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IGNORANCE IS NOT BLISS!

HOW JNNURM
FAILED IN SMALL AND MEDIUM CITIES
October 14, 2012 by terraurban in Dynamics of Urban Poverty, Strengthening Civil Society Voices on
Urban Poverty 4 Comments
By Nidhi S. Batra, PRIA

Pan-India ONE solution for Urban Poverty is failing. We have seen it in JNNURM and
shall see it again in Rajiv Awas Yojana. Small and Medium cities are facing the brunt.
These cities are one not equipped with know-hows and appropriate capacity and nor do
they have enough focus of centrally sponsored schemes to solve the urban poverty issues
in these cities.

Jawaharlal Nehru Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM), launched in 2005 was directed towards
development of our cities and for the first time managed to have some bit of spotlight on even the urban
poor. Within JNNURM there were/are on ground actual proposals and reforms at governance level that
were to help include the urban poor in the development context.

The scheme has two sub-missions: the sub-mission for Urban Infrastructure and Governance
(UIG) administered by the Ministry of Urban Development (MoUD) and the Sub-Mission for Basic
Service to the Urban Poor (BSUP) administered by the Ministry of Housing and Poverty Alleviation
(MoHUPA). The latter sub-mission focuses on integrated provision of basic services including shelter and
security of tenure to slum dwellers. In non-mission cities covered by MoHUPA, these activities are carried
out under Integrated Housing and Slum Development Program (IHSDP)

JNNURM Funding has been provided making with conditions of governance level reform.
Some of these reforms are mandatory while other are optional level reforms that have to be
taken up by the Urban Local Bodies (ULBs).( In this context , it is important to recall how urban
planning has now become a mandate of urban local bodies with the 74th Amendment and ULBs are now
to take charge of undertaking development for the poor).

Two mandatory reforms at the ULB level those are necessary for the ULBs to undertake in context to
the urban poor are:

1)

Provision of basic services to the Urban Poor, including security of tenure at

affordable prices

2)

Internal earmarking within local bodies budgets for basic services to the urban poor

Optional reform at ULB level in context to urban poverty is:

1)

Earmarking at least 20-25% of developed land in all housing projects

And other related mandatory reform of municipal accounting which makes it mandatory for the ULBs to
shift to the double entry accounting system which should reflect the separate municipal fund for
services to the poor and recording of the targeted revenue expenditure of delivery of services to the urban
poor per annum.

These reforms and projects have been prescribed in great spirits, attempting for the first time to dissolve
all issues regarding the uncertainty that had been created due to institutional arrangement for slum
improvement programs between different agencies slum boards, housing boards, development
authority, municipal body etc. that had led to problems in implementation and also the failure to provide
for the poor in the urban planning process.

But, have these proposals really been working for Small and Medium Cities?

Small and Medium Cities are where there is at present a sudden boom of Urbanisation. These are the
cities that are being hit by urban poverty at a rate that is not even conceivable. And at the same time it is
here, in these Small and Medium Cities that a preventive addressal of urban poverty can be taken up
rather than finding futile cures in the million plus cities. From the graph below it is visible how the share
of urban poverty and slum population has been increasing in small and medium cities. It is interesting to
note that about 50% of urban population are living in slums; the city is seeing unprecedented growth rate
after it became the capital of the new state of Chhattisgarh.

Share of Urban Poor in large and small and medium cities

Source: data on poverty from Lanjouw and Morgain 2011 based on NSS data

But, has JNNURM really considered these aspects?

75% of the assistance has been committed to 65 mission cities under UIG and BSUP under
JNNURM; 25% is for the rest 640 small and medium towns under IHSDP and UIDSSMT. On
an average, bigger cities have had a higher per capita investment. Also, the percentage of urban
population covered under these two schemes decreases with the size and class of towns.

Committed Central Assistance by Scheme

Source: IIHS Analysis based on data from JNNURM website

Population covered under UIG and UIDSSMT by City-Size

Source: IIHS Analysis based on data from JNNURM website

How has JNNURM then through its mechanism attempted to serve small and medium towns differently?

