CORE Fiscal Baseline And Public Capital Outlay
Rajasthan State Budget 2023-24 is the immediate baseline for reading the infrastructure turn in the state, because it framed roads, drinking water, power, urban services and industrial areas as capital-heavy commitments. Rajasthan State Budget 2024-25 sharpened that baseline on 10 July 2024 by placing capital expenditure at Rs.44,216 crore, against Rs.26,646 crore in 2023-24, a 65.94 percent rise. The figure matters because infrastructure development in Rajasthan is not one scheme; it is a public-capital pipeline linking budget grants, externally aided projects, public enterprises and central-sector corridors. Rajasthan Economic Review 2024-25 then supplies the statistical frame: it records a schematic budget outlay of Rs.2,09,633.99 crore for 2024-25 and treats roads, power, irrigation, urban water, renewable energy and industries as linked development heads. The budget numbers also explain why district-level infrastructure in Rajasthan appears across several departments. Road works sit with Public Works and externally aided highway programmes, urban water and sewerage sit with Local Self Government and RUIDP, power transmission sits with energy companies and green-corridor projects, and industrial nodes are carried by RIICO, NICDC and state investment promotion agencies. The state’s geography makes this fiscal design necessary: Thar districts need water harvesting and solar transmission, the Jaipur-Alwar belt needs logistics and industrial land, the Hadoti and eastern districts need highway and canal connectivity, and western districts need refinery-linked industrial services. For that reason the 2024-25 capital outlay functions as a coordinating number for roads, metro, water, power, industrial corridors and refinery infrastructure rather than as a single department’s expenditure. It also distinguishes productive asset creation from routine revenue expenditure: a road bridge, transmission substation or sewerage trunk line changes the future service base, while salaries and subsidies mainly operate current services. Rajasthan’s fiscal documents therefore provide the first filter for infrastructure quality, because they show whether announcements are backed by capital heads, loan agreements and named executing agencies.
