This study, entitled “Municipal Finance in India – An Assessment”,
undertaken for the Development Research Group (DRG), Reserve Bank of India examines
the performance of Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) in India. Using data from 35 Metropolitan
Municipal Corporations, the study attempts to analyze the reasons for their differential
performance with respect to fiscal parameters and provision of civic amenities.
In the light of the findings of the study and international experience in this
regard, the study makes suggestions for improving the municipal financial system
in India. 1. Local Self-Government Institutions or Local Bodies directly
influence the welfare of the people by providing civic, social and economic infrastructure
services and facilities in both urban and rural areas. Given their strategic position
in delivering services in the hierarchy of Government set up, following the Constitutional
(73rd & 74th) Amendment Acts, more functions, powers and resources have been
provided to them. However, over a period of time, the functions and responsibilities
of LBs have increased considerably without commensurate enhancement of their resource
base. 2. Constitutionally built-in imbalances in functions and finances
assigned to various levels of government eventually reflect in the high dependency
of local bodies on State Governments and the latter, in turn, on Central Government
for funds. Moreover, in the absence of financial support coming from the upper
tiers of Government, these bodies may have to resort to borrowings from financial
institutions and the capital market. Being responsible for the soundness and stability
of the financial sector and in view of the government sector tending towards financial
markets to meet fiscal gaps, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) sponsored this study
of finances of Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) in India. The key objective is to obtain
a holistic view on local government finances and factors affecting municipal fiscal
performance. 3. Urbanisation is an important ingredient of economic development.
The trend towards greater urbanisation is observed across the developing world.
Going by this trend, India is slated to have 50 per cent of its population living
in cities and towns in the next few decades, up from the current proportion of
about 30 per cent. Although India’s urban population has been growing, the
level and pace of urbanisation have been low in comparison with other developed
and developing countries. After liberalisation of the economy, India made strides
in economic growth; a large part of it has been through the contribution of urban
areas. 4. Globalisation has been resulting in further concentration of
economic activities in cities, in a manner that leads to cost reduction and increasing
competitiveness. Cities offer distinct advantages of economies of scale, scope
and agglomeration and returns to sharing of infrastructure and public services.
The rising economic importance of cities is evident from their contribution to
the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which is reportedly more than
50 per cent. Given the strategic importance of cities, provision of civic infrastructure
services has assumed critical importance socially, economically and politically.
While the expectations from the public are rising, the fragility of civic infrastructure
and services has been exposed during the floods in some of the major Indian cities
recently. 5. In the case of ULBs in India, the 74th Amendment to the
Constitution of India, 1992 identified enormous responsibilities for the urban
local governments. Besides the 18 items listed as municipal responsibilities in
the Twelfth Schedule of the Constitution, the Legislature of a State, by law,
can assign any tasks relating to: (i) the preparation of plans for economic development
and social justice; and (ii) the implementation of schemes as may be entrusted
to them. 6. For strengthening the finances of urban local governments,
two positive features were provided in the 73rd and 74th Amendments to the Constitution:
(a) provision for the constitution of State Finance Commissions (SFCs) every five
years (Article 243-I as per the 73rd Amendment) and (b) amendment of Article 280
of the Indian Constitution by inserting section 3(C) which requires the Central
Finance Commission (CFC) to suggest measures needed to augment the consolidated
fund of the states to supplement the resources of municipalities devolved on the
basis of the respective SFC recommendations. However, the progress in the implementation
of SFC recommendations in several states has not been very encouraging. The CFC
has also grappled in making recommendations of resource transfer to local governments
in states. However, in the absence of authentic data, successive CFCs have made
recommendations for the transfers of funds for local bodies on ad hoc basis.
7. With this background, the study attempts to take a view of the finances
of the 35 Municipal Corporations (MCs) of the metropolitan cities, with population
more than 1 million as per 2001 Census. The objectives of the study are as follow:
• To critically examine the provisions relating to revenues and expenditure
of municipalities and bring out the mismatch between their revenue authority and
expenditure responsibilities in the light of international as well as national
experiences. • To examine the trends in major revenue sources and
expenditures of municipalities and assess their fiscal position. •
Analyse performance of ULBs with respect to fiscal parameters and provision of
civic infrastructure. • Examine and identify major constraints
that could influence the overall performance of ULBs in the provision of civic
infrastructure. • To estimate and project the resource requirements
of the municipal sector in the country during the 10-year period from 2004-05
to 2013-14 and suggest measures for improving municipal financial system.
8. Aggregate revenue of all ULBs in India, is very low at around 0.75 per
cent of the country’s GDP. In contrast, the ratio is 4.5% for Poland, 5%
for Brazil and 6% for South Africa. As per the Twelfth Finance Commission report,
there are 3,723 ULBs, of which 109 are Municipal Corporations, 1,432 are Municipalities
and 2,182 are Nagar Panchayats. The total revenue of these ULBs grew from Rs.11,515
crore in 1998-99 to Rs.15,149 crore in 2001-02 at a compounded average growth
rate (CAGR) of 9.6 per cent. Their total expenditure increased from Rs 12,035
crore to Rs 15,914 crore during the same period, registering a CAGR of 9.8 per
cent.
9. The total revenue of ULBs has been growing at a lower rate (9.6
per cent during 1998-99 to 2001-02) than the growth of combined Central and State
Government revenues (10.8 per cent during 1998-99 to 2001-02). This has reflected
in a marginal decline in the share of municipal revenue in total government revenues
from 2.5 per cent in 1998-99 to 2.3 per cent in 2001-02. 10. Primary
data obtained from budget documents of 35 major MCs for the period 1999-2000 to
2003-04 reveal broad trends about the structure and composition of
their revenue and expenditure. Component-wise, tax revenue accounted for 45.2
per cent of its total own revenue, followed by non-tax revenue (28.7 per cent)
during 2000-04. Establishment and administration expenditure accounted for about
36 per cent of total expenditure during 2000-04. Expenditure on public works accounted
for about 44 per cent of the total expenditure, with that on roads and parks and
playgrounds accounting for about 19.5 per cent of the total expenditure.
11. Analysis of the revenues and expenditure of these MCs reveals that most MCs
are generating revenue surplus and overall resource gaps are not very large. At
the same time, it could be observed that spending by all the municipal bodies
is lower than that required for providing a minimum level of civic amenities.
This apparent contradiction of sound fiscal health and high level of under-spending
is due to statutory obligations, whereby ULBs are generally bound to restrict
their expenditure to the resources available and are also not granted liberal
permission by State Governments to incur debt. In view of the above factors, the
study has undertaken the assessment of municipal finance in “normative terms”,
besides the “standard approach” of revenue or fiscal balance.
12. A comparison of per capita spending on core services by the Metropolitan
MCs in terms of the Zakaria Committee norms indicates that the level of under-spending
on an average works out to be about 76 percent. The extent of under-spending varied
between 30.78 per cent in the case of Pune to 94.43 per cent in the case of Patna.
Significantly, MCs belonging to Bihar and Uttar Pradesh are the ones that have
highest level of under-spending whereas those belonging to Maharashtra and Gujarat
(the only states imposing Octroi) are among the best performers. Reasons for under-spending
are traced to MCs’ own operations (endogenous) as well as to policy issues
related to the upper tiers of Government (exogenous). Exogenous factors include
dependency for resources on the upper tiers of Government and inadequate delegation
of revenue-raising powers. Endogenous factors include inefficient revenue (tax)
administration, low cost recovery and poor quality of expenditure. 13.
The exogenous factors are essentially those factors over which the MCs do not
have any control. The delegation of revenue powers and grants (inter-governmental
transfers), which determine the resources of the local bodies, are the key exogenous
factors influencing the ability of the MC to spend and provide these services.
