Title: Devolution of functions, funds and functionaries to Panchayats
1Devolution of functions, funds and functionaries
to Panchayats
13 October, 2007
- Ministry of Panchayati Raj
- Government of India
2Salient features of the 73rd Constitution
Amendment Act, 1993
- Constitutional status for Gram Sabha
- Three tier Panchayat system at the village,
intermediate and district levels except in State
with populations of less than 20 lakhs, where
intermediate Panchayats may not be constituted, - Reservation of seats and leadership positions for
SCs/STs and women, - Regular elections every 5 years,
- Establishment of independent State Election
Commission, - State Finance Commissions to be set up once in 5
years, - Powers to be so devolved upon Panchayats as to
enable them to functions as institutions of self
government (Article 243 G read with Schedule XI).
3Article 243 G reads as follows
- Powers, authority and responsibilities of
Panchayats.- - Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, the Legislature of a State may,
by law, endow the Panchayats with such powers and
authority as may be necessary to enable them
to function as institutions of
self-government and such law may contain
provisions for the devolution of powers and
responsibilities upon Panchayats at the
appropriate level, subject to such conditions
as may be specified therein, with respect to- - (a) the preparation of plans for economic
development and social justice - (b) the implementation of schemes for economic
development and social justice as may be
entrusted to them including those in relation to
the matters listed in the Eleventh Schedule.
4Eleventh Schedule lists 29 matters as below
Agriculture, incl. extension
Land improvement, land reforms, consolidation
soil conservation.
Minor irrigation, water management watershed
devpment
Animal husbandry, dairying and poultry
Fisheries
Social forestry farm forestry
Minor forest produce
Fuel and fodder
Maintenance of community assets
Rural housing
Drinking water
Poverty alleviation programme
Public distribution system
Technical training vocational education
Education, including primary and secondary
schools
Cultural activities
Libraries
Adult and non-formal education
Welfare of the weaker sections, in particular of
SCs and STs
Social Welfare, Welfare lf handicapped and
mentally retarded
Women and Child development
Family welfare
Roads, culverts,bridges, ferries, waterways
other means of communication
Non- conventional energy
Health and sanitation hospitals. Primary health
centres dispensaries
Rural electrification, distribution of
electricity
Markets Fairs
Khadi, village and cottage industries
Small scale industries, food processing
industries
5The Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas)
Act, 1996
- Establishes specific provisions for the extension
of Panchayati Raj to Fifth Schedule areas - State legislation enjoined to give primacy to
communities to manage their affairs in accordance
with traditions and customs in strict conformity
with the letter and spirit of PESA. - Gram Sabhas given extensive powers to
- safeguard and preserve traditions, customs,
cultural identity, community resources and
customary mode of dispute resolution. - approve the plans, programmes and projects for
social and economic development, - identify beneficiaries under poverty alleviation
and other programmes, - authorise the issue of utilization certificates
after examining the utilisation of funds by the
Gram Panchayat, - protect common property resources, including
minor forest produce, - be consulted prior to land acquisition.
6The Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas)
Act, 1996
- State Governments mandated to endow Panchayats in
the Scheduled Areas with such powers and
authority as may be necessary to enable them to
function as institutions of self-government, and
specifically with - the power to enforce prohibition or to regulate
or restrict the sale and consumption of any
intoxicant - the ownership of minor forest produce
- the power to prevent alienation of land in the
Scheduled Areas and to take appropriate action to
restore any unlawfully alienated land of a
Scheduled Tribe - the power to manage village markets
- the power to exercise control over money lending
to the Scheduled Tribes - the power to exercise control over institutions
and functionaries in all social sectors
7Article 243 ZD district planning
- Every State to constitute a District Planning
Committee in each district to consolidate the
plans prepared by the Panchayats and the
Municipalities in the district and to prepare a
draft development plan for the district as a
whole. -
- 80 members of DPCs to be elected by, and from
amongst, ZP members and municipality members, - Every District Planning Committee while
preparing the district plan must consider -
- - matters of common interest between
Panchayats and Municipalities including spatial
planning, sharing of water and other physical and
natural resources, the integrated development
of infrastructure and environmental conservation -
- - the extent and type of available resources
whether financial or otherwise -
- - consult specified institutions and
organisations - The DPC Chairperson shall forward the
development plan approved by the DPC to the State
Government.
8Inclusion of people in governance Statistics on
Panchayats
- 537 District Panchayats, 15,694 elected
representatives. (37 women, 17 SC, 11 ST) - 6094 Intermediate Panchayats, 1,56,609 elected
representatives. (37 women, 21 SC, 7 ST) - 2,33,913 Village Panchayats, 26,56,476 elected
representatives. (37 women, 19 SC and 12 ST)
9Concept of Gram Sabhas
- Constitution defines Gram Sabha as a body
consisting of voters relating to a village
comprised within a Panchayat - A Gram Sabha is not only a meeting of voters!
