Maharashtra clears Rs 61 crore for cooperative spinning mills despite Rs 3,396 crore pending dues in sector
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September 20, 2024 MUMBAI: The Maharashtra govt has decided to extend financial assistance worth almost Rs 61 crores to two cooperative spinning mills in Ahmednagar in keeping with its integrated textile policy . Another mill linked to rural development minister Girish Mahajan is in the queue for clearance, sources say.
ToI has learnt that the state cabinet cleared share capital assistance to the two spinning mills despite opposition from the state finance and planning departments.
They pointed out that 142 cooperative spinning mills owed the state Rs 3,396.5 crores in terms of share capital. The state had managed to retrieve only Rs 37 crores share capital dues from cooperative spinning mills till 31 March 2023, it pointed out.
In terms of total financial assistance from the state, including share capital and interest-free loans, the cooperative textile mills owe the state Rs 4,782 crores, data shows.
The two mills set to receive assistance are the Ashirwad cooperative spinning mill in Jalgaon’s Pachora taluka, the constituency of Shiv Sena MLA Kishor Dhansing Patil (Rs 32.4 crores), and the Pingala cooperative spinning mill in Ahmednagar’s Shevgaon taluka (Rs 28.3 crores).
The state’s integrated textile policy for 2023-28 aims to promote the sector, which is said to be the second-highest employment enabler in the state after agriculture. The state accounts for 10.4% of the country’s textile and apparel production. The textile policy divided the cooperative spinning mills into zones and declared the percentage of state share capital assistance per zone.
For 2024-25, the state has budgeted Rs 600 crores for financial assistance to cooperative spinning mills. The decision to provide financial assistance to the two mills was initially taken by the cabinet sub-committee for textiles and later by the state cabinet.
Both the state planning and finance departments opposed the state’s share capital assistance to the two cooperative textile mills mainly on the grounds of pending dues that lay unretrieved from the 142 mills assisted so far.
In addition, the state planning department had pointed out that there should be a distinction between non-merit subsidies and merit goods such as expenditure on health and education. It pointed out that high spend on subsidies results in less funding available for development spending, which impacts the state’s progress.
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