The Sunday Guardian

Generous grants will compensate Centre’s no to AP special status

The Centre may reimburse the state all the tax incentives it offers to prospectiv­e entreprene­urs for the next 10 years.

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The Centre may give an indirect special status to Andhra Pradesh by agreeing to reimburse the state for the tax incentives it offers to prospectiv­e entreprene­urs for the next 10 years. The entire amount will be adjusted through funding revenue deficit and special assistance schemes.

AP Chief Minister N. Chandrabab­u Naidu, who met Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Delhi on Tuesday, is said to have been given an assurance on this. After a scheduled meeting with the PM on the drought situation in AP, both leaders held a one-on-one meeting for 20 minutes in the PM’s office and discussed the political tension in the state following a series of statements by Union ministers refuting the grant of special status. However, the PM assured CM Naidu that he would explore how to extend special status privileges to the state, sources said.

On the political front, PM Modi told CM Naidu that allies BJP and TDP should “work together” and “walk together” on all issues including the special status demand, a senior MP close to Naidu told The Sunday Guardian. Naidu told the PM that he was under pressure from within his party to quit the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance as the Centre was not willing to grant special status. Naidu is learnt to have told the PM that the TDP won’t quit NDA, but some positive signals should come from the Centre.

Senior officials in Hyderabad, who spoke to this newspaper, said that the report of the 14th Finance Commission, which devolved greater funds to states, ruled out granting special status to any state in future.

Seen from the right perspectiv­e, this new approach would give greater freedom to states to offer whatever concession­s they want to their industrial­ists.

The promise for special category was made on the floor of the Rajya Sabha by former PM Manmohan Singh and was backed by BJP leaders Arun Jaitley and Venkaiah Naidu in February-March 2014, much before the submission of the report of the 14th Finance Commission.

Notably, special status does not find a mention in the AP Reorganiza­tion Act, 2014, and this is being used as the Centre to steer clear of the matter. The Centre has set up a special cell in the Home and Finance Ministries to fulfill all promises made to AP as per the Act. But as the statute is silent on the status, the Centre can do little about it, officials pointed out.

The public perception is that only a special status, which offers tax incentives to prospectiv­e industrial­ists for a decade, would be use- ful to AP. There were also allegation­s that Naidu has sacrificed the special status demand in order to get more funds from the Centre. Naidu denied the allegation­s.

Officials are now working out modalities to pass on the benefits of tax incentives to industrial­ists and entreprene­urs for the first 10 years through the state government. The tax incentives including 100% exemption of Central excise duty for the first 10 years, full exemption of income tax for the first five years and 30% and 25% for industries and other businesses respective­ly for the next five years.

The demands include a 15% subsidy on capital investment for new industries in plant and machinery with an upper cap of Rs 1 crore and the creation of a special fund of Rs 1,000 crore for training and skill developmen­t in the backward districts of Srikakulam, Vizianagar­am, Visakhapat­nam, Kurnool, Kadapa, Chittore and Anantapur for the next 10 years.

The state government is examining whether these sops can be passed on from its funds so that the Centre can reimburse it through funding the revenue deficit.

Sources said that a lot depends on the final report of the NITI Aayog which has been entrusted with finding ways to bail out AP from its financial crisis owing to its annual revenue deficit of around Rs 15,000 crore. An intense heat wave has gripped Maharashtr­a for almost a week now. Temperatur­es have soared to above 42 degrees Celsius in many places. Ten people have already lost their lives due to sun stroke. But the weather forecast says that there will hardly be any respite from the situation for the next few days.

Experts have said that local factors have added to the severity of the heat wave, and that the state is “paying the cost of developmen­t”.

The forecast of a delay in monsoon arrival has only worsened the situation. Though a depression in the Bay of Bengal has led to some respite in temperatur­es for the southern states, Maharashtr­a continues to sizzle.

This week, Akola recorded an average temperatur­e of

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