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In this article, the authors show that India's cities generate over 63 per cent of GDP yet remain fiscally starved and governance-deficient. Three decades after the 74th Constitutional Amendment, Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) lack meaningful functional devolution, with own-source revenues stagnating at 0.86 per cent of GDP. Urbanisation is simultaneously undercounted, and functionally urban populations remain outside planning frameworks. This article evaluates the Sixteenth Finance Commission's recommendations across three dimensions - measurement, governance, and fiscal architecture - and assesses whether its unprecedented allocations constitute a structural correction or an incremental adjustment to India's deepening urban conundrum.
India's urban story is one of profound paradox. Cities are the country's primary economic engines, generating approximately 63 per cent of GDP and driving the bulk of formal employment and fiscal revenues, and yet they also exhibit chronic governance failure, fiscal starvation, and deteriorating liveability. It is within this paradox that the Sixteenth Finance Commission (16th FC), which tabled its report in Parliament on 1 February 2026, covering the award period 2026-27 to 2030-31, must be evaluated. This article examines the scale of India's urban conundrum across three dimensions: the measurement and magnitude of urbanisation; the governance and financial deficits of Urban Local Bodies (ULBs); and the extent to which the 16th FC's recommendations represent a meaningful structural correction.
India has the second-largest urban population globally. While the 2011 Census placed 31.1 per cent of the population in urban areas, the United Nations' World Urbanisation Prospects 2024 Revision estimates India's urban population at 37.6 per cent - approximately 555 million people - as of 2026. However, the UN DEGURBA methodology using satellite data from the European Commission's Global Human Settlement Layer estimated India's urbanisation rate at approximately 63 per cent in 2015, nearly double the Census figure. The Janaagraha Foundation's ASICS 2023 independently corroborated this, showing that applying Mexico's population threshold of 2,500 persons would place India's urbanisation at 65 per cent.
This measurement gap carries real costs. Large populations that are functionally urban - living in census towns, peri-urban fringes, and unrecognised agglomerations - are ineligible for urban scheme financing, urban planning coverage, and ULB-based service delivery. Further, the Registrar General of India has proposed retaining the same 2011 definition of urban areas for Census 2027, to ensure comparability of urbanisation trends. This decision has been widely critiqued: a definition that systematically misclassifies the majority of its functionally urban population actively misallocates public resources at scale.
The consequences of this misrecognition are visible in India's urban liveability. India ranks 176th out of 180 countries on the Environmental Performance Index 2024, with particularly low scores on air quality and ecosystem vitality. Urban flooding in Mumbai (2021) and Bengaluru (2024), intensifying heat islands, and chronic water scarcity are no longer episodic events but structural features of urban life. According to the World Bank, Indian cities will require an estimated USD 840 billion to USD 2.4 trillion by 2050 to address rapid urbanisation and build climate-resilient infrastructure.
More than three decades since the 74th Constitution Amendment Act (1992) formally recognised ULBs as the third tier of government and mandated devolution of 18 functions listed in the 12th Schedule, this devolution remains deeply incomplete. The Praja Foundation's Urban Governance Index 2024, which surveyed 43 cities across all 28 states and 3 union territories, found that no state has devolved all 18 functions to city governments. Mumbai has the highest devolution in the country, with 11 of 18 functions; Meghalaya, Uttar Pradesh, and Uttarakhand have only one function under independent city government control. Functions most commonly withheld include urban planning and land-use control, and public transport - precisely the functions most critical to managing rapid urban growth.
The institutional weakness of ULBs is compounded by severe fiscal constraints. Municipal revenues across all ULBs stood at approximately 0.86 per cent of GDP in FY 2020-21, a figure that has stagnated for over a decade and is exceptionally low by international standards. Own Source Revenue remains deeply underdeveloped due to incomplete property records, widespread undervaluation, and political resistance to raising rates. Only 12 of the 43 city governments surveyed hold independent authority to introduce new taxes or charges, and no city government receives a direct share of GST revenues.
Staffing deficits further compound the fiscal crisis. Nine cities - including Ahmedabad, Gurugram, Bhopal, and Kolkata - had more than 40 per cent of sanctioned posts vacant, while Patna recorded the highest vacancy rate at 89 per cent. The rotational posting of IAS officers as municipal commissioners, who often lack specialised urban expertise and serve short tenures, further dampens institutional capacity.
The 16th FC, chaired by Dr Arvind Panagariya, has recommended total grants of ₹7,91,493 crore to rural and urban local bodies for 2026-27 to 2030-31, with a 60:40 split between rural and urban local bodies. The urban share of 45 per cent of total local body grants is the highest in Finance Commission history, representing a 129 per cent increase over allocations to ULBs under the 15th Finance Commission. Janaagraha has noted that this five-year urban allocation roughly equals the cumulative spending on all centrally sponsored urban schemes over the preceding 13 years combined. The Commission has divided grants into basic (80 per cent) and performance (20 per cent) components; 50 per cent of the basic component is untied, giving cities flexibility to address locally identified needs.
