23. 11. 2024

Indian states squabble over how to share out federal cash


THE population of Uttar Pradesh is over 220m, enough to make the northern Indian state the world’s fifth-most populous country. But statistics still used by bureaucrats in New Delhi put it at less than 85m. Antiquated census data are used to split everything from federal funding to seats in the national parliament. A proposal to use up-to-date figures has created a political storm.In the mid-1970s India’s southern states were doing better than northern ones at controlling population growth. That meant losing federal power and money, both doled out in proportion to population. The inelegant solution was to keep using...Continue reading Who counts?Indian states squabble over how to share out federal cash They are still measuring their size using census data from half a century ago print-edition icon Print edition | Finance and economics Apr 14th 2018 | MUMBAI twitter icon facebook icon linkedin icon mail icon print icon THE population of Uttar Pradesh is over 220m, enough to make the northern Indian state the world’s fifth-most populous country. But statistics still used by bureaucrats in New Delhi put it at less than 85m. Antiquated census data are used to split everything from federal funding to seats in the national parliament. A proposal to use up-to-date figures has created a political storm. Get our daily newsletterUpgrade your inbox and get our Daily Dispatch and Editor's Picks. Latest stories Republicans are less divided on cultural issues than Democrats are Graphic detail7 hours ago A hearing-loss lawsuit raises questions about orchestras’ duty of care Prospero7 hours ago An Asian religion gains popularity in the New World Erasmus10 hours ago How American women got stuck in the kitchen Democracy in America20 hours ago Senegal's innovative approach to prostitution The Economist explainsa day ago China still executes more people than anywhere else Graphic detaila day ago See more In the mid-1970s India’s southern states were doing better than northern ones at controlling population growth. That meant losing federal power and money, both doled out in proportion to population. The inelegant solution was to keep using census figures from 1971, an arrangement that became indefinite. But buried in a recent government memo is a proposal to use figures from the most recent count, in 2011, for federal funding. Southern states are fuming. Their populations have risen since 1971, but nothing like as much as those of Uttar Pradesh and its neighbours (see map). They have also become much richer than northern states, not least because of lower fertility. That cuts their share of federal funding further. The change would be a “punishment for states that had performed splendidly between 1971 and 2011 in stabilising their population,” thundered P. Chidambaram, a former finance minister (and southerner). The southern state of Tamil Nadu estimates that it could lose 800m rupees a year ($1.2bn), about as much as its policing budget. The finance minister, Arun Jaitley, decried a “needless controversy”. But the row has a political dimension. India’s south is relatively less keen on the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, which has its roots in the north. Regional parties, something of a thorn in the side of Narendra Modi, the prime minister, fear that a decision to stop using retro statistics to calculate federal funding would set a precedent for 2026, when the deal to allocate seats in the federal parliament using 1971 data is due to expire. This article appeared in the Finance and economics section of the print edition under the headline "Who counts?" print-edition icon Print edition | Finance and economics Apr 14th 2018 | MUMBAI twitter icon facebook icon linkedin icon mail icon print icon Reuse this contentAbout The Economist

 

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