Economic Policy, Governance, and the Political Economy of Redistribution: Evidence from West Bengal
Abstract
Economic
policy is conventionally understood as a technical instrument for managing
resources, stabilizing macroeconomic conditions, and promoting development.
However, in practice, it is deeply embedded in political processes and
institutional structures. This article examines the relationship between
economic policy and governance through the case of West Bengal. It argues that
the state’s fiscal trajectory reveals a structural shift from a developmental
framework toward a distributive, welfare-driven model shaped by electoral
incentives. Drawing on budgetary data, debt indicators, and employment trends,
the article demonstrates how the predominance of revenue expenditure, rising
debt burden, and limited capital formation constrain long-term growth. It
further contends that the expansion of welfare schemes, in the absence of
corresponding productive investment, may generate a politically mediated
redistributive regime associated with institutional pressures and weak
employment generation.
1.
Introduction: Economic Policy as a Political-Institutional Process
Economic
policy refers to a systematic set of objectives and guiding principles
formulated by the state to regulate, direct, and transform economic activity
within a given society. It addresses fundamental economic problems such as
scarcity, allocation of resources, income distribution, and macroeconomic
stabilization. Traditionally, economic policy operates through fiscal
instruments, monetary regulation, trade strategies, and welfare interventions.
However,
economic policy cannot be understood as a purely technical exercise. It is
inherently shaped by political structures, institutional capacities, and power
relations. Policy outcomes emerge through negotiation among competing
interests, mediated by electoral incentives, bureaucratic structures, and
ideological commitments. In democratic systems, responsiveness to public
demands often coexists with pressures for redistribution, while institutional
weaknesses may influence implementation outcomes.
This
political embeddedness becomes particularly significant in post-colonial
economies such as India, where economic policy has historically functioned as
an instrument of nation-building, structural transformation, and social justice.
2.
Methodology and Analytical Framework
This study
adopts a qualitative–quantitative political economy approach, combining
descriptive statistical analysis with institutional interpretation. The
empirical component is based on secondary data drawn from (i) Budget Estimates
(BE) and Revised Estimates (RE) of the Government of West Bengal, (ii) Reserve
Bank of India (RBI) State Finances reports, and (iii) Periodic Labour Force
Survey (PLFS) datasets.
The analysis proceeds in three steps:
1.
Fiscal
Structure Analysis
– examining trends in revenue and capital expenditure to identify structural
expenditure patterns;
2.
Comparative
Fiscal Assessment
– situating West Bengal’s debt indicators within an inter-state framework;
3.
Political
Economy Interpretation
– linking fiscal outcomes with governance structures, electoral incentives, and
institutional dynamics.
The study
is primarily descriptive and interpretive rather than econometric,
aiming to identify structural tendencies rather than establish causal
inference. This approach is consistent with broader political economy analyses
of fiscal policy in developing democracies.
3.
Economic Policy and Developmental Objectives in India
In
post-independence India, economic policy was closely tied to planning,
industrialization, and state-led development. Public investment in
infrastructure, heavy industry, and human development formed the core of the
developmental state model. Even in the post-liberalization period, the state
has continued to play a corrective role in addressing market failures and
ensuring inclusive growth.
However, a
persistent tension exists between growth-oriented investment and redistributive
welfare policies. Redistribution without corresponding expansion of productive
capacity may weaken long-term developmental sustainability—a concern
increasingly noted in recent policy discussions on fiscal strategy in India .
