Achieving Accountability Through Decentralization: Lessons for Integrated River Basin Management

While decentralization holds out the promise of increased flexibility and efficiency, the preconditions for realizing it are daunting. To draw lessons for productive decentralization in integrated river basin management, this paper surveys the decentralization experience in education, health care, roads, irrigation, and public infrastructure services. Case studies reveal that the prime focus in the design of a decentralized structure must be accountability, based on principles of subsidiarity, transparency, and allocation of property rights. While some debates are sector-specific, others, such as the need for political and financial accountability, the related data requirements, educating stakeholders and potential beneficiaries of the new system, and ensuring effective participation are true of decentralization wherever it is to unfold. In turn, initial conditions and the adaptation of political leadership to suit the historical context determine the success of decentralization. Four issues demand high priority in integrated river basin management. These are (1) overcoming financial inadequacy at the local level; (2) commitment to upgrading skills, particularly management skills, while also ensuring that the expertise accumulated in central bureaucracies is not dissipated; (3) assuring pre-reform beneficiaries that their rights would be protected; and (4) sustaining a long-term commitment to an inevitably slow and drawn out decentralization process. The main conclusions of the literature survey caution those who believe that decentralization is, in itself, a solution to problems of inefficiency and inequity in developing countries. Tradeoffs and tensions need to be reconciled (such as economies of scale versus local monitoring and integrated management or interregional equity versus local control).

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mody, Jyothsna
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2004-06
Subjects:ADMINISTRATIVE DECENTRALIZATION, BARGAINING POWER, BASIN AUTHORITY, CENTRAL AUTHORITY, COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION, DECENTRALIZATION EFFORTS, DECENTRALIZATION PROCESS, DECENTRALIZED STRUCTURES, DRINKING WATER, ECONOMIES OF SCALE, EXPENDITURE POLICIES, FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION, IRRIGATION, LOCAL GOVERNMENT, LOCAL MONITORING, MUNICIPAL AUTHORITIES, PRIVATE SECTOR, PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY, RIPARIAN STATES, RIVER BASINS, RURAL WATER, RURAL WATER SUPPLY, SANITATION, SMALL-SCALE IRRIGATION, WATER ALLOCATION, WATER DISTRIBUTION, WATER LEGISLATION, WATER MARKETS, WATER PRICING, WATER REQUIREMENTS, WATER RIGHTS, WATER SYSTEMS, WATER USE, WATER USE MANAGEMENT, WATER USER ASSOCIATIONS, WATERSHED MANAGEMENT, ACCOUNTABILITY, ADMINISTRATIVE SKILLS, ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES, ALLOCATION OF WATER, ASSETS, AUDITING, AUTHORITY, BUREAUCRACY, CAPACITY BUILDING, CAPITAL MARKETS, CATCHMENT AREA, CENTRAL GOVERNMENT, CENTRAL GOVERNMENTS, CENTRAL TRANSFERS, CITIZENS, CONSTITUENCY, CORRUPTION, COUNCILS, DECENTRALIZATION, DECISION MAKING, DECISION-MAKERS, DECISION-MAKING, DEVOLUTION, DISCRIMINATION, DISTRICTS, DOWNSTREAM USERS, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC CONDITIONS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ELECTED OFFICIALS, EMPLOYMENT, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, EXPENDITURE, EXPENDITURES, EXTERNALITIES, FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING, FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, FINANCIAL AUTONOMY, FINANCIAL INFORMATION, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, FISCAL, FISCAL MANAGEMENT, FLOOD CONTROL, GARBAGE COLLECTION, GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS, HEALTH SERVICES, HOUSING, HUMAN RESOURCE, HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT, IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGIES, INCOME, INSTITUTIONAL REFORM, INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE, JUDICIARY, LACK OF ACCOUNTABILITY, LEGAL SYSTEM, LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLIES, LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT, LOCAL ACCOUNTABILITY, LOCAL BODIES, LOCAL COMMUNITIES, LOCAL GOVERNMENT BUDGETING, LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, LOCAL TAX, MANAGEMENT OF WATER, MANAGING WATER RESOURCES, MUNICIPALITIES, NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS, NATIONAL LEVEL, NATIONAL POLICY, NATIONS, NEGATIVE EXTERNALITIES, PANCHAYATS, PARASTATAL ORGANIZATIONS, POLICY MAKERS, POLITICIANS, POLLUTION, POLLUTION TAXES, POSITIVE EXTERNALITIES, PRICE CEILINGS, PRICE DISCRIMINATION, PRICE SETTING, PRIVATE GOODS, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTIVITY, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT, PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENTS, PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, PUBLIC FUNDS, PUBLIC GOODS, PUBLIC MANAGEMENT, PUBLIC OPINION, PUBLIC SERVICE, PUBLIC SERVICES, QUALITY STANDARDS, RECYCLING, REDUCTION IN PUBLIC SPENDING, REORGANIZATION, REPRESENTATIVES, RESOURCES MANAGEMENT, REVENUE COLLECTION, RIVER BASIN, RIVER BASIN AUTHORITY, RIVER BASIN MANAGEMENT, RIVERS, SCARCE WATER, SERVICE DELIVERY, SERVICE PROVISION, SOCIAL SECTORS, SOLID WASTE, SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT, STAKEHOLDER PARTICIPATION, STATE AGENCIES, STATE GOVERNMENT, STATE PLANNING, SUPPLY, TAXATION, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, TRANSACTION COSTS, TRANSPARENCY, TRANSPORT, UNEMPLOYMENT, WASTE DISPOSAL, WATER, WATER MANAGEMENT, WATER QUALITY, WATER RATES, WATER SECTOR, WATER SUPPLY, WATER USERS, WATER USES, CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION, SDG 6,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/06/4965735/achieving-accountability-through-decentralization-lessons-integrated-river-basin-management
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14045
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