In the context of the Indian Constitution,  local government bodies are the subject of the State List and are  thereby governed by State Statutes, or in the case of Union Territories,  by the Union Parliament. Federal recognition of local government was  substantively expressed in the 74th and 73rd Constitution Amendment Acts  of 1992. The former pertains to urban local government and the latter  to rural local governance.
A primary reason for the delay was that local governments were perceived  to be rivals, rather than complements, by state governments. Hence,  local government was generally not a level that was maintained with  commitment and sufficiently empowered in the post-Independence era. For  that reason, it could be said that even by 2004, the state of West  Bengal distinguished itself by its commitment to having regular local  elections once the current ruling party of West Bengal came to power in  the 1970s.
In other states, these bodies were frequently superseded for long  periods by state governments. West Bengal’s commitment to local  government in fact had an important role to play in the national  recognition accorded local government. Its commitment inspired the 1992  Amendment Acts that formally gave constitutional recognition to local  government.
However, it can also be said that there is today a growing  awareness of the need and importance of local self-government as that of  a provider of services to local communities and as a mechanism for  democratic self-government. There are currently two distinct types of  local government system: the urban local system and the rural local  system. The structure of the latter is covered by the 73rd Amendment  Act, which provides for a multi-tiered system of self-governing units  and will not form the subject of this article, which focuses on urban  local government.
As illustrated in a Wall Street Journal article entitled “Megacities Threaten to Choke India” published on 14 May 2009, which also refers to City Mayors data about growing Indian cities, Lord Ripon’s ghost is evidently failing urban India’s growing needs.
As pointed out in this article “[a]cross India, poor migrants  keep streaming into cities like Lucknow, many of which are woefully  mismanaged and ill-equipped to handle the influx. India has at least 41  cities with more than one million people, up from 23 two decades ago. A  half-dozen others will soon join the megacity list. Urban experts say  the risk is now rising that some of these cities could face the same  fate as Mumbai and Calcutta, which became synonymous with poverty and  decay in the 1970s and 1980s”.
The article further noted: “[t]he country already has 25 of the world’s 100-fastest growing urban areas, according to City Mayors,  an international urban-affairs think tank, that compares with eight in  China. Pune, near Mumbai, has more than four million people, about the  same as the Houston area. Kanpur, in north central India, has more than  three million, as does Surat, in western India. India is expected to add  10 million people a year between 2000 and 2030 to its 5,161 cities,  according to the United Nations. If India fails to get a handle on its  new urban areas, it could be saddled with more bottlenecks and  inefficiencies that could doom the country to years of subpar growth,  says Dharmakirti Joshi, an economist at Mumbai ratings agency Crisil”.
What this article also illustrated was that structural governance  shortcomings, not just crumbling overburdened infrastructure, were part  of the problem. Hence, while using the example of Lucknow, it further  stated: “[p]art of the problem: Lucknow, like many Indian cities, is  managed by a bewildering array of government bodies that don’t always  coordinate activities. In theory, Lucknow is led by an elected mayor and  110-member Municipal Corporation, similar to a U.S. city council.  Together, they share oversight of basic services such as water, housing  and roads. But in practice, the elected officials’ authority is sharply  limited by the half-dozen or more other government bodies that wield  power in town”.
Indian civic NGOs have also realised this problem. Ramesh  Ramanathan, founder of Bangalore’s Janaagraha civic NGO, in an article  published in December 2004 discussed this subject of uncoordinated  services. The article’s title was apposite: ”Too many cooks in each  other’s way for the urban services kitchen.”
He opened the article with the following statement: “[i]magine a  puppet whose strings are being pulled by different puppeteers: the hands  by one, the legs by another, the head and shoulders by a third. Sitting  in the audience, the show would not look pretty. City governance in  India is similar, being pulled and pushed in different directions —  sometimes even torn apart — by a chaotic urban administrative set-up”.
India’s civic NGOs also realise that large cities need  decentralised systems affording a more efficient systemic response to  the pressures of urbanisation. Their ‘vote Mumbai’ plan, which they hope  can be extended across India’s growing cities, illustrates their  understanding. And what is the current status of that plan approved by  the State cabinet after strong central government support? Approved, yet  not implemented in any form – illustrating again that the  state-implemented bottlenecks reflected in the rural context are also  alive in the urban one.
