How India looks to fix its finance data problem in village governance
New report scheduled for June 8 to give fiscal clarity, may transform how panchayats get their money
The Union Ministry of Panchayati Raj is set to release a significant report on June 8th, addressing the long-standing issue of inadequate data affecting the fair allocation of funds to village panchayats by state governments, a process historically reliant on incomplete information and guesswork. This report, titled "Report of the Committee on Datasets for State Finance Commissions," aims to rectify this by identifying essential datasets and proposing actionable recommendations for improving data availability, standardization, interoperability, and institutional capacity, which are crucial for State Finance Commissions to effectively review the financial health of Panchayati Raj Institutions and recommend resource devolution as mandated by Article 243-I of the Constitution, stemming from a recognized data gap identified at a Finance Commissions Conclave.
The Union Ministry of Panchayati Raj is set to release a significant report on June 8th, addressing the long-standing issue of inadequate data affecting the fair allocation of funds to village panchayats by state governments, a process historically reliant on incomplete information and guesswork. This report, titled "Report of the Committee on Datasets for State Finance Commissions," aims to rectify this by identifying essential datasets and proposing actionable recommendations for improving data availability, standardization, interoperability, and institutional capacity, which are crucial for State Finance Commissions to effectively review the financial health of Panchayati Raj Institutions and recommend resource devolution as mandated by Article 243-I of the Constitution, stemming from a recognized data gap identified at a Finance Commissions Conclave.
The Union Ministry of Panchayati Raj is set to release a significant report on June 8th, addressing the long-standing issue of inadequate data affecting the fair allocation of funds to village panchayats by state governments, a process historically reliant on incomplete information and guesswork. This report, titled "Report of the Committee on Datasets for State Finance Commissions," aims to rectify this by identifying essential datasets and proposing actionable recommendations for improving data availability, standardization, interoperability, and institutional capacity, which are crucial for State Finance Commissions to effectively review the financial health of Panchayati Raj Institutions and recommend resource devolution as mandated by Article 243-I of the Constitution, stemming from a recognized data gap identified at a Finance Commissions Conclave.
How do you fairly decide how much money a village panchayat should receive from the state government? The answer, for too long, has been: with incomplete data and a great deal of guesswork. But on June 8, Monday, the Union Ministry of Panchayati Raj will take a significant step towards fixing that, with the release of the Report of the Committee on Datasets for State Finance Commissions in New Delhi.
The report will be released at a function by Dr V. Anantha Nageswaran, Chief Economic Advisor to the Government of India, in the presence of Vivek Bharadwaj, Secretary, Ministry of Panchayati Raj, and Dr Manish Gupta, Associate Professor, National Institute of Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP).
The report release will be followed by a keynote address by the Chief Economic Advisor on data-driven policymaking and evidence-based fiscal governance as foundations for local self-government.
So, why now? At the heart of the exercise is a structural problem that has long hampered India's fiscal federalism at the grassroots level. State Finance Commissions, constituted under Article 243-I of the Constitution, are mandated to review the financial health of Panchayati Raj Institutions and recommend how financial resources should be devolved to them.
But their ability to do this well has been constrained by a chronic shortage of reliable, timely, and disaggregated data, covering everything from local government finances and demographics to infrastructure, service delivery, and asset management.
The origins of the committee trace back to a Finance Commissions Conclave on Devolution to Development, held in November 2024 under the Sixteenth Finance Commission's chairman, where the data gap was flagged as a critical obstacle to the quality and timeliness of State Finance Commission recommendations.
The committee's report now maps the essential datasets needed, and sets out actionable recommendations on improving data availability, standardisation, interoperability, and institutional capacity.