1 / 2

Top IAS Coaching in Bangalore

Believers IAS Coaching in Bangalore is best UPSC coaching in Bangalore for civil services examination preparation. We provide best UPSC coaching in Bangalore. You will get all the facilities for UPSC civil services examination preparation by Believers IAS Coaching Centre in Bangalore.<br><br>For more info : https://www.believersias.com/<br><br><br>

Digital100
Download Presentation

Top IAS Coaching in Bangalore

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Downloaded from: justpaste.it/coysc India’s Urban Infrastructure The Need for investment in Urban infrastructure: World Bank in its recent report ‘Financing India’s Urban Infrastructure Needs: Constraints to Commercial Financing and Prospects for Policy Action’ has commented on the need for investment in infrastructure. According to the World Bank, India would need to invest $840 billionover the next 15 years, that is, an average of $55 billion each year, to meet the demands of its fast- growing urban population. Source of these funds: Financing on a repayable basis can be done either through debt, private lendingor public-private partnership This requires a recurrent source of revenueto meet obligations, thus, mandating raising adequate resources. How funding is done currently: Most of the funding for infrastructure development currently comes from the governmentthrough various schemes to meet certain objectives sub-nationally.

  2. Of the finances needed to fund capital expenditures for Indian cities, 48% is derived from Stategovernments, 24% from the Central government and 15% from urban local bodies’ own surplus. The rest includes public-private partnership (3%), commercial debt (2%) and loansfrom Housing and Urban Development Corporation, or HUDCO (8%). Only a handful of large cities have accessed institutional banks and/or loans. The constraints for fundraising: The report argues that the overall funding base to raise commercial revenues “appears to be low” owing to weak fiscal performance of citiesand low absorptive capacity for execution of projects. Low service chargesfor municipal services underminefinancial sustainability and viability. Urban bodies are unableto recover operations and maintenancecosts, thus, constraining their ability to further execute projects. City agencies have been unableto expand their resource and funding base to support private financing for services such as water supply, sewerage networks and bus services, as they are highly subsidised. Revenue sharing designs between public-private partnershipis not particularly viable for private investors and does not fully account for risk-sharing or risk- transfer mechanisms for project risks. What can be done: The central idea is to increasecities’ fiscal base and creditworthiness. Cities must institute a buoyant revenuebase and be able to recoverthe cost of providing its services. This could be attained by revising property taxes, user fees and service charges, among other streams, from the current low base. For more info click here

More Related