Why in the news?
- Urban India contributes nearly two-thirds of the nation’s GDP, yet its municipalities manage less than one per cent of total tax revenue.
Fiscal Challenges of Urban Local Bodies
- Context:
- The 74th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 empowered Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) to perform 18 functions listed in the 12th Schedule, including water supply, waste management, and public health.
- However, fiscal devolution has not kept pace with functional devolution.
- Urban India contributes nearly two-thirds of the national GDP, but municipalities control less than 1% of the country’s tax revenue.
- Major Fiscal Challenges:
- Weak Own Revenue Base:
- Property tax, user fees, and local cesses form only 20–25% of potential municipal income.
- Low collection efficiency, outdated valuation, and political reluctance to hike rates further weaken revenue.
- Dependence on Higher Level Transfers:
- ULBs depend on tied grants from State and Central governments through schemes like AMRUT, Smart Cities Mission, etc., reducing fiscal autonomy and flexibility.
- Intergovernmental transfers often lack predictability and are scheme-based, limiting local innovation.
- Impact of GST:
- Introduction of GST abolished key local taxes like octroi, entry tax, and advertisement tax, leading to a loss of around 19% of municipal revenue sources.
- Promised compensation mechanisms do not reach ULBs directly.
- Limited Access to Credit Markets:
- Poor creditworthiness and unclear accounting frameworks restrict ULBs’ ability to borrow.
- Only 13 ULBs have issued municipal bonds totaling about ₹2,833 crore (2017–2025), indicating minimal penetration.
- Credit rating agencies undervalue cities by ignoring regular grants, calling them “non-recurring income,” leading to skewed credit ratings.
- Over Centralisation of Taxation Powers:
- ULBs lack independent taxation authority beyond minor taxes.
- Most buoyant taxes — income tax, GST, excise — are controlled by the Union and States.
- Weak Administrative and Institutional Capacity:
- CAG audit (2024) revealed a 42% mismatch between ULB financial requirements and their actual income; 37% staff vacancies across ULBs limit fiscal efficiency.
- Weak Own Revenue Base:
- Underlying Structural Issues:
- Fragmented fiscal federalism: Decentralisation without financial empowerment.
- Inadequate intergovernmental coordination: Poor linkage between planning and funding.
- Low credit culture and transparency: Weak financial reporting systems in ULBs.
- Reforms Needed:
- Strengthening Own Revenue Generation:
- Implement GIS-based property valuation and digital payment systems for better tax compliance.
- Regularly revise property tax rates linked to market valuation.
- Rational Fiscal Transfers: States should operationalize the State Finance Commissions (SFCs) regularly to provide predictable, untied grants.
- Reforming Municipal Bond Market:
- Include regular grants and shared tax revenues as part of income metrics for credit ratings.
- Develop pooled financing models and allow ULBs to use part of GST share or state allocations as collateral.
- Enhancing Institutional and Human Resource Capacity:
- Fill staffing gaps and train local officials in financial management.
- Integrate Urban Outcome Framework (UOF) data for performance-based funding.
- Strengthening Own Revenue Generation: