automatic correction mechanisms — if deficit breaches target, pre-defined expenditure adjustments triggered
      • Develop medium-term fiscal consolidation roadmap — credible, independently monitored, binding on successive governments
      • Extend fiscal responsibility norms to states — stricter enforcement, not just advisory compliance
    • Subsidy Reform 
      • Universalize DBT for all major subsidies — food, fertilizer, power — eliminate in-kind delivery and associated leakage
      • Introduce income-based subsidy targeting 
      • Develop phased subsidy rationalization roadmap — politically managed, gradual, with social safeguards
      • Replace blanket power subsidies with targeted support — meter all connections, bill at cost, transfer subsidy directly
      • Introduce sunset clauses for all subsidy schemes — mandatory review before renewal
    • Managing Committed Expenditure 
      • Accelerate NPS coverage — prevent OPS reversion by states through Finance Commission disincentives
      • Develop actuarial estimates of pension liabilities — make true fiscal cost visible in budget documents
      • Right-size government employment through attrition — reduce salary burden without retrenchment
      • Implement interest payment reduction strategy — gradual debt consolidation, refinancing at lower rates
    • Fiscal Transparency 
      • Mandate comprehensive reporting of off-budget transactions — include in fiscal deficit calculation
      • Publish annual contingent liability statement — government guarantees, PSU losses, DISCOM debt
      • Implement accrual-based government accounting — replace cash accounting for true fiscal picture
      • Strengthen CAG mandate — concurrent audit of large expenditures, not just post-facto review

Strategic Allocation of Resources 

  • Reforming the Budget Preparation Process 
    • Introduce strategic budget priorities — Cabinet-level agreement on top 5–7 national priorities driving allocation
    • Develop sectoral expenditure strategies — health, education, infrastructure — with multi-year allocation commitments
    • Mandate independent pre-budget expenditure review — identify low-priority spending for reallocation
  • Rationalizing Centrally Sponsored Schemes 
    • Merge overlapping, eliminate ineffective
    • Allow states flexibility in scheme design — central framework with state adaptation
    • Reform counterpart funding norms — differentiated by state fiscal capacity
    • Introduce outcome-linked CSS funding — releases conditional on verified outcomes, not just expenditure
    • Devolve more untied funds to states — trust states to allocate based on local priorities
  • Protecting and Enhancing Capital Expenditure 
    • Capital expenditure should be given greater priority because it creates long-term assets, improves productive capacity and crowds in private investment.
    • Revenue expenditure such as subsidies, salaries and administrative costs should be rationalised wherever possible without affecting essential services.
      • Institutionalize minimum capex floor — constitutional or statutory guarantee of minimum public investment
      • Establish National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP) financing framework — assured multi-year funding
      • Ring-fence education and health capital expenditure — protect from fiscal consolidation cuts
      • Promote public-private partnerships for infrastructure — leverage private capital alongside public investment
  • Increasing Social Sector Allocations 
    • Commit to health expenditure of 2.5% of GDP — as per National Health Policy 2017 — with credible roadmap
    • Increase education spending to 6% of GDP — as recommended by NEP 2020
    • Develop nutrition-sensitive budgeting — track spending across departments affecting nutritional outcomes
    • Implement gender-responsive budgeting meaningfully — not just a statement but allocation audit
    • Introduce climate budget tagging — identify and protect climate-relevant expenditures

Operational Efficiency 

  • Strengthening Implementation Architecture
    • Fill critical vacancies in frontline service delivery departments — health workers, teachers, extension officers
    • Build state and district implementation capacity — training, systems, decision-making authority
    • Reduce procedural complexity in fund release — simplify General Financial Rules (GFRs) , procurement norms
    • Introduce single nodal agency for scheme implementation — eliminate multi-departmental confusion
    • Empower local bodies with funds, functions, and functionaries — genuine decentralization
  • Institutionalizing Outcome-Based Budgeting 
    • Budget allocations should be linked with measurable outcomes.
    • For example, education spending should be judged through learning outcomes, health spending through health indicators, and infrastructure spending through actual service delivery.
      • Make Outcome Budget a genuine accountability document — not a parallel exercise but integral to budget
      • Link fund releases to verified milestones — not just passage of time
      • Establish independent program evaluation units — within Finance Ministry and NITI Aayog
      • Introduce sunset clauses for all central schemes — mandatory evaluation before renewal
      • Publish annual expenditure performance report — outcomes achieved per rupee spent, department-wise
  • Improve monitoring and evaluation
    • Schemes and projects should be regularly monitored through real-time dashboards, social audits, third-party evaluation and performance audits.
    • This will help identify inefficient expenditure and allow timely correction.
  • Control cost and time overruns
    • Large infrastructure projects should have better project appraisal, timely clearances, realistic cost estimation and strict accountability.
    • This will prevent wastage of public money and improve operational efficiency.
  • Reduce leakages and improve delivery
    • Public Financial Management System, e-procurement, digital payments, geo-tagging of assets and direct transfers should be strengthened.
    • This will improve transparency, reduce corruption and ensure that expenditure reaches the intended beneficiaries.
  • Leveraging Technology for Efficiency 
    • Complete PFMS (Public Financial Management System) integration — real-time tracking of every rupee from treasury to beneficiary
    • Use AI and data analytics for expenditure monitoring — flag anomalies, predict under-utilization
    • Expand DBT coverage — remaining subsidies and welfare schemes
      • Develop JAM trinity (Jan Dhan-Aadhaar-Mobile) applications for all government transfers
    • Deploy drone and satellite monitoring for physical verification of infrastructure expenditure

Inflation control requires a balanced mix of monetary, fiscal, administrative and supply-side measures. While monetary policy controls excess demand and liquidity, fiscal policy ensures disciplined spending and rational taxation. Administrative measures help check hoarding, black marketing and sudden price spikes, whereas structural reforms in storage, logistics, agriculture and energy address the root causes of inflation. Thus, effective inflation management must protect price stability without hurting growth and vulnerable sections.

Sample Mains Questions

Q1. What is Public Expenditure Management? Explain its main objectives.
(150 words, 10 marks)

Q2. Fiscal discipline, strategic allocation and operational efficiency are the three pillars of Public Expenditure Management. Discuss.
(250 words, 15 marks)

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