印度的城市治理与金融

M. Rao, R. Bird
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引用次数: 53

摘要

超过3.3亿人居住在印度的城市;35个城市的人口超过100万,世界上10个最大的大都市中有3个(孟买、德里和加尔各答)在印度。印度的城市很大,经济上很重要,而且还在不断发展。然而,城市基础设施和城市公共服务水平都不足以满足当前的需求,更不用说满足日益增长的需求了。处理这个问题是一项艰巨的挑战。不仅必须为提供服务找到足够的资金,而且至关重要的是要确保所花的钱产生预期的产出和结果。为此,地方治理结构也需要改革和加强。本文试图通过从财政联邦制理论和印度及世界各地的治理机构和融资体系的经验中吸取教训,分析印度的城市治理和金融,从而指出一些可能的解决方案。没有一种城市治理体系可能对所有城市地方机构都同样有效。然而,本文确定了一些关键改革,以实现鼓励公民参与城市治理的宪法意图和确保城市政府更大的问责制的经济和政治理想目标。例如,该文件提请注意任务分配制度中现有的含糊不清之处,并强调必须进行活动绘图,以确保明确性,并使独立机构对城市地区的民选政府负有重大责任。本文还讨论了增加该国市政机构资源的各种方法,包括财产税制度的基本改革和对所提供的各种服务的用户收费的充分利用,以及加强和改进中央和国家向城市地方政府转移的方法。在为城市基础设施提供资金方面,应更有效地利用发展费用。政府亦应采取更多措施,更有效地利用公共土地。此外,在相当大的程度上,资本支出需求将不得不通过借款来融资,因此进一步发展市政债券市场很重要,在某些领域越来越有效地利用公私伙伴关系也很重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Urban Governance and Finance in India
Over 330 million people live in India's cities; 35 cities have a population of over a million and three (Mumbai, Delhi, and Kolkata) of the 10 largest metropolises in the world are in India. India's cities are large, economically important, and growing. However, neither urban infrastructure nor the level of urban public services is adequate for current needs, let alone to meet growing demands. Dealing with this problem is a formidable challenge. Not only must adequate finance for the provision of services be found but it is critical to ensure that the money spent results in desired outputs and outcomes. To do so, local governance structures also need to be reformed and strengthened. This paper attempts to point the way towards some possible solutions by analysing urban governance and finance in India in the context of lessons drawn from fiscal federalism theory and experiences of governance institutions and financing systems both in India and around the world. No one system of urban governance is likely to work equally well for all urban local bodies. However, the paper identifies some key reforms required to realise both the constitutional intent to encourage citizen participation in urban governance and the economic and politically desirable goal of ensuring greater accountability of urban governments. For example, the paper draws attention to existing ambiguities in the assignment system and underlines the need to undertake activity mapping to ensure clarity as well as to make independent agencies significantly accountable to elected governments in urban areas. The paper also discusses a variety of ways of augmenting the resources of the municipal bodies in the country including essential reforms in the property tax system and adequate exploitation of user charges and fees for various services delivered as well as ways of strengthening and improving Central and State transfers to urban local governments. With respect to financing urban infrastructure, development charges should be used more effectively. More should also be done to utilise public lands more effectively. In addition, to a considerable extent capital expenditure requirements will have to be financed through borrowing so further development of the municipal bond market is important, as is more and more effective use of public private partnerships in some areas.
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