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Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu on Thursday presented the rail budget for the next fiscal year with passenger amenities in focus. The amenities range from ease of booking tickets and cancellations to actual travel comfort and cleanliness.
The minister possibly left the decision on fare and freight hikes to a later date, de-linking it from the budgetary exercise for the first time. The 68-minute speech mentioned the need for an independent watchdog for railways.
The minister also significantly enhanced the plan outlay for developmental projects to Rs. 1.21 lakh crore. “This year, our investment will be close to double of the average of previous years – a feat never achieved earlier,” he said while tabling the budget in the Lok Sabha.
A host of measures were also announced:
The quota of lower berths for senior citizens will be hiked by 50 percent to 120 seats per train, more stations will come under the special scheme for old and differently abled passengers, and a new train “Tejas” will be introduced.
But there have been some slips as well in terms of
improving the operating ratio that spells out how much of the revenue generated
is spent on day-to-day operations. Globally, a 75-80 percent or lower operating
ratio is seen as a healthy benchmark.
In the last budget, while Prabhu had targeted to bring the operating ratio down to 88.5 percent, or the lowest in nine years, from an unsustainable level of 93.6 percent in 2013-14 and 91.8 percent for 2014-15. But this has proved elusive.
He assured that the performance of Indian Railways will improve with the adoption of what he termed as three pillars of strategic thought process:
As per official data, India has the fourth largest railroad
network in the world with some 64,460 route km, after the US (224,792), Russia
(128,000) and China (112,00). Nearly 21,000 trains ply daily to ferry 23
million passengers and 3 million of freight.
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