### The Fiscal Reckoning on State Welfare
The fiscal health of Indian states faces mounting pressure from the rapidly expanding landscape of unconditional cash transfers (UCTs). A recent Economic Survey, tabled in Parliament on January 29, 2026, highlights significant financial risks associated with these programs, suggesting they may not foster sustainable economic outcomes. The Survey estimates that spending on these UCT schemes could burden state finances with approximately ₹1.7 lakh crore in the 2025-26 fiscal year. This projection comes as the number of states implementing such initiatives has surged more than fivefold between fiscal years 2022-23 and 2025-26. This expansion occurs even as nearly half of these states anticipate revenue deficits.
### The Core Catalyst: Unconditional Transfers' Strain
Unconditional cash transfers have become a significant fixture in Indian state welfare policies, offering immediate income support, particularly to women. However, their scale and persistence are straining state finances. The Survey indicates that these transfers can range from 0.19% to 1.25% of Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) and can account for as much as 8.26% of total state budgetary expenditure. This escalating commitment contributes to widening fiscal and revenue deficits. The combined gross fiscal deficit of states has climbed from 2.6% of GDP in 2021-22 to an estimated 3.2% by 2024-25, while revenue deficits have also expanded. This trend suggests states are increasingly borrowing to cover routine expenditures, pushing outstanding liabilities to about 28.1% of GDP in 2024-25. Approximately 62% of states' total revenue receipts in 2023-24 were already consumed by essential outlays like salaries and interest payments, thus squeezing capital expenditure vital for long-term growth.
### The Analytical Deep Dive: Outcomes and Alternatives
The Economic Survey argues that while UCTs provide short-term relief and boost consumption, they often fail to deliver durable gains in crucial areas like nutrition, education, or poverty reduction. Evidence cited suggests that without direct links to services or employment, these transfers offer temporary stabilization but not upward mobility. Furthermore, the Survey flags a concern that unconditional income support may reduce incentives for women to participate in the workforce, particularly when transfers form a dominant share of household income. The lack of conditions or exit mechanisms risks entrenching dependency rather than fostering self-sufficiency.
The Survey proposes a shift towards conditional, time-bound welfare programs, drawing lessons from international models. Brazil's Bolsa Familia is highlighted as a prime example. This program ties cash transfers to verifiable conditions such as school attendance and health check-ups, incorporating monitoring and exit pathways. Similarly, conditional cash transfer programs in Mexico (Progresa/Oportunidades) and the Philippines (Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program) have demonstrated measurable improvements in education and health outcomes while maintaining fiscal discipline. These conditionalities transform welfare spending into investments in human capital, promoting 'graduation' from welfare rather than permanent reliance. Unlike India's current UCTs, these international models incorporate accountability mechanisms, periodic reassessments, and defined exit strategies, ensuring welfare complements rather than substitutes for investments in skilling, nutrition, and infrastructure.
### The Future Outlook: Redesigning Welfare for Sustainability
The core recommendation from the Economic Survey is to redesign state-level freebie schemes. This involves incorporating clear conditions, time limits, and outcome-linked evaluations. Sunset clauses and periodic audits are crucial to prevent schemes from becoming permanent fiscal burdens. The Survey stresses that welfare must act as a complement to, not a substitute for, investments in human capital development and infrastructure creation. This approach aims to ensure that welfare spending contributes to long-term economic growth and fiscal sustainability, rather than merely providing short-term consumption boosts that strain public finances.