The missing aggregate
As a next step, we looked at the lesser known (compared to the IOC, BPCL, NTPC et al), 'state' owned public sector units. Mostly because they are unlisted they stay out of analyst view. But structured as they are, they stay out of public view too. Unless they are the power, transport and infrastructure utilities in which case they are in the public eye.
But that scrutiny does not extend to their balance sheets. And their cumulative condition has a direct bearing on the combined national deficit and of course a drain on the exchequer.
So let's look at how Maharashtra's 85 state PSUs are doing. Their combined revenue was Rs 40,873 crore (approximately $9 billion) and they represented just under 5 per cent of the state's GDP. Some 199,000 people worked in these enterprises which turned in a cumulative loss of Rs 1,360 crore ($302 million).
Accumulated losses are pegged at Rs 8,539 crore ($1.9 bn). Interestingly, of these 85 State PSUs, 23 are classified as non-working and three have been under liquidation for between 17 and 24 years.
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