These factors can be captured in the form of ‘dependency ratio’ and
‘decentralization ratio’. Dependency ratio is defined as the share
of grants a MC receives in relation to its total expenditure. Decentralisation
ratio refers to the proportion of the MC’s per capita revenue to State per
capita revenue receipt. 14. Decentralisation increases efficiency of
the lower levels of Government in the provision of various local services due
to their limited jurisdiction and better matching of resources, services and preferences.
An increase in decentralisation is expected to delegate more powers to local government
authorities and augment their capacity to mobilise resources. Dependency of local
government on the upper tiers of Government arises from the support extended to
them in the form of grants, which arise largely out of vertical mismatches between
functions and finance, as well as out of the compulsions necessitated by horizontal
disparities between different jurisdictions. However, greater dependency on the
upper tiers renders the local governments vulnerable regarding spending on the
provision of basic infrastructure and services. This adversely affects the performance
of the local governments. 15. Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient
between underspending and dependency ratio in respect of the MCs works out to
0.61, statistically significant at 1 per cent level of significance. Further,
the rank correlation between under-spending and revenue decentralization works
out to be - 0.81 and has a desired negative sign. It is highly significant at
1 per cent level of significance. Thus, lower decentralisation or higher
dependency leads to higher underspending. 16. Efficiency in revenue administration,
reflected by per capita own revenue as a proportion to per capita GSDP, improves
the availability of resources with a MC and lowers the under-spending. Rank correlation
among the two parameters works out to -0.913, which is statistically significant
at 1 per cent level. 17. There is a very weak link between under-spending
and cost recovery. Interestingly, MCs such as Mumbai, Surat and Pune, which are
among the best performers in terms of other financial parameters, have below average
user charges. On an average, the cost recovery is below 1/4th of the expenditure
incurred by the MCs. Considering the opportunities to adopt the benefit principle,
there is a large scope for improvement in levying local user charges.
18. Quality of expenditure, measured as establishment and administrative expenditure
as a proportion of total expenditure also turns out to be a major factor in determining
the ability of MCs to provide basic services. Some of the MCs have an unsustainably
high proportion (more than 50 per cent) of total expenditure on establishment
and administration, which affects the sustainability of their finances and their
service delivery capacity. Lower spending on administrative and establishment
purposes would leave more resources with the MCs to provide civic amenities. Accordingly,
the study suggests that guidelines/norms may be framed for the ULBs towards spending
on capital and maintenance works as well for rationalizing the staffing pattern.
19. The debt position of MCs have been assessed in terms of the following:
a) use of debt and b) debt sustainability. The former has been studied by using
debt to capital expenditure ratio. Analysis indicates that for most of the MCs,
borrowing/capital expenditure ratio is more than one, suggesting that the borrowed
funds have been utilized for capital expenditure only. Further, aggregate revenue-expenditure
balance is positive, indicating scope for capital expansion. 20. Debt
sustainablity of the MCs has been measured in terms of interest coverage ratio,
debt coverage ratio and ratio of debt repayment to revenue receipt. Interest coverage
ratio defined as interest payment to operating surplus and debt coverage ratio
as debt repayment to operating surplus have been very low. Similiarly, the ratio
of debt repayment to revenue receipt has been below 10 per cent for all the MCs
excepting those of Chennai, Madurai and Vijaywada. These indicate that probability
of debt default is low. 21. Investment requirement for urban infrastructure
including basic civic amenities, mass urban transport and road infrastructure
(at 2004-05 prices) has been estimated at about Rs. 63,000 crore per annum
for the ten-year period (2004-05 to 2013-14), which forms about 2.2 per cent of
GDP. Of this, about Rs. 28,000 crore is required for basic civic amenities alone.
Assuming the current status quo in fiscal federal relationship, the study has
projected that ULBs in India together have the potential to raise revenues only
up to about 1.0 per cent of the GDP. Of these funds, in a best case scenario,
only 2/3rd would be available for asset creation after meeting the current expenditure.