The tied 50 per cent of the basic component is directed towards sanitation, solid waste management, and water management. The performance component carries conditions on fiscal discipline and own-source revenue, including a minimum property tax collection of ₹1,200 per household. Entry-level eligibility conditions include the constitution of duly elected local bodies, online publication of accounts, and compliance with constitutional provisions for the regular formation of State Finance Commissions. However, the use of the term 'urban local bodies' rather than 'urban areas' risks excluding large populations in peri-urban and transitional settlements from fiscal transfers entirely.
The Commission has introduced a one-time Urbanisation Premium of ₹10,000 crore to incentivise rural-to-urban transitions, fixed at ₹2,000 per person based on the Census 2011 population. This premium is triggered upon states merging peri-urban villages into adjoining ULBs with an existing population of at least one lakh, and upon formulation of a Rural-to-Urban Transition Policy. The Commission has also stipulated that states must ensure the Action Taken Report on SFC recommendations is laid before the state legislature within six months of SFC submission.
Despite the unprecedented scale of the fiscal correction, the ratio of ULB grants to GDP remains approximately 0.13 per cent per year, stagnant relative to the growing urban population and its infrastructure demands. The Union Budget 2026-27 has simultaneously contracted several centrally sponsored urban schemes, signalling a structural shift from scheme-based to formula-based urban spending - which places substantially greater responsibility on state governments and municipalities who may lack the capacity to absorb and deploy funds effectively. The Urban Challenge Fund of ₹1 lakh crore, announced in early 2025, requires cities to mobilise 50 per cent of project costs through bonds or loans and has remained entirely unutilised in FY 2025-26, due to weak municipal creditworthiness.
Most critically, the 16th FC's recommendations address finances but leave functions and functionaries largely untouched. No Finance Commission can compel states to transfer the undevolved 12th Schedule functions, abolish duplicative parastatals, constitute Ward Committees, or professionalise urban cadres. These are political choices that rest with state governments, and the Commission's design offers limited levers to incentivise them.
The upcoming Census 2027 has not addressed the long-standing urban definitional gap. It is a federal design problem involving statistics, governance, and fiscal incentives. The workable path will require a sequenced and hybrid approach with clear ownership at the centre and operational levers at the states.
The enhanced financial transfers of the 16th FC will not transform urban governance unless states transfer the full complement of 12th Schedule functions to ULBs - particularly urban planning, land-use regulation, and public transport, which remain the most commonly withheld. While state governments have been incentivised through performance-linked grant conditions to dissolve duplicative parastatals and constitute functional Ward Committees, dedicated municipal cadres and continuous capacity-building programmes must be institutionalised. The Kerala People's Planning model, which devolved 40 per cent of the state's plan budget alongside substantive functions, remains an instructive benchmark.
The 16th FC's conditionality on property tax collection is a step in the right direction and must be implemented with adequate central technical and financial support. The Janaagraha Municipal Premiere League experiment in Odisha, which produced a 37 per cent increase in property tax collections through a structured enforcement competition across all 114 ULBs, demonstrates that OSR improvements are achievable through institutional innovation. No city government in India currently receives a direct share of GST revenues; the 17th Finance Commission should examine a transformative mechanism for direct fiscal transfers to ULBs.
All states in India should be mandated to set up MPCs with minimum standards for planning, composition, and accountability, providing genuine decision-making authority, financial resources, and democratic accountability rather than acting as advisory committees in the shadow of state-controlled development authorities. Metropolitan governance structures, such as those in London and Toronto, should serve as reference points.
Given India's low ranking on environmental performance, future Finance Commission grants and urban scheme financing must explicitly incorporate allocations for nature-based solutions, stormwater management, urban heat mitigation, and air quality improvement. Gender-responsive urban planning - ensuring that women's safety, mobility, and livelihood concerns are embedded in municipal planning and budgeting - must be a concurrent priority.
The Sixteenth Finance Commission has taken a significant step in acknowledging the scale of the urban fiscal deficit and correcting it. The doubling of grants to urban local bodies, the historic high in the urban share of local body allocations, the introduction of the Urbanisation Premium for peri-urban integration, and the recommended reform of State Finance Commissions collectively represent a meaningful structural shift. But financial transfers, however generous, cannot substitute for institutional reforms, full devolution of functions, professionalisation of municipal cadres, constitutional strengthening of metropolitan governance, and systematic property tax reform that would make India's urban local bodies capable of absorbing and deploying those resources effectively.
The cities of Viksit Bharat 2047 will not be built through transfers alone. They require a shared resolve - at the Union, state, and local levels - to treat urban governance as critical economic infrastructure, and urban local bodies not as administrative appendages of state governments but as autonomous institutions of democratic self-governance. The 16th Finance Commission presents a significant opportunity to strengthen ULBs. Whether this proves transformative will depend not only on the Commission's design, but critically on the political will and institutional commitment across all three tiers of government.
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