For certain, slums are a problem in larger cities but in smaller towns the question of poverty alleviation is
more pressing but has seen much lesser focus, funding and appropriate approach. These small and
medium towns are struggling to provide for housing for the urban poor and are also unable to undertake
the governance level reforms.

Most of these towns have not even shifted to a double accounting system; there is no
separate entry for services being catered to urban poor. Nagar Panchayat such as Sanawad
in Madhya Pradesh, and many others in their books state that 25% of the total revenue is
utilised on services for the urban poor, but at present there is no mechanism to check this
expenditure. Other municipalities directly have put the central sponsored allocations
under this and show complete expenditure as required. Small and medium towns at
present do not even have their books digitized and require far greater hand holding than
larger cities.

Also, wrongly so, most ULBs believe that optional reforms are actually optional! Therefore
optional reforms such as earmarking 25% of land in all new housing projects for
Economically Weaker Sections and Low Income Groups do not see the light of the day. The
fact is under JNNURM, optional reforms are not optional- just that they are not the most priority reform

that should be taken up by ULB; however, the phasing of these reforms would be at the choice of the ULB/
state. Two reforms need to be carried out every year over the mission period.

Other municipalities and corporations find it difficult to implement this reservation


reform. Infact most of the corporations such as Indore complain of how they saw loss in
housing investment over last few years when the shelter fund was stopped and it was
mandatory for private housing projects to designate the land/ houses for urban poor in
their schemes. They clearly stated how Shelter Fund mechanism wherein the Private
builder had the obligation to contribute a portion of the land developed by them or CASH
proportionate to the land value towards Ashraya Nidhi (Shelter Fund) for pro-poor
housing. Most builders obviously offered to give CASH! Of course this model doesnt allow
an equitable city with no apartheid class divided zones to be created within the city and has
also created a shortage of land for the corporation to even undertake pro-poor housing!

Other criticisms of JNNURM that has been articulated in the public domain is:

Mission is said to suffer from the lack of an integrated approach; related issues like land,
health, education and employment are being handled by separate Ministries at the central
level and no strategy towards convergence of the same has been formulated.

Complete failure in respect to community participation. Overnight slums have been


removed and housed in flats that have already been created, even the slums that were not
even in the listing under the BSUP housing in cities like Raipur. In the same city, no
example of in-situ slum rehabilitation has been successful. The only model the corporation
attempted was the case of Telibhanda, where in the community was deceived and shifted to
far off transit homes and even after 3 years still do not have their in-situ houses back in the
land that belonged to them! Also, JNNURM even lacks an articulated clear resettlement
policy. There is great ambiguity in the air, which and why slums are being removed
overnight, are market forces acting up?!

Cities have also chosen not to invest in BSUP extensively; thrust of JNNURM has been on
infrastructural and buses instead! Options of micro-financing and role of PPP for housing
urban poor has not been explored.

ULBs of small and medium towns also faced a peculiar situation wherein the State Local
Nodal Agency (SLNA) did not provide the necessary capacity to the ULB in time. Small

Nagar Panchayats and Municipalities are not equipped with qualified staff or know-how of
how to include the cause of urban poor within their new mandate after 74 th Amendment.

JNNURM in its vision is essential, it has attempted to focus on issues that are crucial for Indian Cities, but
it has failed in its approach. One size fits all solution does not work in a country like India wherein the
level of urbanisation differs exponentially across the nation.

There is a need for far greater bottom up planning, far greater capacity building and far
greater hand holding in small and medium towns, than what is at present being offered.
The future of a sustainable urbanization is in these towns and the only way to address it is to
take care of the excluded and work towards an inclusive society. Ignorance is not a bliss
for these cities we need to empower them!

A boy in slum of Raipur,


photograph by Nidhi Batra

1. In JNNURM, to receive funds cities have to do many reforms and these reforms were
classified into compulsory and optional reforms. So cities never paid heed to optional
reforms.
2. Lack of double entry accounting system resulting in corruption and lack of
accountability.
3. About 30% of expenditure is shown in urban services which is not easy to verify.
4. Lack of coordination between different ministries related to water, power, transportation,
etc.
5. Division of funds is more tilted toward development of infrastructure and less

towards services to poor.


6. Lack of participation of people in planning and implementation.

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