Railway Accounts

Railway Accounts

Key Information

ItemDetails
1. Financial year of Indian Railways1 April – 31 March
2. Budget presentation in ParliamentBy the Union Railway Minister (now merged with Union Budget)
3. Accounts compilation agencyComptroller & Auditor General of India (CAG)
4. Railway’s accounting systemAccrual-based Double-entry system
5. Fund for Pension disbursementRailway Pension Fund (managed by MoFinance)
6. Major revenue headTransportation Earnings (Goods + Passenger)
7. Accounting code for freight earnings3001-3999 series
8. Accounting code for passenger earnings1001-1999 series
9. Depreciation fund for track & bridgesDepreciation Reserve Fund (DRF)
10. Capital fund for safety worksRashtriya Rail Sanraksha Kosh (RRSK) – ₹20,000 cr annual corpus
11. Internal resource generation target14-16 % of annual Capital Outlay
12. Operating Ratio (OR) target (2025-26 BE)≤ 90 %
13. Highest revenue earning zoneCentral Railway
14. Earnings unit in accountsOne Unit = ₹ 1,000
15. Wagon Registration fee credited toOther Miscellaneous Receipts (OMR)
16. Dividend payable toConsolidated Fund of India (abolished 2016-17)
17. Railway’s own finance wingIndian Railway Finance Service (IRFS)
18. Costing unit for passenger farePassenger Kilometre (PKM)
19. Costing unit for freightNet Tonne Kilometre (NTKM)
20. Digital payment aggregator for IRCTCPaytm, Razorpay & SBI e-Pay

Important Points

  • Operating Ratio below 90 % is considered healthy for Railways.
  • Railway Budget was merged with Union Budget in 2017-18; separate Budget speech discontinued.
  • Rashtriya Rail Sanraksha Kosh (RRSK) is non-lapsable and exclusively for critical safety works.
  • Capital expenditure is met through Gross Budgetary Support (GBS), Internal Resources and Extra-Budgetary Resources (IRFC bonds).
  • Indian Railways does not allocate budget for Dividend anymore; practice stopped after 2016-17.
  • All earnings are credited to the Consolidated Fund of India and refunds are charged to the same fund.
  • Zero-based budgeting is adopted for Plan Heads 4000-4999 (works expenditure).
  • Accounting classification has 4 tiers – Major Head, Minor Head, Detailed Head and Object Head.
  • Freight Earnings are further sub-divided into Coal, Cement, Food-grains, Container etc.
  • Passenger Earnings are classified into Reserved, Unreserved, Suburban and Surcharge.
  • Outstanding dues of Railways are reflected under “Railway Receivables” in Finance Accounts.
  • E-rolls and PFMS (Public Financial Management System) are mandatory for all railway payments above ₹ 1 lakh.

Practice MCQs

Question:01 Which fund is created exclusively for Railway safety works?

A) Depreciation Reserve Fund
B) Railway Pension Fund
C) Rashtriya Rail Sanraksha Kosh
D) Development Fund

Show Answer

Correct Answer: C

Explanation: Rashtriya Rail Sanraksha Kosh (RRSK) is a dedicated non-lapsable fund set up in 2017-18 exclusively to finance critical safety works on Indian Railways.

Question:02 In which financial year was the separate Railway Budget merged with the Union Budget?

A) 2014-15

B) 2016-17

C) 2017-18

D) 2018-19

Show Answer

Correct Answer: C

Explanation: The Government of India discontinued the 92-year-old practice of a separate Railway Budget and merged it with the Union Budget starting from the financial year 2017-18.

Question:03 What is the accounting system followed by Indian Railways?

A) Cash-based single entry

B) Accrual-based double entry

C) Hybrid cash-cum-accrual

D) Government single entry

Show Answer

Correct Answer: B

Explanation: Indian Railways follows the accrual-based double-entry accounting system as mandated by the Ministry of Railways, ensuring comprehensive recording of all financial transactions with matching debits and credits.

Question:04 The Operating Ratio of Indian Railways is expressed as—

A) Revenue over Expenditure × 100
B) Expenditure over Revenue × 100
C) Net Revenue over Capital Outlay
D) Gross Traffic Receipts over Total Working Expenses

Show Answer

Correct Answer: B

Explanation: Operating Ratio = (Total Working Expenses ÷ Gross Traffic Receipts) × 100, i.e., Expenditure over Revenue × 100. A lower ratio indicates better financial health.

Question:05 Which of the following is the highest revenue-earning zone of Indian Railways?

A) Northern Railway

B) Western Railway

C) Central Railway

D) South Eastern Railway

Show Answer

Correct Answer: C

Explanation: Central Railway consistently tops Indian Railways’ earnings chart due to dense passenger traffic, high-frequency suburban services, and heavy freight movement on key routes like Mumbai–Pune and Mumbai–Nagpur.

Question:06 Freight earnings are accounted under which accounting code series?

A) 1001-1999

B) 2001-2999

C) 3001-3999

D) 4001-4999

Show Answer

Correct Answer: C

Explanation: In Indian Railways, the accounting code series 3001-3999 is specifically reserved for freight earnings.

Question:07 Who compiles the Finance & Appropriation Accounts of the Railways?

A) Railway Board
B) Ministry of Finance
C) CAG of India
D) NITI Aayog

Show Answer

Correct Answer: C

Explanation: The Comptroller & Auditor General (CAG) of India is constitutionally mandated to compile and audit the Finance & Appropriation Accounts of the Indian Railways.

Question:08 Dividend payment by Railways to GOI was discontinued from the FY—

A) 2014-15

B) 2015-16

C) 2016-17

D) 2018-19

Show Answer

Correct Answer: C

Explanation: The Indian Railways stopped paying dividend to the Government of India from the financial year 2016-17 onwards.

Question:09 The unit for freight costing is—

A) PKM

B) GTKM

C) NTKM

D) RKM

Show Answer

Correct Answer: C

Explanation: NTKM (Net Tonne Kilometre) is the standard unit used for freight costing in Indian Railways, representing the movement of one tonne of revenue-earning weight over one kilometre.

Question:10 Outstanding dues recoverable from customers are shown in accounts as—

A) Railway Payables

B) Railway Receivables

C) Sundry Creditors

D) Contingent Liability

Show Answer

Correct Answer: B

Explanation: Amounts owed to the railway by its customers are classified as Railway Receivables, a current asset on the balance sheet.