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BRS looted and made TG to have heavy debts. Now Govt. resorting to sell lands


paaparao

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Thagubothodu motham sanka naakinchadu TG ni. left n right heavy borrowing chesadu. monthly 20000 Cr revenue vosthe andulo debt interest payments ke 14000 Cr velthondi. remaining 6000 Cr tho state ni naduputhunnaru. chivariki TG Govt selling lands in hyd to gather amounts. 

HCU university lo 400 acres ammuthunnaru ante naa heart shock thindi. i studies there. the university is so good. environment is peaceful with lot of lands. ipudu TG govt ammesthondi aa lands.

 

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Just now, Anta Assamey said:

Enni hundreds of crores ki ammutunaro...Kontava endi...tenor.gif?itemid=8412189

Konalante mundu asalu ammutunaro ledo telvali kada…lekapothey redfruit avutha…anduke confirming ..

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2 hours ago, paaparao said:

Thagubothodu motham sanka naakinchadu TG ni. left n right heavy borrowing chesadu. monthly 20000 Cr revenue vosthe andulo debt interest payments ke 14000 Cr velthondi. remaining 6000 Cr tho state ni naduputhunnaru. chivariki TG Govt selling lands in hyd to gather amounts. 

HCU university lo 400 acres ammuthunnaru ante naa heart shock thindi. i studies there. the university is so good. environment is peaceful with lot of lands. ipudu TG govt ammesthondi aa lands.

 

Educated ayi undi nuvvu kudha itla matladithae Eyla bro.. do you know the root cause of this?

I believe the current financial issues facing states like Telangana, Tamil Nadu, and Karnataka stem from a deeper governance challenge, where welfare schemes have become the central focus of political strategies, often at the expense of long-term economic planning and fiscal responsibility. While basic necessities such as water, electricity, and agriculture should undoubtedly remain a priority, it is the escalation of welfare promises that has led these states into a growing debt trap.
 

during KCR's tenure in Telangana, there was a competitive push from opposition parties offering increasingly larger welfare schemes, which led to KCR's government diverting funds meant for infrastructure development and essential services into populist welfare measures. This shift in priorities created short-term electoral gains but at the cost of long-term financial stability, as the state had to borrow heavily to fund these schemes, which ultimately deepens the debt burden. Covid also made situations worse.

The problem is not unique to Telangana but is a common issue across several South Indian states. Governments are under immense pressure to outdo each other with welfare promises, often without adequate plans to sustain them, leading to a vicious cycle of borrowing. I feel this emphasis on welfare as an electoral tool has shifted the focus away from effective governance, infrastructure development, and investments in sectors that could drive long-term growth and economic stability. For instance, Jagan Mohan Reddy’s approach in Andhra Pradesh, where he deprioritized essential sectors like water, electricity, infrastructure and agriculture while increasing welfare spending, reflects an attempt at a more imbalanced stretch approach, but even then people voted 41% and if he had not arrested Chandra Babu situation would have been different. Did people really care for capital, revenue, jobs and infrastructure. The answer is ‘NO’, they again favored who is giving them more welfare schemes instead.

To address this, I think it's crucial that voters start prioritizing good governance, long-term economic planning, and effective leadership over short-term welfare promises. Leaders should be elected based on their ability to deliver sustainable growth and solve structural issues, not just offer immediate financial relief. One potential solution could be introducing a cap on welfare spending, perhaps limiting it to 50% of a state’s revenue, rather than allowing it to dominate the state’s budget. Such a policy would ensure fiscal discipline, promote a more balanced allocation of resources, and shift the focus toward investments in infrastructure, education, and other critical sectors that can drive future growth and improve the state’s overall economic health.

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2 hours ago, paaparao said:

Thagubothodu motham sanka naakinchadu TG ni. left n right heavy borrowing chesadu. monthly 20000 Cr revenue vosthe andulo debt interest payments ke 14000 Cr velthondi. remaining 6000 Cr tho state ni naduputhunnaru. chivariki TG Govt selling lands in hyd to gather amounts. 

HCU university lo 400 acres ammuthunnaru ante naa heart shock thindi. i studies there. the university is so good. environment is peaceful with lot of lands. ipudu TG govt ammesthondi aa lands.

 

Is it part of 2300 acres of HCU? I don't think so. It comes under forest area I guess

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2 hours ago, paaparao said:

Thagubothodu motham sanka naakinchadu TG ni. left n right heavy borrowing chesadu. monthly 20000 Cr revenue vosthe andulo debt interest payments ke 14000 Cr velthondi. remaining 6000 Cr tho state ni naduputhunnaru. chivariki TG Govt selling lands in hyd to gather amounts. 

HCU university lo 400 acres ammuthunnaru ante naa heart shock thindi. i studies there. the university is so good. environment is peaceful with lot of lands. ipudu TG govt ammesthondi aa lands.

