TVK govt releases white paper on Tamil Nadu's finances
CHENNAI, June 17 -- Tamil Nadu's finance minister N Marie Wilson, on Tuesday released a white paper on the state's finances -- a pre-poll promise by chief minister C Joseph Vijay that is part of an effort to highlight that the previous DMK government left the state's finances in a precarious position.
To be sure, Wilson said that there would be no new taxes.
According to the document, Tamil Nadu's outstanding debt almost doubled in five years from Rs.5.13 lakh crore in 2021-22 to Rs.10 lakh crore approximately in 2025-26; its interest payments rose from Rs.41,564 to Rs.67,050 crore in the same period; and the state's revenue deficit in 2025-26 was higher than Karnataka's and Maharashtra's, at Rs.78,324 crore; and the state's own tax revenue to GSDP ratio was only 5.45%; and committed expenditure has squeezed out capital expenditure.
"Today I lay open the financial books of the state of Tamil Nadu before you... This is an analytical framework built with complete transparency and entirely based on evidences." Wilson said.
"Every single number featured here has been extracted from verified documents - specifically from state government's budget documents, the Reserve Bank of India and the Comptroller and Auditor General. No political party can refute the data presented here as these are all officially audited records belonging to the State government," he said.
That said, the numbers do not suggest the situation has worsened. For instance, between 2021-22 and 2025-26, revenue deficit as a proportion of GSDP has stayed almost flat (2.25% and 2.22%), as had outstanding liabilities as a proportion of GSDP (28.7% and 28.3%). The state's growth has clearly helped offset the increase in spending and debt; Tamil Nadu's GSDP grew 10.83% in 2025-26, on the back of a 11.19% growth in 2024-25. In terms of size of economy, Tamil Nadu is India's second largest after Maharashtra, with a nominal GSDP of 35.29 lakh crore.
On the outlook, Wilson said the path to emerge from this severe crisis which is most powerful and simplest tool is 'administrative efficiency. "There is absolutely no need to raise even a single tax. By upgrading our administrative system, enhancing the performance efficiency of our employees, plugging revenue leakages and eradicating corruption, we can naturally increase the government's revenue," he said....
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