Whereas, the Mumbai plan could be more expansive than it is in current  form, as examples of decentralised systems outside India illustrate, the  desire is constrained by the limits of the 74th Amendment, which needs  to be amended to permit further amplification.
The need for further amendment of the 74th Amendment Act was also  appreciated by the 2nd Administrative Reform Commission’s report on  local government. A thoughtful 400 page-plus report, it pointed out some  of the shortcomings of the current local government constitutional  amendments as understood by Commission members and staffers. While this  author appreciates the deep thought reflected in the Commission’s  report, what was most striking was that, as with previous attempts at  review, there was no reflection of the understanding that local  government structures can be an economic tool. Whereas articles, papers  and reports in western countries discussing the potential for integrated  local systems all highlight what an economic tool they can be – witness  the article in the November 2008 issue of Governing magazine on the  Stuttgart Region, also published on City Mayors – this has not been a  focus of Indian discussions.
This is especially noteworthy, because since the late 1800s India  has been the beneficiary of one of the most pioneering integrated local  systems in the world that was introduced in colonial times – the rural  panchayat system, which the states chose to ignore post-Independence.  The same unwillingness to see this potential is also reflected in the  poor capacity building mechanisms implemented to support the rural  systems resurrected post-73rd Amendment Act. This factor is illustrated  by the report of the NGO ASA (Action for Social Advancement) on this  shortcoming in Madhya Pradesh, a system that is viewed as being actually  one of the better performing panchayat systems in India. The NGO’s  report’s title was: “Continued Capacity Building of Panchayat Raj  Representatives and Gramsabha Members in Madhya Pradesh.”
Whereas, few countries have rural integrated local systems, there  is an ever growing array of urban integrated local systems coinciding  with the rise of urbanisation. This fact was not mentioned in the Wall  Street Journal article, since there is little general awareness in  America of this explosion going on outside the country – although, like  India, there have been pioneering systems of this type dating back to  the 1800s, such as the New York City system and the New England Town  systems (though unlike the rural type in India, are urban examples).  Both have unfortunately regressed in the face of advancement and  evolution elsewhere, as exemplified in North America by the recent  changes in Quebec’s largest cities.
However, Indians do not need to look at Western examples to see  what an economic tool integrated local systems can be. They can look to  China, where such systems in the post-Reform period were established as  the foundation for the urban industrial economies that have powered  Chinese economic growth. Readers interested in learning more can examine  this author’s article on this Chinese example. See: “China is at the  forefront of the greatest urban-industrial revolution of all time.”
There, interested readers will also learn how former HudCo chairman  Habitiat Jam discussed what he saw in China, which as systems outside  China reveal are also hallmarks of productive integrated local systems.
Below follows a discussion of the current Indian urban systems and the  history of local government operations in India that influence them.
Municipal governments
Historical evolution from the British era
The first municipal mechanism created during British rule was  the Municipal Corporation introduced in Madras (Chennai today) in 1688,  which was followed by municipal corporations in Bombay (Mumbai today)  and Calcutta (Kolkata today) by 1762. Subsequently, Lord Mayo’s  Resolution of 1870 called for the introduction of an elected President  in the municipalities. The current form and structure of municipal  bodies is based on Lord Ripon’s Resolution on local self-government  adopted in 1882. Since then the structure of municipal bodies has  essentially remained the same, even though the urban areas multiplied  along with their increasingly complex problems.
Statutory provision for creating a municipal unit is available in two  forms. First, by statute that provides for the establishment of a  municipal authority, as for instance in the form taken in the case of  the Bombay Municipal Corporation Act in1888, the City of Nagpur  Corporation Act of1948 and the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act of 1957.  The other route is through statutory provision empowering State  Government creation. The Bombay Provincial Municipal Corporations Act of  1949 and the Gujarat Municipalities Act of 1964 are both examples of  the latter. Generally, these statutes confer significant control and  supervisory powers on the state government. In this context, it can be  said they are creatures of state government.
Municipal election provisions in different states are not uniform. In  some, arrangements for election are made by the state government, while  in others Municipal Commissioners (executive officers) make the  arrangements. Prior to the passage of the 1992 Act, urban local  government was defined generally by the Municipal Corporations,  Municipal Councils, Town Area Committees and Notified Area Committees.  In this context, the structure and composition of municipalities varied  considerably, with wide differences in definition and structure between  states. Hence, the 1992 Act attempted to instil some uniformity  in the constitution of the municipal bodies by classifying them as  Municipal Corporations for large urban areas, Municipal Councils for  smaller urban areas and what are termed Nagar Panchayats, suburban government bodies.