Thus, the short fall, even for basic civic amenities, would be at least to the
tune of Rs. 10,000 crore or about 1/3rd of the requirement. Accordingly, the study
has suggested wide-ranging reforms to revamp the current system of municipal finances
in the country. 22. It is apparent from the analysis that there is a
need to substantially increase the spending by urban local bodies. Given the constraints
faced by State Governments, it is essential that the MCs be granted access to
borrowed funds. At least there are two convincing arguments in favour of MCs going
for borrowed funds. First, there is a scope for MCs to go in for borrowed funds
as their current level of indebtedness is not very large. Secondly, there is a
scope to raise user charges which are abysmally low across the States. Enhancement
of user charges would make the new projects undertaken with borrowed funds economically
viable and ensure that MCs are debt-sustainable. 23. MCs which have lower
levels of under-spending or better performance have fared well on 4 out of 5 criteria
viz., dependency, decentralization, tax administration and expenditure quality.
On the other hand, MCs with ranking “below average” on these 4 parameters
are also the ones which have been spending less on core civic amenities. Notably,
those MCs which had better delegation of revenue powers and less dependency on
the upper tiers of Government were the best performers, in terms of provision
of core services (lower under-spending). Thus, the analysis suggests that restructuring
of revenue powers may be given top priority by the State Governments if urban
amenities are to be improved significantly. 24. Though the delegation
of revenue powers is a key factor, the need for efficient revenue (tax) administration
cannot be underplayed. Examination of various taxes across the local bodies reveals
that property and profession taxes are important sources. Octroi, however, is
the most important source of revenue in municipal corporations belonging to Maharashtra
and Gujarat. The local bodies need to adequately tap the existing avenues. Unit
area system of computation, based on self-assessment principle, with respect to
property tax needs to be extended to all ULBs. ULBs, where Octroi has been a major
source of revenue, should be adequately compensated when Octroi is abolished.
Other sources like entertainment tax, development charges, betterment levies,
etc need to be tapped. 25. The 12th Schedule introduced in the Constitution
by 74th Amendment Act envisages that functions like ‘safeguarding the interests
of weaker sections of society, including the handicapped and the mentally retarded’,
‘slum improvement and upgradation’ and ‘urban poverty alleviation’
belong to the legitimate functional domain of urban local bodies. However, there
are no commensurate resources with these institutions to discharge these functions.
This is a case of expenditure assignment without a corresponding revenue assignment.
An implicit assumption may be that these functions will be discharged by ULBs,
but financed by higher levels of government which have access to buoyant and redistributive
taxes. 26. The mix of municipal revenues in India - taxes, user charges
and fees, transfers and loans - is narrow compared to international benchmarks
with regard to the financing of local public services. The revenue instruments
assigned to urban local bodies by State Governments at present are grossly inadequate
and not commensurate with the functions expected to be performed by them in accordance
with the 74th Amendment Act. This is also evident from the structure of municipal
finance in federal countries like United States, Canada, Brazil and China. 27.
