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The people of Punjab showed immense belief in Captain Amarinder Singh-led Congress party as the party won 77 out of 117 seats.
But the new government in Punjab, which takes oath on 16 March, will face multiple challenges – slow economic growth, high youth unemployment, drug menace and low literacy rate.
Amarinder's election manifesto included getting rid of the drug problem in the first month of their government, but one needs to see how the Congress will come up with solutions to all the other problems of the state.
The drug menace was one of the most discussed issues during the election campaign this year. Singh has promised to get rid of the drug problem in a month, but can he deliver?
According to a study conducted by National Drugs Dependent Treatment Centre of AIIMS and an NGO in 2015,
But the numbers don't tell the entire story. The whole drug racket involves policemen and government authorities and getting to the bottom of it will be difficult.
According to Budget 2015-16, Punjab is under a debt of around Rs 1.25 lakh crore. This means that each person of the so-called rich province is under a debt of around Rs 38,000. The Budget also says that in the financial year 2015-16, Punjab paid Rs 9,900 crore in interest, which is one-fifth of the state's revenue.
But the proposed solution in the Congress' manifesto might end up drilling a bigger hole in its finances.
In Punjab, the unemployment rate among youth – the proportion of the labour force between 18 and 29 years that is unemployed – is 16.6 percent while the Indian average is 10.2 percent. Punjab also has India’s eighth-highest rural youth unemployment rate.
During the campaigning, the Congress itself said that the total number of unemployed people in Punjab is 75 lakh. It promised to provide ‘Ghar Ghar Rozgaar’, a job in every household.
The party also promised an unemployment allowance of Rs 2,500 per month to all unemployed, until jobs can be created. This would cost the government Rs 9,000 crore every year.
The rate of agriculture growth in the state declined over nine years, from 0.95 percent in 2005-06 to (-)3.4 percent in 2014-15, according to the Punjab government data, affecting 6.3 million people of the working population engaged in agriculture, according to the 2011 Census.
For higher agricultural growth, the Congress manifesto said it would continue to provide free power to farmers which will be worth Rs 6,000. This subsidy was there during the SAD-BJP government as well. In 2010, the then finance minister Manpreet Badal was against the subsidy and ended up leaving the coalition. Now, he is in the Congress. It will be interesting to see if Badal still resists the subsidy, in which case, Amarinder's promises can't be fulfilled.
Apart from the above-mentioned subsidies, the Congress has also promised free smartphones, free books for kids, free education for girls until PG and free housing for Dalit and other backward caste people with yearly income of less than Rs 5 lakh.
The Congress won 77 seats of the 117 total seat in the Assembly. However, he can make ministers out of only 15 percent of the total members. Which means, only 17 MLAs will have the a ministerial position.
The decision on Navjot Singh Sidhu is yet to be made and there are a few rebels in the Congress who supported the party on the condition of getting a ministerial position. Congress MLAs in Punjab are hungry for power because the party has come to power after 10 years. Captain will have a difficult time managing the ministers.
(This story was originally published in Quint Hindi.)
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