CM Revanth Orders Chasing Cell to Plug Revenue Leaks in Telangana
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Telangana announced on Wednesday, 1 July 2026 that Chief Minister Revanth Anumula has directed senior officials to sharpen focus on revenue mobilisation in line with the state budget, ordering the creation of a dedicated 'chasing cell' to plug leakages across departments and ensure continuous monitoring.
Context
The directives were issued at a high-level review meeting held at MCR HRD Institute, Hyderabad. The meeting was attended by Deputy Chief Minister Bhatti Mallu, ministers Uttam Kumar Reddy and Jupally Krishna Rao, Chief Secretary Sanjay Jaju, adviser K. Ramakrishna Rao, and other senior officials. CM Revanth used the session to issue several key directives on revenue enhancement to departmental heads.
Addressing officials, the Chief Minister stressed that the government's proposed budget must not be 'imaginary' (ūhājanitam), and that budget-making should be grounded entirely in realistic revenue projections. He made clear that negligence in revenue mobilisation and fund collection would no longer be tolerated.
Policy Backdrop
Indian states routinely conduct internal reviews to align departmental collections with annual budget estimates and curb leakages in own-tax revenue. Telangana, since its formation in 2014, has periodically targeted receipts from excise, mining, and urban local bodies to shore up fiscal health. The emphasis on a dedicated monitoring mechanism reflects standard public-finance practice across states grappling with revenue volatility.
CM Revanth specifically called for special attention on revenue mobilisation by the Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority (HMDA) and TGIIC (Telangana Industrial Infrastructure Corporation). He also directed that leakages in commercial taxes, excise, and mining departments be completely plugged.
Stakeholders and Impact
The directives affect a wide range of state departments — from commercial taxes and excise to mining and urban development bodies. Officials were told to improve departmental capacity to perform at the expected level and to prepare department-wise budgets aligned with completing pending projects and other works.
On infrastructure and capital projects, the CM instructed that land acquisition be treated as the top priority. He assured officials that the government is fully prepared to extend all necessary support to the concerned departments to achieve their targets.
What's Next
The immediate focus will be on the operationalisation of the proposed chasing cell and its effectiveness in monitoring monthly collection trends across commercial taxes, excise, and mining. How closely the next annual budget estimates align with actual revenue performance will be a key indicator of whether these directives translate into fiscal discipline on the ground.