The study concludes that there is a need for certain lines of reforms to restructure
the system of municipal finances in the country by revisiting expenditure assignment
and revenue assignment, finding an alternative to Octroi, developing national
consensus on a Municipal Finance Schedule, careful matching of revenues and expenditures
based on Bahl-Linn principles, raising local revenue efforts, reforming property
tax, using urban land as a resource, adopting ‘users pay’, ‘beneficiaries
pay’ and ‘polluters pay’ principles, linking individual services
with user charges and collective services with benefit taxes, restructuring inter-governmental
transfers with a simple distributive formula that gives due weights to needs,
rights to minimum basic services, incentives to performance and inter-jurisdictional
equity, easing borrowing restrictions on ULBs, financing urban infrastructure
through exploring the options of i) specialized banks for municipal lending, ii)
municipal bond markets, and iii) specialized municipal funds and strengthening
the creditworthiness of ULBs, developing public-private partnerships, addressing
poverty alleviation through linkage to buoyant redistributive taxes, improving
expenditure management and disclosure, promoting fiscal responsibility and professionalizing
municipal management. 28. A ‘Municipal Finance Schedule’
for assignment to the ULBs to match the list of functions included in the 12th
Schedule may comprise property tax including vacant land tax and taxation of Central
and State Government properties (or service charges in lieu thereof), professional
tax, entertainment tax, advertisement tax, business licensing fee or tax, motor
vehicle tax or a share from the same, planning permission fee, development impact
fee, betterment levy, a surcharge on stamp duty on registration deeds or a share
from it and a proportion of the Value Added Tax. State Governments may provide
freedom to ULBs in matters relating fixation of tax base and tax rate. Restrictions,
if any, may only be by stipulation of ceilings or maximum rates of levy and limiting
the power to grant exemptions. 29. The study suggests that the CFC may consider
a “normative” approach for assessing the resource requirements of
local bodies to decide the quantum of grants for them. This is necessary as the
time lag between the submission of reports of SFCs, actions taken by State Governments
on SFC recommendations and the constitution of CFCs is bound to continue. Norms
for sub-national expenditures may be evolved and depending on the normative estimates
of expenditures to be incurred by State Governments and local bodies, a share
in the central divisible pool of resources may be considered for the local bodies
in lieu of ad hoc grants. As urban poverty issues are going to assume critical
proportions, the CFC may also consider revenue assignment for ‘redistributive’
functions such as urban poverty alleviation and slum development and linking such
functions to an appropriate share in ‘redistributive’/buoyant taxes
like personal income tax, corporation tax and service tax. 30. As regards
SFCs, the study suggests that they may follow the suggestions made by the Twelfth
Finance Commission regarding approach to be adopted to study the finances of local
bodies, identifying problems and making recommendations. SFCs may accord priority
to ‘measures’ for improving municipal finances and financial management
to address the fundamental factors leading to vertical imbalance rather than adopting
a gap-filling approach. 31. The study has extensively used the Zakaria
Committee norms (adjusted to study period) for working out under-spending by the
urban local bodies and for projecting resource requirement for 10 years. In this
context, it could be indicated that the Zakaria Committee norms, developed during
the early 1960s, pertain to only five core services. Moreover, the costs of services
may be subject to convexity due to technological changes and lack of natural advantages
(e.g. on account of over-growth of cities). Therefore, there is a strong case
for developing new benchmarks for estimating the costs of municipal services in
India by constituting new groups and by undertaking more primary studies.
32. The study has employed a couple of quantifiable parameters relating to
revenue balance, fiscal balance, debt sustainability, dependency, decentralisation,
cost recovery, revenue administration and quality of expenditure to make comparative
assessment of finances of municipal corporations. There is a need for the regular
conduct of similar studies for ULBs, state-wise and ULB group-wise to draw benchmarks
and pursue reforms scientifically. A national network of resource centres on urban
development, urban poverty alleviation and local public finance and a national
bank on urban best practices and innovations by urban local bodies in the country
and outside may also be instituted. 33. One serious difficulty encountered
while studying the municipal finances in India related to the lack of availability
of comprehensive and consistent data. There is no source of reliable data on finances
of all local bodies in India to estimate their resource gaps. There is also a
lack of uniformity in classification and reporting of financial data, which do
not allow precise comparison on various parameters. Thus, an imperative need exists
to develop a robust database on municipal finances and the same may be made public
on a regular basis. With increasing urbanization, urban public finance is going
to have important implications for state and national finances. The Reserve Bank
of India may steer the building of such a national database on municipal finances.
The study provides formats based on the National Municipal Accounting Manual and
suggests that an online National Municipal Finance Information System (MFIS) be
created. |