Capturing the Value of Public Land for Urban Infrastructure : Centrally Controlled Landholdings

Government entities in India hold large amounts of public land. Their landholdings include some of the most valuable property in the country. Parts of this patrimony lie vacant or underutilized. Public sector bodies also own large blocs of land that sometimes stand in the way of efficient completion of urban infrastructure networks. At the same time, urban India is deficient in basic infrastructure -- both network infrastructure needed to support economic growth and urban service infrastructure needed to meet basic household needs like water supply, waste removal, and transportation. This condition raises fundamental questions. Are some of government landholdings "surplus" or not needed for service provision? If so, can their economic value be captured to help finance infrastructure investment? This report aims to document evolving government policies toward pubic land management. It examines how active public entities are in identifying "surplus" lands and attempting to monetize them. Public bodies in India have proved reluctant to surrender landholdings. The report therefore considers practical alternatives that have emerged, such as land trading among public institutions. Land exchange can clear the way for completion of important urban infrastructure projects, without requiring public landowners to declare their property "surplus" and suitable for market disposition.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Peterson, George E., Thawakar, Vasudha
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013-10
Subjects:ACCOUNTING, APPRAISERS, ARCHITECTURE, AUTONOMOUS BODIES, BIDDING, BRIDGES, CLEAR TITLE, COMMERCIAL LEASING, CONSTRUCTION, DEBT, DEFICITS, DEVELOPERS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, HOTELS, HOUSING, INCOME, INVENTORY, LAND DEVELOPMENT, LAND MANAGEMENT, LAND SALES, LAND USE, LAND USE PLANNING, LAND VALUE, LANDOWNERS, LEASES, LEASING, LOCAL AUTHORITIES, LOCAL LEVEL, LOCAL OFFICIALS, OCCUPANCY, OFFICE BUILDINGS, PARKS, POINTS, PORTS, PRIVATE SECTOR, PROVISIONS, PUBLIC, PUBLIC AGENCIES, PUBLIC ENTERPRISE, PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS, PUBLIC INVESTMENT, PUBLIC LAND, PUBLIC POLICY, PUBLIC SECTOR, REAL ESTATE, RECLAIMED LAND, REDEVELOPMENT, RENTS, RESORT DEVELOPMENT, RESTAURANTS, ROADS, SLUMS, STATE GOVERNMENT, TENANTS, TRANSPARENCY, URBAN AREAS, URBAN DESIGN, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE, URBAN LAND, VACANT LAND, VACANT PROPERTY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/10/18412669/capturing-value-public-land-urban-infrastructure-centrally-controlled-landholdings
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/16879
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!