How India's Small Towns Live (or Die)
Making Sense of Muncipal Finances
Paromita Shastri
Making Sense of Muncipal Finances
About the Book
By 2040, over half of India's population will live in cities and towns. How many of them will live in slums? To prevent intense migration pressure on the handful of metros and state capitals and the resulting urban dehumanisation, policymakers must urgently focus on reviving India's small towns and big villages. Yet, most small town municipalities are in shambles; they lack resources, planning, data, maps, incentives and proper accounting. Corruption and power politics dog them, and citizens have no say or role in their running.
This book looks at the kaleidoscope of municipal finance issues in India, keeping the small towns at the core, and argues for a radical change in the constitution and working of these municipalities, with effective devolution of funds, functions, and functionaries from the state level. It contends that municipal bodies need to function independently and with real participation of citizens to be the force of change that gives birth to a new urban India.
About the Author(s) / Editor(s)
Paromita Shastri has been an economic journalist for 25 years and worked in senior editorial positions at
Business Standard in Kolkata and at The Economic Times, Outlook Magazine,
and Mint in New Delhi. As an independent writer editor now, she has written for various organisations,
among them IFPRI, The World Bank, the Planning Commission and the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation (MSSRF).
She is also a translator and child rights activist. She has written an exhaustive report, called “Blind Alley: Juvenile Justice in India”,
for HAQ: Centre for Child Rights, New Delhi, and is currently looking after their research work in child budgeting and education.
She has a post-graduate degree in economics as well as journalism from Kolkata.
Contents in Detail
List of Tables, Figures and Annexure
Foreword
Introduction
1. Will India Miss the Global Bus? Urbanisation and
its Demands on Local Bodies
2. A Constitutional Dependence: Local Bodies in Search
of Space in India's Fiscal Federalism
3. Devolving Neither Money Nor Power: The Role of SFCs
in Strengthening Urban Local Bodies
4. Handicapped by Birth: Weak Revenues and Fiscal
Dependence of Municipal Bodies
5. Neglecting Development: Spending
Woes of Municipal Bodies
6. Developing as Growth Engines: Urban Reform
and the Role of Municipal Bodies
7. Beyond the Fiscal Package: Local Governments
as Executive Stakeholders
References and Further Reading
Annexures
| Publisher | AF Press |
| Publication Date | 2011 |
| Number of Pages | 180 |
| ISBN |
9788171888344 |
Academic Foundation (AF), based in New Delhi, is India’s leading independent publisher of academic/scholarly books in Social Sciences, specialising in Economics—Development Economics and Indian Economy in particular, and allied subjects.
About the Book
By 2040, over half of India's population will live in cities and towns. How many of them will live in slums? To prevent intense migration pressure on the handful of metros and state capitals and the resulting urban dehumanisation, policymakers must urgently focus on reviving India's small towns and big villages. Yet, most small town municipalities are in shambles; they lack resources, planning, data, maps, incentives and proper accounting. Corruption and power politics dog them, and citizens have no say or role in their running.
This book looks at the kaleidoscope of municipal finance issues in India, keeping the small towns at the core, and argues for a radical change in the constitution and working of these municipalities, with effective devolution of funds, functions, and functionaries from the state level. It contends that municipal bodies need to function independently and with real participation of citizens to be the force of change that gives birth to a new urban India.
About the Author(s) / Editor(s)
Paromita Shastri has been an economic journalist for 25 years and worked in senior editorial positions at
Business Standard in Kolkata and at The Economic Times, Outlook Magazine,
and Mint in New Delhi. As an independent writer editor now, she has written for various organisations,
among them IFPRI, The World Bank, the Planning Commission and the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation (MSSRF).
She is also a translator and child rights activist. She has written an exhaustive report, called “Blind Alley: Juvenile Justice in India”,
for HAQ: Centre for Child Rights, New Delhi, and is currently looking after their research work in child budgeting and education.
She has a post-graduate degree in economics as well as journalism from Kolkata.
Contents in Detail
List of Tables, Figures and Annexure
Foreword
Introduction
1. Will India Miss the Global Bus? Urbanisation and
its Demands on Local Bodies
2. A Constitutional Dependence: Local Bodies in Search
of Space in India's Fiscal Federalism
3. Devolving Neither Money Nor Power: The Role of SFCs
in Strengthening Urban Local Bodies
4. Handicapped by Birth: Weak Revenues and Fiscal
Dependence of Municipal Bodies
5. Neglecting Development: Spending
Woes of Municipal Bodies
6. Developing as Growth Engines: Urban Reform
and the Role of Municipal Bodies
7. Beyond the Fiscal Package: Local Governments
as Executive Stakeholders
References and Further Reading
Annexures
| Publisher | AF Press |
| Publication Date | 2011 |
| Number of Pages | 180 |
| ISBN |
9788171888344 |
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How India's Small Towns Live (or Die)