Poor Municipal Spending for Infrastructure Development and Gap for Investment: A Case of Bangladesh

Type Journal Article - International Journal of Business and Management
Title Poor Municipal Spending for Infrastructure Development and Gap for Investment: A Case of Bangladesh
Author(s)
Volume 8
Issue 11
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 27-37
URL http://www.ccsenet.org/journal/index.php/ijbm/article/viewFile/25076/16661
Abstract
The study aims at assessing (Bangladeshi) municipal financial capabilities in meeting growing demands for infrastructure facilities and other services. Determining municipal financial capacities is important mainly because the factors such as around 3.1 percent (Note 1) annual urbanization growth, 40-50 percent (Note 2) urban service gap and creation of new urban bodies put tremendous pressure on municipal authorities to meet the growing demand for infrastructure facilities and citizenry services. By analyzing sampled municipal annual budget documents along with urban population data, and questionnaire survey, the study finds that municipalities are as poorly capable as to spend less than US$10 per person annually. The study also finds 18-97 percent shortage of estimated transfer revenues, which are generally being used for building infrastructure facilities that literally requires huge capital investment. So vacuum for investment is found. Around 70 percent respondents interviewed are dissatisfied with the service qualities and quantities they receive. Thus, the study suggests that government should give immediate attention to find alternate financing options for investment-hungry municipal infrastructure development sector.

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