4.Fiscal Structure of West Bengal: Revenue Dominance and
Capital Constraints
Table 1: Composition of Expenditure in West Bengal
|
Year |
Revenue Expenditure (% of Total) |
Capital Expenditure (% of Total) |
|
2015-16 |
~86% |
~14% |
|
2018-19 |
~88% |
~12% |
|
2020-21 |
~90% |
~10% |
|
2022-23 |
~89% |
~11% |
|
2023-24 |
~88-89% |
~11-12% |
Source: Government of West Bengal (various
years)
The data reveal a persistent structural
bias toward revenue expenditure, which absorbs nearly 85–90 per cent of
total spending. Capital expenditure—critical for infrastructure and long-term
growth—remains limited
.Figure 1: Revenue vs Capital
Expenditure (Trend Representation)
Revenue (●): High
and stable (~86–90%)
Capital (○): Low and stagnant (~10–14%)
100% ┤
90% ┤ ●
● ● ●
80% ┤
●
70% ┤
60% ┤
50% ┤
40% ┤
30% ┤
20% ┤
○ ○ ○
○ ○
10% ┤
0% ┼────────────────────────────
2015 2018
2020 2022 2023
Interpretation:- The
widening gap between revenue and capital expenditure suggests a gradual shift
from a predominantly developmental orientation toward a more distribution-oriented
fiscal structure.
The data reveal a
persistent structural bias toward revenue expenditure, a pattern commonly
observed in sub-national fiscal systems where redistributive commitments
constrain capital formation (Pranab Bardhan
1998). Such tendencies are consistent with broader political economy arguments
that democratic governments often prioritize immediate consumption-oriented
spending over long-term investment (Joseph
Stiglitz 2012).
5.Debt
Burden and Fiscal Stress
Table 2: Debt-to-GSDP Ratio (Comparative)
|
State |
Debt-to-GSDP (%) |
|
West Bengal |
~38-40% |
|
Maharashtra |
~18-20% |
|
Gujarat |
~22-20% |
|
Tamil Nadu |
~26-28% |
|
Karnataka |
~25-27% |
Source: RBI (2023)
Figure 2: Debt Comparison (Visual
Representation)
West Bengal ████████████████████████████████████ 38–40%
Maharashtra ████████████████ 18–20%
Gujarat █████████████████████ 22–26%
Tamil Nadu ██████████████████████ 26–28%
Karnataka █████████████████████ 25–27%
West
Bengal’s relatively high debt burden constrains fiscal flexibility, increases
interest obligations, and reduces the scope for developmental investment. This
is argued by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (2012), can constrain
institutional capacity and long-term development by limiting policy
flexibility. Recent
policy debates in India emphasize the importance of maintaining fiscal space
and sustainability in the context of rising public debt levels.
6.Structure
of Public Expenditure: The “Committed Expenditure” Constraint
Table 3: Composition of Revenue
Expenditure
|
Category |
Share |
|
Salaries & Pension |
~35-40% |
|
Interest Payment |
~18-20% |
|
Subsidy & Welfare |
~25-30% |
|
Development (Residual) |
Minimal |
Figure 3: Expenditure Composition
Salaries & Pensions ██████████████████████████████
Interest Payments ████████████████
Subsidies & Welfare
██████████████████████
Developmental ██
This
reflects a high level of committed
expenditure, where pre-allocated obligations limit the fiscal space
available for capital formation and policy innovation.
7.Welfare Expansion and the Political Economy of
Redistribution
Table 4: Welfare vs Productive
Investment
|
Type |
Orientation |
Outcome |
|
Welfare Transfer |
Consumption |
Short-term Relief |
|
Capital Investment |
Production |
Limited Expansion |
|
Combined Outcome |
Redistribution |
Structural Imbalance |
West Bengal has significantly expanded welfare schemes such as cash
transfers and subsidies..The
expansion of welfare schemes may be interpreted within the framework of
politically mediated redistribution, where fiscal policy is shaped by electoral
incentives and institutional dynamics (Pranab
Bardhan 1998). This aligns with recent discussions on the political
economy of populism in India.
Conceptual
Framework
Fiscal
Populism
Fiscal
trends may be interpreted as indicative of a form of fiscally expansionary
distributive policy orientation, where expenditure prioritizes short-term
welfare gains alongside electoral responsiveness. Recent policy discussions
caution that excessive reliance on such strategies may constrain long-term
resilience and fiscal sustainability.
Politically
Mediated Redistribution
The
expansion of welfare schemes may also reflect elements of politically
mediated redistribution, where access to benefits is shaped by
administrative processes and governance structures. This produces a hybrid
regime combining welfare provisioning with electoral considerations, consistent
with broader analyses of populist political economy in India .