The 74th Constitutional Amendment Act
The 1992 Act provided for the Twelfth Schedule which listed  the functions of urban local units, along with their planning,  regulation and development powers. It made provision for ward committees  in areas exceeding 300,000 and the specification of the powers and  responsibilities of municipal units and the ward committees. There is a  requirement made therein for the holding of timely periodical elections  and for the reconstitution of a municipal government within six months,  should it be dissolved for any reason.
Sources of municipal finance and their periodic review by a statutorily  constituted State Finance Commission were also provided for by the Act,  which also made it obligatory for the Central Finance Commission to  recommend steps to support state resources for the assistance of  municipal governments. The Act also provided for reservation of  one-third of the seats for women and scheduled castes in municipal  bodies. State Governments were to adopt the 74th Constitutional  Amendment Act with reference to their respective municipal bodies to  effect its purpose within their jurisdictions.
Unlike rural bodies, urban government was not provided with a federated  systemic framework (which is ironic, because since the 1950s outside  India it has been urban regions that have seen the rising use of  integrated federated systems). However, they do have direct access to  state governments, something that is not open to rural governments which  have indirect access through their relevant state bureaucratic  representative – the District Collector and Divisional Commissioner.
Divisions of Powers
Elected, Nominated and Administrative
The 1992 Act provides for elected and nominated councillors. According  to the size of the population of a particular unit, the number of  elected councillors varies. Nominated councillors are to be chosen by  the elected councillors for their special knowledge or experience in  municipal administration.
The Municipal corporation
Mayor and councillors
This model is also known as the Commissioner system, taking its name  from the role of the city administrator who is generally a  state-appointed officer. In such a system the Mayor in the Municipal  Corporation is usually chosen through indirect election by the  councillors from among themselves for a term of one year, which is  renewable.
The Mayor generally lacks executive authority. This is due to the  British roots of the system that remain from the time when the  administrator was the representative of the colonial power, not to the  fact that it operates under a council-manager system (the subject of  another article by this author on this website) whereby the executive  would be accountable to the elected representatives. In this context,  the indirect election of the Mayor combined with his short one-year  tenure renders the role little more than that of a figurehead.
Councillors act by committee, the most powerful being the Standing  Committee with its role of the steering committee exercising executive,  supervisory, financial and personnel powers. It is composed of elected  members varying in number between seven and sixteen through a system of  proportional representation of councillors.
The executive arm of the corporation
The Municipal Commissioner is the chief Executive Officer and  head of the executive arm of the Municipal Corporation. All executive  powers are vested in the Municipal Commissioner. Although the Municipal  Corporation is the legislative body that lays down policies for the  governance of the city, it is the Commissioner who is responsible for  the execution of the policies. The Commissioner is appointed for a fixed  term as defined by state statute. The Commissioner’s term in office can  be extended or reduced. The powers of the Commissioner are those  provided by statute and those delegated by the Corporation or the  Standing Committee. This is the closest that India has come to the  council-manager system, with the critical difference of accountability  of the manager to the elected arm of government; and the fact that the  power of the unelected executive arm of government is thus weighted in  its favour.
The Kolkata model
An alternative model to the prevailing Commissioner model is  the one implemented in Kolkata, West Bengal. This model was introduced  in 1984 and is known as the Mayor-in-Council form of city governance  that can be described as a cabinet government replicating the formula  operating at the state and national levels. This system is composed of a  Mayor and a ten-member cabinet with individual portfolios chosen from  among the elected councillors (in the context of Kolkata there are 141  wards in a single member ward system, rather than a multiple member ward  system). It is in essence a hybrid between a mayor-council CAO system  and the integrated federated framework. The Municipal Commissioner  serves as the Principal Executive Officer subject to the control and  supervision of the Mayor as the Chief Executive Officer in this model.
The municipal Corporation groups wards into boroughs with each one  having a committee consisting of the councillors elected from the  respective wards of the borough. The councillors elect one among  themselves as the chairperson of the borough. The borough committees are  subject to general supervision of the Mayor-in-Council, and look after  sublocal functions such as water supply, drainage, collection and  removal of solid waste, disinfection and health services, housing  services, lighting, repairs of certain categories of roads, maintenance  of parks, and drains.
