Today's Editorial

2 February 2018

Devolution in progress

 

 

Source: By Deccan Herald

 

 

It has been over 25 years since the historic 73rd and 74th amendments to the Constitution of India were passed. These two amendments conferred constitutional status to local self-government in rural and urban areas. The respective bills were tabled in Parliament by the Narasimha Rao government, and were passed by both Houses in December 1992. Subsequently, more than half the state assemblies ratified the two bills (much like the GST amendment last year), and the bills became law in April 1993. The 73rd and 74th amendments became respectively the Panchayati Raj Act and Nagarpalika Act.

 

Now is an appropriate occasion to reflect on how the amendments have fared, in letter and spirit. Before these amendments, the Constitution recognised only states as sub-national entities. There were three lists that identified the domain of governance, policy-making and legislation. These were respectively the Union, State and Concurrent lists. Thus, for instance, defence, foreign policy, currency and income tax are exclusively the domains of the Union government. Agriculture, land revenue and police are in the State list. Labour and education policy are in the Concurrent list.

 

The two amendments led to the creation of two new schedules in the Constitution, which identified areas that would become the domain of the rural and urban local bodies. These are the Eleventh and Twelfth Schedules. The Acts don’t make it mandatory to devolve these functions, only recommendatory. The Acts are aimed at empowering local self-governments with legislative and executive powers, with well demarcated powers and responsibilities.

 

Until the passage of these Acts, it was left to the respective state governments to decide how much autonomy they would delegate to lower levels of government. That discretion has been taken away. The key mandatory provisions of the 73rd and 74th amendments, are (a) regular direct elections to all local bodies; (b) setting up of state-level election commission and finance commissions; (c) mandatory reservation of seats for Dalits and Adivasis in every local body, proportionate to their share in the population; (d) 33% reservation for women, and (e) setting up of District Planning Committees that consolidate plans of rural and urban bodies. Apart from these mandatory provisions, the Act recommends the devolution of funds, functions and functionaries (the 3 “F”s) to the third tier of government. The actual performance of the 3F devolution across different states of India is variable due to a variety of reasons.

 

Either the representatives and officers at the state level are unwilling to relinquish power and resources to municipalities and panchayats, or they don’t have confidence in the capacity of the third tier. Some states had been dragging their feet even on holding the mandatory elections to the panchayats, or on implementing the recommendations of the state-level finance commissions. Thus, local governments remain starved for funds and functionaries.

 

Long way ahead

 

As we review the status of the two historic amendments, we have to acknowledge that much work remains to be done, even as there has been substantial progress. For instance, many states have gone ahead and introduced 50% reservations for women in all local bodies. In some other states, despite the 33% quota, the actual share of women is more than 40%, which implies that women are winning in open category seats as well.

 

The country has more than three million elected representatives across all local bodies, of which more than a million are women. More than half of these are heading a local body as sarpanch or chairperson of the district body. This is nothing short of a silent revolution. Nowhere in the world do women hold elected office in such large numbers. Yes, there is a long way to go toward the true spirit, but this is still a significant achievement. In the early years, there was an impression that women in panchayats or municipalities were simply proxies for their husbands or fathers. That is no longer the order of the day. Many women heads of local bodies are occupying office on their own record and steam.

 

Another major headache was that vested interests (mostly male) who disliked an assertive woman sarpanch would use the instrument of “no-confidence” motion in the panchayat to remove her. This was becoming rampant. The remedy was to have a directly elected sarpanch. For instance, Maharashtra passed a reform law this year, which mandates direct elections to the post of sarpanch and heads of municipal councils. In a village then, only the gram sabha with a two-thirds majority can pass a no-confidence motion. The power of the coterie that toppled the chief within the panchayat is effectively taken away.

 

The problem of funding for the local bodies remains a big challenge. Their power of taxation is severely limited. Property taxes cannot be increased. Indeed, in a celebrated case, the tiny village of Dabhol tried to levy a property tax on the Enron power project to fund a local hospital, but lost the case in the courts. The 13th Finance Commission, for the first time, found a way to devolve funds directly to the third tier.  But the quantum was too small. The cities and villages still largely depend on the mercy of respective state governments for all their development and welfare spending needs.

Unlike cities, the villages are in a slightly better shape, because the budgets of state-level rural development ministries are large and do benefit the gram panchayats. But for cities, the problem is acute. There is a proposal to have a rule-based fixed share of the GST revenues of a state to be carved out to respective municipalities. Whether this becomes the norm remains to be seen; thus, while we push the agenda for cooperative fiscal federalism, let’s not ignore the challenge of routing the funds to the lowest tier. Despite these challenges of meaningful devolution of funds and functions, the Panchayati Raj and Nagarpalika Acts have certainly ushered in the ethos of decentralised governance. To that extent, India’s democracy is stronger today.

 

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