8.
Employment, Industrial Stagnation, and Informality
Table 5: Labour Market Indicators
|
Indicator |
West Bengal |
National Trend |
|
Unemployment |
~5-7% |
Comparable |
|
Manufacturing Share |
~12-14% |
Higher Elsewhere |
|
Informal Employment |
~80% + |
High |
|
Private Investment |
Low |
Higher in Leading State |
Source: MOSPI (PLFS)
Despite welfare expansion, the state has not experienced corresponding
growth in industrialization or formal employment. High informality and weak
investment flows indicate limited structural transformation.
9.
Governance, Institutional Integrity, and Policy Outcomes
Economic
policy outcomes are critically shaped by governance quality. Institutional
limitations, administrative discretion, and implementation challenges may
influence allocation efficiency and transparency.
When
access to welfare benefits becomes closely linked with political and
administrative processes, the universalistic character of economic policy may
be moderated. This contributes to a political economy in which redistribution
and governance structures are closely intertwined.
10.
Political Economy Implications
The evidence suggests a
transformation from a developmental state to a more distribution-oriented
state, characterized by:
·
Partial
decoupling of redistribution from production
·
Rising
fiscal pressure and debt dependence
·
Modest
industrial growth and employment generation
·
Increasing
reliance on state-mediated transfers
This generates a structural tension:
short-term consumption is supported, but long-term economic dynamism may remain
constrained.
10A. Robustness and Limitations
The findings of this study should be interpreted in light of certain limitations. First, the analysis relies on aggregate fiscal indicators, which may not fully capture intra-sectoral allocation efficiency. Second, the absence of econometric modelling limits causal inference. However, the consistency of trends across multiple data sources (Government Budgets, RBI reports, and PLFS datasets) enhances the robustness of the descriptive conclusions. Moreover, the study’s interpretive framework is grounded in established political economy literature, which strengthens its analytical validity.
11.
Conclusion
Economic
policy must be understood as a deeply political and institutional process
rather than a purely technical exercise. The experience of West Bengal
illustrates how fiscal priorities, governance structures, and electoral
incentives reshape policy outcomes.
For economic policy to function as
an effective instrument of development, it must balance:
·
Redistribution with production
·
Welfare with investment
·
Political responsiveness with
institutional integrity
Without
such balance, a sustained shift toward a distribution-heavy fiscal regime may
pose challenges for long-term growth, fiscal sustainability, and institutional
effectiveness.
12.Final Assessment
The
analysis demonstrates that economic policy in West Bengal reflects a complex
interaction between fiscal constraints, governance structures, and democratic
responsiveness. The persistence of revenue-dominated expenditure, rising debt
commitments, and modest capital formation suggests the emergence of a
structurally constrained fiscal regime.
Rather
than viewing this trajectory in purely normative terms, the findings highlight
an inherent tension within democratic political economy: the need to balance
immediate welfare provisioning with long-term developmental investment
(Acemoglu & Robinson 2012; Stiglitz 2012).
Sustainable
economic policy, therefore, requires a calibrated approach that integrates
redistribution with productive capacity expansion, strengthens institutional
delivery mechanisms, and preserves fiscal space for future growth.
References
(Updated – with Recent Additions)
Acemoglu, D and J Robinson (2012): Why
Nations Fail, Crown.
Bardhan, P (1998): The Political Economy of Development in India, OUP.
Government of West Bengal (various years): Budget Documents.
MOSPI (2023): Periodic Labour Force Survey, Government of India.
Reserve Bank of India (2023): State Finances: A Study of Budgets.
Stiglitz, J (2012): The Price of Inequality, W W Norton.
Recent Additions (2020–2024):
Chinoy, S Z, T Jain and D Sood
(2024): “Reimagining India’s Fiscal Architecture,” Indian Public Policy
Review
Tillin, L (2024): “The Political Economy of Populism in India,” ProMarket
Bery, S (2024): Remarks on fiscal populism and economic resilience
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