- The Gram Sabha
- Exists at all times and can be convened at any
time - Institutionalises the right of people to
participate - The effectiveness of the Gram Sabha is only as
important as the participation of the people - Therefore, members of the Gram Sabha must be
consulted even in their homes, through door to
door surveys - Some States have two levels of Gram Sabhas at
the ward or habitation level and at the GP level
10Role of Gram Sabhas
- Gram/Ward Sabhas
- entitled to get all information required,
- to approve plans, programmes and budgets for
economic development and social justice prepared
by the Gram Panchayat - to authorize the issue of utilization
certificates for funds allocated for plans,
projects or programmes of the Panchayat - identify and select beneficiaries.
- undertake social audit in association with
reputed NGOs
11The Role of Gram Panchayats
- Grassroots level of participative, democratic
self-government, - Closest level of consultation with people through
Gram Sabha - Should be given extensive powers in respect of
civic functions such as village sanitation, water
supply, streetlights, intra-village roads,
licencing of establishments, - Best level for delivering basic services such as
schools, anganwadis, PHCs/dispensaries,
veterinary hospitals/dispensaries, ration shops - Basic unit of planning and implementation for
economic development and social justice.
12Intermediate Panchayats role and relevance
- Known by several names Panchayat Samitis,
Mandal Praja Parishad, Taluk Panchayats, Anchalik
Panchayats - Good level to deliver those services that cannot
be best delivered at GP level, such as High
Schools, Hostels, Community Health Centres,
Inter-village Roads, Multi-village water supply
schemes, etc. - Most staff are located at Intermediate Panchayat
level, - Level to consolidate the plans of the Gram
Panchayats and add additional works at the
Intermediate Panchayat level.
13District Panchayats or Zilla Parishads - role and
relevance
- Conceived as the seat of democratic rural
governance at the district level - Level for the delivery of those services that
require higher level of coordination such as
Major District roads, irrigation schemes,
district hospitals, colleges, ITIs etc. - Coordination and implementation of major
Centrally Sponsored Schemes - Coordinate the functioning of the Panchayats at
other levels - Consolidate the plans of the Village and
Intermediate Panchayats and link up with Urban
plans for submission to the District Planning
Committee
14The difference between real and not-so-real
devolution
- Not-so-real devolution
- Scheme bound expenditure,
- Staff on deputation,
- Limited power to collect resources
- Somebody else (above or below) acting for the
Panchayats - Somebody else (above or below) responsible for
Panchayat performance
- Real Devolution
- Clear role assignment,
- Power to spend money,
- Power to tax,
- Discretion in spending money,
- Power to hire fire and control staff,
- Direct Accountability.
15Vision on decentralisation
- Autonomy Different tiers of PRIs to be
functionally, financially and administratively
autonomous - Subsidiarity What can be done best at a
particular level should be done at that level
alone and not at higher levels. - Role Clarity There should be clarity regarding
the role of each tier in the development process
and clear division of functions among the tiers - Complementarity The functions of the different
tiers should not overlap, but be complementary to
each other
16Vision on decentralisation
- Uniform application of norms There should be
uniformity of norms and criteria for the pattern
of assistance or selection of beneficiaries for
all the programmes implemented in a local area
irrespective of the sponsoring agency - Peoples participation Local body functioning
should facilitate maximum direct peoples
participation in the development process. - Accountability The accountability of elected
reps should go beyond periodic electoral verdicts
through a process of periodic social auditing - Transparency People should have the right to
information regarding every detail of
administration.
17- Activity Mapping
- Identification of activities related to devolved
functions and - Attribution of appropriate activity to each
level, based on the principle that each activity
ought to be undertaken at the lowest level that
it can be undertaken, - Activity mapping to touch all levels of
government, from the Central level to the GPs, - Activity Mapping to trigger fiscal
decentralisation.
18- What activity mapping is not
- Activity Mapping does not mean that subjects are
devolved wholesale they need to be broken into
activities and assigned to different levels of
government. -
- Activity Mapping need not be unduly influenced by
the way budget items or schemes are arranged.
Schemes may specifically relate to one activity
or sub-activities, or might comprise of several
activities, - Different yardsticks cannot be applied to the
assignment of the same activity on a scheme-wise
basis. Certain activities, such as beneficiary
selection, can span different schemes. - There is no gain or loss of power through
Activity Mapping.
19Example of activity mapping for education
Role assignment
Existing structure
Government
accountability
Education department
?
SSA society
Panchayat/ULB
?
VEC
?
Community
20Example of activity mapping for Education
Role assignment
Government
Regulatory authorities
accountability
activity mapping
Panchayat/ULB
Education department
SDMC/Panchayat Sub-committee
Community
21States that have issued Activity Mapping
notifications and have or are operationalising
them Kerala, Karnataka, Orissa, West Bengal,
Haryana, Assam, Sikkim States where Panchayati
Raj Acts themselves incorporate detailed roles
for Panchayats Maharashtra, Gujarat, Goa. States
where Activity Mapping is ready to be notified
and operationalised Andhra Pradesh,
Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Rajasthan,
UP, Uttaranchal. States where there is gathering
momentum Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar, Himachal
Pradesh, Manipur, Tamilnadu, Tripura.