It is perhaps best described as a transitional form of an  integrated federated system, which seems to indicate that less of a  study of urban federated systems was made outside India. Instead, what  was attempted was a system that tried to create an urban variation of  the federated rural system. It is commendable that this effort was made,  since an urban variation is due for India which was one of the very  first regions of the world where the integrated federated framework was implemented.
One can contrast the Kolkata system to the Birmingham (UK) formula or  the geographically closer new Karachi formula, which are both systems  with a three-tier federated framework to place it in the context of  these more defined models. (A description of the Karachi system can be  found on this website in an article drafted by this author).
The weaknesses of this model in practice have been that the borough and  ward committees have been too dependent on the mayor-in-council arm of  the system. There has been inadequate operational autonomy in the  selection and execution of schemes and a lack of involvement with  revenue-raising and tax collection. Another variant of this approach is  known as the chairman-in-council system, where the Mayor is the Chairman  of the Council.
Municipal councils
Municipal Councils are units designated for smaller areas  than the Municipal Corporations. State statutes govern Municipal  Councils. The Municipal Council, the President elected by the  councillors from among themselves, the Committees and the  Executive/Chief Officer constitute the structure of this type of  municipal government. The size of each Municipal Council varies from  state to state, with the municipal acts prescribing both the maximum and  the minimum number of councillors with terms in office varying from  three to five years. In some states the council Presidents are elected  directly by the citizens. In a number of states the term of the  President varies from one to three years and is not coterminus with that  of the council.
The President has a substantive position in the municipal administration  and enjoys significant authority and power both in the deliberative and  executive arms of the municipality. The powers and functions of the  Municipal Council Committees are the same as those of the Municipal  Corporation. In most states the state government appoints the Executive  Officer. In some states the council makes the appointment, but his or  her independence has been confirmed by making removal from office  difficult – generally by a three-quarter majority vote.
Local government functions
All municipal acts in India provide for functions, powers and  responsibilities to be carried out by the municipal government. These  are divided into two categories, obligatory or discretionary.
Obligatory functions include: supply of pure and wholesome water;  construction and maintenance of public streets; lighting and watering of  public streets; cleaning of public streets, places and sewers;  regulation of offensive, dangerous or obnoxious trades and callings or  practices; maintenance or support of public hospitals; establishment and  maintenance of primary schools; registration of births and deaths;  removing obstructions and projections in public streets, bridges and  other places; and naming streets and numbering houses.
Discretionary functions include: laying out of areas; securing or  removal of dangerous buildings or places; construction and maintenance  of public parks, gardens, libraries, museums, rest houses, leper homes,  orphanages and rescue homes for women; and public buildings; planting  and maintenance of roadside and other trees; housing for low income  groups; conducting surveys; organising public receptions, public  exhibitions, public entertainment; provision of transport facilities  with the municipality; promotion of welfare of municipal employees.
Some of the functions of the urban bodies overlap with the work of state  agencies. The functions of the municipality, including those listed in  the Twelfth Schedule are left to the discretion of the state government.  Local bodies have to be bestowed with adequate powers, authority and  responsibility to perform the functions entrusted to them by the Act.  However, the Act has not provided them with any powers directly and has  instead left it to state government discretion.
The Act does address devolution of powers and responsibilities. However,  the devolution of powers commensurate with the relevant  responsibilities is left to the discretion of the state government  concerned. This leaves it open to the states to devolve powers, together  with the challenge of determining whether what is devolved can be  managed in terms of sufficient capability and money. In sum, the 1992  Act was a step towards modernising local government; although still  doing so on the basis of the foundation of the earlier era.
Currently, there remains the void that can be filled by establishing  city regions that would embrace both core cities and the Nagar  Panchayats, or intergovernmental cooperative bodies that could be a  preliminary mechanism from which more substantive bodies could emerge.  Both alternatives can be found in countries outside India.
Coordination Challenges
In urban areas in the post-1992 Act era there remains a need  for coordination between the various agencies that operate in the same  environment. Ramesh Ramanathan encapsulated the confusion and patent  lack of coordination that can result thereby in his article in the  Financial Express entitled: “Too many cooks in the urban services  kitchen”. Such agencies are rooted in India’s pre-Independence era, and  there remains the requirement that there be developed some coherence  with clear demarcation of responsibilities and accountability; or  alternatively, for the consolidation of some of these agencies within  urban government
It could also be suggested that civil service personnel develop a local  specialty, and the formation of capacity building mechanisms instituted  to improve their performance in this context.
