NHAI's debt has increased seven-fold in the past five years.
Business
Standard : India’s path to economic recovery faces another
obstacle, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi asking the state road
builder to stop constructing highways after its debt ballooned almost
seven-fold over the past five years.
"National
Highways Authority of India totally logjammed with unplanned and
excessive expansion of roads," the prime minister’s office
wrote to NHAI in a letter dated August 17. "NHAI mandated to pay
several times the land cost; its construction costs also shooting up.
Road infrastructure has become financially unviable."
Modi’s
office proposed that NHAI
be transformed into a road-asset management company, according to the
letter obtained by Bloomberg, and the prime minister’s office asked
NHAI to reply within a week.
The
decision is a reversal from Modi’s first term, when his
administration was praised for its breakneck speed of highway
construction that helped make India one of the fastest-growing
economies
in the world. However this came with the burden of escalating
costs, leaving NHAI increasingly dependent on the government for
financial support at a time when Modi is looking to contain his
budget deficit.
Restricting
road-building risks imperiling Modi’s target to make India a $5
trillion economy as roads are necessary for socio-economic
development, said Vikash Kumar Sharda, a partner at Infranomics
Consulting LLP, who previously consulted for PWC India. “Road is
critical infrastructure, and putting breaks on it will not only
result in a slowdown of highway construction but also of other
sectors that are dependent on it.”
There’s
a strong co-relation between economic growth and investments in
infrastructure, with roads accounting for about 3.1% of gross value
added, Modi’s economic advisers said in a report this year. Data
due Friday will probably show India’s gross domestic product
expanded 5.7% in the quarter through June, the slowest pace in five
years.
Modi’s
office now wants NHAI to revert to a model used by his predecessor,
where NHAI would auction projects to developers. They’d construct
the roads, collect toll from users and then would transfer ownership
back to NHAI after an agreed period. Weak private sector
participation pushed Modi to scrap this practice and he permitted
NHAI to bear as much as 100% of the costs in certain road projects
that led to ballooning debt.
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