22- Challenges in activity mapping
- Money and assets not transferred to Panchayats
and activity mapping remaining on paper, - Sizes of Panchayat jurisdictions vary from State
to State, - Pull of competing loyalties because of dual
control of staff, - Parallel committees are created by departments,
- Lip service to Panchayat system by co-opting
office bearers into parallel systems, - Parallel system accounts not captured in
Panchayat accounts - User groups created at sub-panchayat level with
no connection to the Panchayat.
23(No Transcript)
24Parallel bodies and Panchayats, suggestions for
harmonisation
- Reconceptualise parallel bodies as technical
support systems of Panchayats. - Mandate strong Standing Committee System within
Panchayats with timelines for decision making - Funds to be deposited in Panchayat fund,
- Fund use to be tracked electronically to prevent
delay or diversion. - Use CAG to provide technical guidance and support
for accounting, - Ensure prompt audit.
25States with Panchayat sector window in their
budgets, largely matching functional
devolution Kerala, Karnataka States with
Panchayat sector window, but with degrees of
mismatch between functional devolution and fiscal
assignments Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh,
Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Gujarat. States that
have agreed in the Statements of Conclusions that
they will create separate budget windows for
Panchayati Raj Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh,
Assam, Goa, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Manipur,
Orissa, Punjab, Sikkim, Uttaranchal
26Backward Regions Grant Fund Key features and
procedures
27- District Planning Committees
- a mandatory Constitutional requirement
States that have constituted DPCs (17) Assam,
Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar,
Chhattisgarh, Goa, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh,
Karnataka, Kerala, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh,
Manipur, Rajasthan, Sikkim, Tamilnadu, West
Bengal, States where constitution of DPC is in
advanced stage Tripura. States where DPCs
are yet to be constituted Maharashtra,
Uttaranchal, Uttar Pradesh. Gujarat,, Punjab
28The Planning Commission has issued guidelines on
District Planning, to guide States Salient
features of Planning Commissions circular of
25-8-06
- In preparing the District Plan, DPC to
consolidate - Plans prepared by the Panchayats for (a)
activities assigned to them, (b) national/state
schemes implemented by them and (c) schemes
implemented with their own resources, - Similar plans prepared by Municipalities,
- Elements of the State Plan physically implemented
in the district.
29Salient features of Planning Commissions
circular of 25-8-06
- Steps to be taken at State Level-
- Complete Activity Mapping,
- Form DPCs in accordance with Article 243ZD,
- Issue guidelines to DPCs and local governments,
- Decide on the formula for distribution of local
government component of the state plan, - indicate sector-wise and untied resources that
would be available to each local government over
five years/one year (2007-08) from the state
plan, - Indicate resources that would be available to
each local government from central sources
through CSSs, Finance Commission grants, and any
special allocations, - After vetting, present a summary of District
Plans, along with State Plan proposals for the
Eleventh Five Year Plan/Annual Plan 2007-08 to
Planning Commission.
30Prescribing formulae for application within the
district
- Formula has to be determined on basis of the
causes of backwardness, - State can determine this formula for each
district, based on level of backwardness - Once determined, the formula has to be made
public and consistently and transparently used.
31 proposed model for fund allocation from
BRGF within a district
Incentives Innovations
More untied funds (formula Based)
Broadly untied funds
Basic
capacity building
Basic capacity
Poorest areas
Not so poor areas
32Release of funds Under BRGF
GOI
State Consolidated Fund
Software for district-wise distribution formulae
Banking system
15 days
Electronic or Telegraphic transfer
District Panchayat
ULBs
Intermediate Panchayat
Gram Panchayat
33Immediate priorities for 2007-08
- Ministry of Panchayati Raj is pursuing with
States the constitution of DPCs, issuing of
guidelines and nomination of experts. - At the State level, five year capacity building
plans are being prepared by States. - States will indicate the formula for division of
funds to the Panchayats (as done in Madhya
Pradesh), - At your level, you will need to
- Put together existing participative plans (such
as under NREGA, NRHM etc.) into a working
district plan, - Convene DPC meetings and approve the draft
development plan,
34New approach under BRGF for 2007-08
- BRGF can commence in districts where RSVY is
still being implemented, provided separate
accounts are maintained for both schemes - Pursue the following priorities under BRGF
- construct or augment existing Panchayat Ghars
- construct Anganwadi buildings both for existing
Anganwadis as well as new Anganwadis under the
new approach of Anganwadi on demand by the
community - augment school facilities,
- augment Indira Awas Yojana by constructing
additional housing units - convergence with works taken up under the NREGA
at the Panchayat level, by dovetailing BRGF
grants as material component for construction of
durable community assets and works permissible
under the NREGA, - augment staff at the Gram Panchayat level, to an
extent of 5 percent of the development grant for
the district.
35Thank you
- Ministry of Panchayati Raj
- Government of India