HomeNewsOpinionTime to put railway finances on track

Time to put railway finances on track

The CAG report should serve as a cornerstone to clean up the books of Indian Railways

May 11, 2020 / 13:37 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

The country’s national auditor feels railway accounts are our of whack.

In its report on railway finances, tabled in Parliament on December 2, the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) has observed that the country’s biggest employer has recorded an operating ratio (OR) of 98.44 per cent in 2017-18, which is the worst in the last 10 years. For the uninitiated, the OR is the amount of money that the national transporter has to spend to earn each rupee. Obviously, lower the ratio, healthier are railway finances.

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While the CAG report pertains to 2017-18, observers feel, railway finances do not seem to have dramatically improved in recent times. It is therefore worthwhile to take a close look at the CAG report to find out what actually ails the railways’ bookkeeping.

In its report, the CAG had observed that the OR for 2017-18 would have actually topped the 100-per-cent-mark had it not been for the advance that the railways received from NTPC and IRCON. But for this money, Indian Railways would have ended up with a negative balance of Rs 5,676 crore instead of a surplus of Rs 1665.61 crore.