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Administrative Decentralisation
About Dr Zahid Masood Khan
Administrative Decentralisation seeks to redistribute authority, responsibility and
financial resources for providing public services among different levels of government. It
is the transfer of responsibility for the planning, financing and management of certain
public functions from the central government and its agencies to field units of government
agencies,subordinate units or levels of government, semi-autonomous public authorities or
corporations, or area-wide, regional or functional authorities. The three major forms of
administrative decentralisationdeconcentration, delegation and devolutioneach
have different characteristics.
Deconcentration
Deconcentrationwhich is often considered to be the weakest form of Decentralisation
and is used most frequently in unitary statesredistributes decisions making
authority and financial and management responsibilities among different levels of the
central government. It can merely shift responsibilities from central government officials
in the capital city to those working in regions, provinces or districts, or it can create
strong field administration or local administrative capacity under the supervision of
central government ministries.
Delegation
Delegation is more extensive form of decentralisation. Through delegation central
governments transfer responsibility for decision-making and administration of public
functions to semi-autonomous organisations not wholly controlled by the central
government, but ultimately accountable to it. Governments delegate responsibilities when
they create public enterprises or corporations, housing authorities, transportation
authorities, special service districts, semi-autonomous school districts, regional
development corporations, special project implementation units. Usually these
organisations have a great deal of discretion in decision-making. They maybe exempt from
constraints on regular civil service personnel and maybe able to charge users directly
from services.
Devolution
A third type of Administrative Decentralisation is devolution. When governments devolve
functions, they transfer authority for decision making, finance and management to
quasi-autonomous units of local government with corporate status. Devolution usually
transfers responsibilities for services to municipalities that elect their own mayors and
councils, raise their own revenues and have independent authority to make investment
decisions. In a devolved system, local governments have clear and legally recognised
geographical boundaries over which they exercise authority and within which they perform
public functions. It is this type of administrative decentralisation that underlies most
political decentralisation.
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