One might also suggest that the civil service develops a vehicle  for improving management skills. The failure to improve the  coordination/collaboration problem between various urban agencies in a  system that India has possessed since colonial times might also indicate  a management skills problem. The fact that Delhi’s BRT attempt failed –  which is a successful innovation from Curitiba, Brazil – and yet has  been adopted with success by other cities, such as Bogota, Colombia,  seems to underscore management weakness as being a systemic factor as  well. There are examples in developing countries that Indians might want  to look at, as there is now a history of civil service reforms that  have been studied. The author also thinks of a source of guidance that  one American example might provide – the city of Phoenix, Arizona. This  is a council-manager city where, like India, bureaucracy has substantive  powers in policy execution and service delivery. Unlike Phoenix, other  cities in Arizona have not been able to replicate its success, perhaps  because outside North Carolina US states do not have substantive  capacity building systemic vehicles.
The National Urban Renewal Mission
In December, 2005, a National Urban Renewal Mission (NURM)  was announced, which calls for the creation of other arrangements for  improving service delivery, which may also affect the environment by  adding even more confusion to the situation preceding it.
The goal of NURM, however, is to upgrade urban infrastructure and to  further reform the urban situation. The centrally devised program has  identified over 60 Indian cities for the improvement program. Funding  provision for the improvement is to be divided according to a defined  ratio for mega cities and those with more than a million plus  population. This is to be 35 per cent from the national government, 15  per cent from the states and the remaining 50 per cent from financial  institutions. For other cities, the formula is to be 80:10:10.
However, release of funding is tied to the states and their urban local  units becoming signatories to a tripartite memorandum of understanding  with the national government of accepting to undertake the reforms  required. The reform agenda includes core reforms, mandatory reforms and  five optional reforms.
The core reforms include implementation of decentralisation measures as  envisaged in the 74th Constitutional Amendment, the drawing up of  public-private-partnership (PPP) models for development, management and  financing of urban infrastructure the adoption of an  accrual-based double entry system of accounting, passage of public  disclosure law to facilitate quarterly performance information to all  stakeholders and a community participation law to institutionalise  citizen participation.
The infrastructure upgrade plans have been confronted currently by the current credit crunch limitations.
There is also the requirement for the states to transfer,  over a period of five years, all special agencies that deliver civic  services in urban areas and the creation of an accountability framework  for all urban civic service providers during the transitional period.  This, it seems, is an effort to reduce the “too many cooks in the urban  kitchen” scenario that has so far prevailed. Its degree of success will  be learned over the course of time – although, as the Wall Street  Journal article indicates, this state of affairs remains the norm.
Other core reforms include introduction of e-governance for property tax  collections, with the goal of at least 85 per cent collection  efficiency within five years and the introduction of similar practices  in the case of financial accounting systems, work management, water tax  billing and collection systems, the trade licensing system and the  approval of building plans. Compulsory reforms to be undertaken by the  states include repeal of the Urban Land Ceiling and Regulation Act,  reforms to the rent control law to stimulate private investment,  reduction of Stamp Duty to bring it down to no more than five per cent  within the next five years and the introduction of independent  regulators for urban services.
It should be noted here that neighbouring Pakistan’s new urban  systems saw the implementation of some of these steps taken when they  were implemented in 2001. This author’s Karachi article can be perused  by readers interested in learning more. In Pakistan, however, the  current government shows the South Asian flaw in not appreciating the  potential economic benefits that are delivered by operating such  systems. Hence, there is a desire to go back to the familiar formulas  which, like the description of the urban crisis in India, were proved  unable to address the challenges of growing urban environments.
Conclusion
Over the past couple of decades, India has seen the  implementation and framing of efforts to modernise local government and  has also revealed in the course of these efforts a commitment to local  government that was hitherto a weak link in the Indian system.  Nevertheless, it remains a system in transition that has room for  further evolution to match its prevalent ground conditions. In addition  to the areas to which attention has been drawn, the system also needs  adequate quality control monitoring and capacity building mechanisms as  well as additional reforms.
This Article was first published in City Mayors

 photo credit: bernardoh
 photo credit: bernardoh
