Title: Urban Governance and Finance
1Urban Governance and Finance
2Urban Governance and Finance
- Introduction.
- Why is urban governance and finance a serious
issue? - What do we learn from fiscal federalism theories?
- Urban Governance in India.
- Expenditure assignment and financial management
un urban local bodies. - Financing Urban services Own revenues.
- Financing urban services Intergovernmental
transfers. - Financing Infrastructure spending.
- Concluding Remarks
3Introduction
- Need to study the issue of urban governance and
public service delivery for a number of reasons - Innovation is the key to prosperity and most
innovations occur in large cities due to
interaction and exchange of ideas. - Cities provide a critical mass to support high
degree of division of labour, knowledge, business
services, infrastructure, institutions and media.
- Globally competitive cities should provide a wide
range of services to attract human capital
transportation, water, sewers garbage collection
and disposal, police, fire protection, parks,
recreation and culture, affordable housing and
social assistance. - Enabling the cities to be sources of dynamism is
going to be the most important challenge. This
requires examination of their governance
structure and finance.
4Why Urban Governance and Finance is a Serious
Issue in India?
- There are 139 municipal corporations, 1595
municipalities and 2108 Nagar panchayats. 3 of
the 10 largest metropolises are in India (Mumbai,
Delhi and Kolkata). Over 330 million people live
in urban areas 35 cities have over a million
population Contributes over two-thirds of GDP.
- Demand for services is large and growing.
Resources inadequate Actual spending (1999-2004)
in 30 large cities was just about 24 per cent of
the requirements. Under-spending was over 75 in
17 municipal corporations. Under spending was
over 50 in all except three. - Poor coverage of urban amenities is recorded in
the draft 11th Plan document as well. -
5What do we learn from theories of fiscal
federalism?
- Clarity in assignments and assignments should be
according to comparative advantage Objective is
responsiveness and accountability Depends on
benefit span, diversity in demand, technology,
capacity of the jurisdiction. - Systems and institutions are necessary to
effectively deal with overlapping assignments. - Assigning responsibilities to different
functionaries Need to make the elected
executive responsible for decision making. Need
to separate the functions of the bureaucrat from
the executive. Importance of governance
systems. - Finances should follow functions. Wicksellian
link - Matching revenue expenditure decisions.
Local governments should have productive tax
handles.
6What do we learn from theories?
- Accountability requires that local services
should be paid for locally and services with
spillovers should receive matching transfers. - Intergovernmental transfers are inevitable even
as they soften the budget constraint. Need to
design them properly to avoid perverse
incentives. - Ensuring a common market is at the heart of
creating dynamism in fiscal federalism. Removal
of impediments to mobility in factors and
products and trade impediments to trade
Efficient factor (land, labour and capital) and
product markets including credit and debt
markets, institutional factors. - Hard budget constraint is critical for efficiency
and accountability This requires clarity in
assignments, avoidance of bail outs, avoidance of
transfer dependency development of markets
transparency in decision making.
7Governance Systems in India
- Four governance systems one tier, two tier,
voluntary cooperation and special purpose
districts. - Distinguish large from small metropolitan areas.
- Large metropolis convert them into city-states
to avoid restrictive protectionist policies
(restrictions on factor and product markets for
partisan reasons). Special capital districts
City States for large cities (Germany Berlin,
Munich and Frankfurt China Shanghai, Tianjin
and Chongqing). - Need to separate the roles of elected executive
(Mayor) from the administrative head
(Commissioner) need to make the officials
accountable to the elected municipal government.
- Municipal Commissioner should be appointed by the
municipal government (Expert Committee
Bangalore). Dual subordination does not work.
Political interference by State and Central
politicians. - Planning for local governments
- 243ZE MPC.
- 243ZD DPC
- Ward sabhas Not implemented in many states.
Planning Commission mandated DPCs based on the
recommendations of the Grassroots Planning
Committee. - 243S Ward Committees in municipalities with
more than 300000. - The Report on Grassroots Planning has made useful
recommendations. Need to Act on them.
8 Expenditure Assignments and Financial Management
- Assignment Issues
- Article 243 (W) devolves ULBs the powers.
- Twelfth Schedule lists 18 functions which are
either in the state or concurrent list to be
devolved at the discretion of the State
government. Concurrency and overlapping. - Omnibus list and one size fits all approach to
ULBs irrespective of the size. Still large
corporations have been assigned more functions. - Need for clear activity mapping exercises.
- States reluctance to transfer functions
- Independent service providers lack of
accountability. - Responsibility is looked at independently from
revenue sources. - Public Financial Management
- Comprehensive, comprehensible, verifiable,
participatory and transparent municipal budget
formulation, implementation and monitoring
systems. - Municipal control over revenues and expenditures
allocative autonomy. - Capacity and incentives to operative efficiently.
- Improving local finance information system
- The system of financial oversight.
- Dealing with mistakes in autonomous
municipalities.
9Municipal Revenues in India
- Reliable data are not available.
- Poor revenue collections 12th FC (2001-02)
Total revenue 0.67 GDP Own revenue 0.38 GDP.
(0.76 -NIPFP Own revenue 0.50 - tax 0.38
user charges 0.12). - (Brazil Revenue 7.4 Own revenue 2.6.)
- No separate tax schedule.
- Not surprising that there is large dependence on
states and public service delivery is abysmal. -
10Criteria for Tax Assignment
- Principles Local governments should have
revenue powers to finance public goods and levy
user charges to finance merit goods. - What is a local tax? Local governments should
have powers to levy, collect and appropriate. - Characteristics
- Tax Base should be relatively immobile
- Should be adequate and sufficiently buoyant
- Tax yield should be stable and predictable
- The tax should be borne by local residents
- If mobile bases are to be taxed it should be
according to benefits received. - It should to reasonably fair
- Relatively easy to administer.
11User Charges
- Local governments of all sizes should charge for
services (water, sewers, transit, recreation)
ignored in practice More important in large
metropolitan areas. - Charges should be according to marginal cost and
not average cost unless, there is a specific
objective.
12Some Commonly Assigned Taxes
- Residential Property Tax
- Appropriate because (i) real property is
immovable and (ii) there is a link between
services provided and value of property. - Non-residential property tax may be shifted to
non-residents - reduces accountability. - Relatively costly to administer
- Base - Capital value or rental value? Presumptive
tax Problem of administration periodic
valuation of properties - Patna model is recommended recent reform in
Bangalore has several desirable features. - Most property tax systems are antiquated. Low
revenue productivity poor incentives. Reforms
on the lines of BBMP could triple the revenues.
13Some Commonly Assigned taxes
- Income tax levied in 13 OECD countries
Piggybacking is the way forward. - Payroll taxes (Mexico and South Africa)
- Vehicle and Fuel taxes (Bahl and Linn) more
suited at regional level. - Sales Tax GST a separate surcharge. 1
additional rate could increase revenue by about
0.5 of GDP. - Business taxes distrotionary.
14Intergovernmental Transfers
- Own revenues hardly sufficient to finance local
public services. Unavoidable. - Unconditional grants Given to enable adequate
level of services at reasonable tax rates based
on capacities and needs. Most countries do not
have such equalization grants. - Specific purpose grants are given to finance the
portion of local public service spilling over the
boundaries. - In India, the system varies from place to place.
They are neither rational not adequate. - Functioning of State Finance Commissions leaves
much to be desired. Central finance commissions
have largely confined themselves to giving lip
service. - Central finance Commission grants 12th FC gave
Rs. 4500 Crore during 2005-10 (of which Rs.
475.46 was not drawn). (Grants to augment water
supply required covering 50 of maintenance
through user charges). - 13th FC Giving a share in central taxes of the
previous year varying from 1.5 to 2.5 . - Basic Grant 1.5 every year- Exclude special
areas ( Rs. 20 per capita) - all states eligible.
(population 50 area 10 Distance 20
Index of devolution 15 Sc/St pop 5) - Performance grant effective 2011-12 - 0.5 to 1
if they fulfil 9 conditions (i) (Supplement to
the budget document on for local bodies and PRI s
and urban local bodies should maintain accounts
(as suggested in the National Municipal Accounts
Manual). (ii) audit system for all local bodies
(iii) Ombudsman for local bodies (iv) Electronic
fund transfer to local bodies within 5 days of
receiving the money from the central government
(v) Specifying the qualifications of the members
of SFC (vi) enable local bodies to levy property
tax (vii) property tax board (viii) prescription
of standards of essential services for local
bodies (ix) fire hazard response and mitigation
plan for MCs with more than 1 million people.
15Specific Purpose Transfers JNNURM and UIDSSMT
- Financing pattern smaller cities - larger grant
component. - Reform component particularly those relating to
the freeing of land, labour and capital markets
in JNNURM needs to be emphasized. - Utilization rate is not encouraging Need to
provide publicity to create interest groups to
demand funds from JNURM.
16Financing Infrastructure
- JNNURM Important source of financing
infrastructure. - Services with nation-wide externalities should be
financed from the Centre. Prevention of
pollution to river water systems from the
untreated sewerage discharge from municipal
bodies on the banks of rivers. - Borrowing
- Is a good way to finance infrastructure.
However, municipal bond markets have hardly
developed in most developing countries. Even
where it is developed, State government
guarantees may be needed. - Latin American countries have faced difficulties
with imprudent borrowing. In the long run, it is
necessary to loosen the restrictions on the,
institute checks and balances and subject the
municipalities to market disciple. - Larger municipalities should be allowed to access
markets with sufficient safeguards. - Development Charges
- Development charges collected by the developers.
Growth should pay for itself can act as
marginal cost pricing. - What about renewal?
- Proceeds from the sale of land and housing
17Financing Infrastructure
- Public Private partnerships.
- Advantages No upfront spending by municipal
bodies greater efficient and implementation
capacity (lower unit costs) - Models
- Private sector invests and collects charges on it
over a specified time span. - Both make investments and acquire rights for
future income streams. - Examples in India
- Municipal solid waste management in Chennai
ONYX. - Water supply in Hubli Dharwar, Gulbarga and
Belgaum by Veolia Water.
18Concluding Remarks
- The issue of urban governance and finance are
paramount They determine how the cities can
accelerate the growth process as growth engines. - The issues are complex and we can not find a
solution for all systems. - Both governance and finance issues will differ
depending on different sizes of ULBs, different
regions of the country. What is important is
that broad principles should be kept in view in
reform efforts. - No one system of governance is universally
applicable. The problems is with implementation. - Need for clarity in functional assignment to
local bodies and functionaries. Need to keep
independent service providers with the overall
control of executive. - The paper explores several ways to augment
revenues at the local level. - Planning urban infrastructure and services
requires compilation of considerable information.
Karnataka is taking some lead in purring
together the GIS. This is useful not only for
planning but also to administer the taxes
effectively.