 

Read this bro. 
for 10’years BRS did 6 lakh crores debt, where as current government made 1.5 lakh crore in 14 months of governance. In my view both are incorrect.. there should be pulse check on this..

https://munsifdaily.com/telanganas-debt-mounts-to-1-52-lakh-crore/

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2 hours ago, paaparao said:

Thagubothodu motham sanka naakinchadu TG ni. left n right heavy borrowing chesadu. monthly 20000 Cr revenue vosthe andulo debt interest payments ke 14000 Cr velthondi. remaining 6000 Cr tho state ni naduputhunnaru. chivariki TG Govt selling lands in hyd to gather amounts. 

HCU university lo 400 acres ammuthunnaru ante naa heart shock thindi. i studies there. the university is so good. environment is peaceful with lot of lands. ipudu TG govt ammesthondi aa lands.

 

Hyd lo govt lands ammude better anna. Ledhante politicians kabza chesi minguthaaru. Monna oka video choosa, revenue records mottham marchesndru. Muslim woman okema fight chesthundhi high court lo. High court kooda em cheyyalekapthundhi aa documents choosi. Govt kindha aa lands unna..vaatini protect chesukovadaniki time and money bokka. Adhe ammesthe vaati meedha entho kontha taxes kindha govt ki revenue generate avuthundhi.

Ledhu ante..land records pakkaga undaali..repu revenue records thaarumaru chese scope lekunda.

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23 minutes ago, Undilaemanchikalam said:

Educated ayi undi nuvvu kudha itla matladithae Eyla bro.. do you know the root cause of this?

I believe the current financial issues facing states like Telangana, Tamil Nadu, and Karnataka stem from a deeper governance challenge, where welfare schemes have become the central focus of political strategies, often at the expense of long-term economic planning and fiscal responsibility. While basic necessities such as water, electricity, and agriculture should undoubtedly remain a priority, it is the escalation of welfare promises that has led these states into a growing debt trap.
 

during KCR's tenure in Telangana, there was a competitive push from opposition parties offering increasingly larger welfare schemes, which led to KCR's government diverting funds meant for infrastructure development and essential services into populist welfare measures. This shift in priorities created short-term electoral gains but at the cost of long-term financial stability, as the state had to borrow heavily to fund these schemes, which ultimately deepens the debt burden. Covid also made situations worse.

The problem is not unique to Telangana but is a common issue across several South Indian states. Governments are under immense pressure to outdo each other with welfare promises, often without adequate plans to sustain them, leading to a vicious cycle of borrowing. I feel this emphasis on welfare as an electoral tool has shifted the focus away from effective governance, infrastructure development, and investments in sectors that could drive long-term growth and economic stability. For instance, Jagan Mohan Reddy’s approach in Andhra Pradesh, where he deprioritized essential sectors like water, electricity, infrastructure and agriculture while increasing welfare spending, reflects an attempt at a more imbalanced stretch approach, but even then people voted 41% and if he had not arrested Chandra Babu situation would have been different. Did people really care for capital, revenue, jobs and infrastructure. The answer is ‘NO’, they again favored who is giving them more welfare schemes instead.

To address this, I think it's crucial that voters start prioritizing good governance, long-term economic planning, and effective leadership over short-term welfare promises. Leaders should be elected based on their ability to deliver sustainable growth and solve structural issues, not just offer immediate financial relief. One potential solution could be introducing a cap on welfare spending, perhaps limiting it to 50% of a state’s revenue, rather than allowing it to dominate the state’s budget. Such a policy would ensure fiscal discipline, promote a more balanced allocation of resources, and shift the focus toward investments in infrastructure, education, and other critical sectors that can drive future growth and improve the state’s overall economic health.

KCR gadu chala telivi ga chala debts and their payments ni 2024 jan ki push chesadu. anduke chala debts anni 6 lac crore varake kanabaduthayi.

but after Jan 2024, so many new debts came into picture and requires payments as interests.

even private companies ki isthanu anna subsidy payments kuda hold lo pettadu. see below demands MNC alcohol firms.

https://www.reuters.com/business/retail-consumer/global-alcohol-firms-demand-466-mln-indian-state-payments-row-sources-say-2025-01-09/?utm_source=chatgpt.com

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Telangana is currently paying around 45% of income just to pay debt related service payments such as restructured fees, ineterest payments and other holding fees. 

As of March 2024, Telangana's public debt has seen a significant increase since the state's formation in 2014. At that time, debt servicing accounted for just 4.1% of Telangana’s total income, but by 2023-24, this figure had surged to 40.9%, indicating a nearly tenfold rise in debt servicing over the decade.

The rapid escalation in debt has raised concerns about the state's financial stability, with some reports suggesting that interest payments now surpass the state's salary bill.

 

https://www.deccanchronicle.com/southern-states/telangana/tg-govt-faces-debt-crisis-interest-payments-surpass-salary-bill-1841020?utm_source=chatgpt.com

 

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