https://ippr.in/index.php/ippr/issue/feedIndian Public Policy Review2024-11-20T09:25:01+0530Anupam Satyanath Manuranupam@ippr.inOpen Journal Systems<p class="IPPRBody">The need for a refereed professional academic journal in public policy has been felt for long. There are very few quality journals in India which are rigorous, analytical and easily accessible to scholars as well as policy makers in India’s public policy space. First, most international journals on public policy are not India-focussed and many standard journals have a prohibitive submission fees which many young scholars cannot afford. Second, few journals have a rigorous and timely refereeing process and often, authors do not get information on the papers submitted by them for months altogether. Third, there is a considerable gestation lag in the publication of articles resulting in a loss of their timely relevance. Finally, most journals have high subscription fees beyond the reach of many teachers and students in Universities and colleges. With the launching of the Indian Public Policy Review: A Journal of Economics, Politics and Strategy, we hope to provide a journal which will publish analytical policy articles, rigorously refereed by anonymous referees and providing a fast publication outlet.</p> <p class="IPPRBody">IPPR is a peer-reviewed, bi-monthly, online, and an open-access journal. The objective of the journal is to further the cause of both research and advocacy by providing a publication space for articles in economics, politics, and strategic affairs. By launching this journal, we hope to facilitate scholarly communication of research on Indian public policies. The journal will publish analytical papers – both theoretical and applied, with relevance to Indian public policy issues. We hope, this will help the scholars in finding a timely outlet for their research, students in understanding and gaining insights into the complex world of design and implementation of policies and the political economy associated with them and the policy makers to gain insights into the ways to meet the challenges of policy calibration.</p> <p class="IPPRBody">IPPR is a bi-monthly publication which will carry original papers, book reviews, and commentaries across the following topics: Economics, Political Science, Public Finance, International Relations and Security, Political and Defence Strategy, Public Enterprises, and Science and Technology Policy, among others. We look forward to contributions from scholars to make the journal a leading voice in public policy.</p> <p class="IPPRBody">IPPR is published by the Takshashila Institution, Bangalore with the support of a grant from the Infosys Foundation.</p> <p> </p>https://ippr.in/index.php/ippr/article/view/317Subsidies in India: Bridging the Data Gaps2024-11-20T08:54:08+0530Shruti Guptashrutigupta@csep.orgRadha MalaniRMalani@csep.orgAnoop Singhasingh1066@gmail.com<div> <p class="IPPRAbstractBody">This paper looks at reported subsidy spending in India, in light of ongoing central initiatives to build transparency and accessibility of information related to financial operations and decisions of public expenditure. Subsidies have become a prominent policy tool for public resource allocation in India. However, without a clear definition and reporting of ‘subsidy’, the term tends to be loosely used to encompass many schemes and programs of the Union and state governments, including the recent rise in ‘freebies’, which need to be clearly differentiated. Moreover, many forms of financing through special securities and extra-budgetary resources have been used to finance subsidy spending, making it difficult to comprehensively define and measure subsidy expenditure in the budget and other annual accounts. These issues relate to the existence of data gaps in India’s fiscal reporting and accounts, which are a critical area of concern due to the large financial implications of subsidy expenditures. This paper identifies how subsidy spending has been accounted in India and explains the resultant data gaps that render such fiscal data inconsistent and incomparable across levels of government. The paper seeks to understand whether the present reporting of subsidy spending in the finance accounts and budget documents provide clear and comprehensive information about budget allocations, revenue sources, expenditures, and other related financial matters. It then proposes steps in the way forward to improve their transparency.</p> </div>2024-11-20T00:00:00+0530Copyright (c) 2024 https://ippr.in/index.php/ippr/article/view/318Fiscal Transfers from the Union to States and Healthcare in India2024-11-20T09:03:30+0530Janak Rajjanakraj@csep.orgRahul Ranjaneditor@ippr.inVrinda Gupravrindag96@gmail.comAakanksha Shrawanjanakraj@csep.org<div> <p class="IPPRAbstractBody">The key focus of the study is to assess the role of fiscal transfers from the Union government compared to States’ own revenue in explaining their healthcare spending. The study found that both States’ own revenue and unconditional transfers impact their health spending. However, own revenue was more significant than unconditional fiscal transfers in explaining health spending by economically well-off states. In contrast, unconditional fiscal transfers were the sole factor for health spending by economically weaker states. Generally, States were substituting their non-National Health Mission (NHM) health spending with NHM health spending. However, this substitution was much less pronounced in economically well-off states compared to economically weaker states. Post-NHM, there was a slight increase in horizontal inequalities. The intricate interplay between fiscal transfers and health spending by Indian states underlines the need for nuanced policy changes. A differentiated strategy is essential for economically well-off and economically weaker states to improve healthcare spending in the country. </p> </div>2024-11-20T00:00:00+0530Copyright (c) 2024 https://ippr.in/index.php/ippr/article/view/319Reimagining India’s Fiscal Architecture2024-11-20T09:14:09+0530Sajjid Z Chinoysajjid.z.chinoy@jpmorgan.comToshi Jain sajjid.z.chinoy@jpmorgan.comDivyanit Soodsajjid.z.chinoy@jpmorgan.com<div> <p class="IPPRAbstractBody">Fiscal credibility in India has increased markedly in recent years underpinned by improved transparency (off-budget liabilities coming on budget), conservativeness (in the budgeting of revenues) and marksmanship (in the attainment of deficit targets). Yet, like around the world, India is left with higher public debt levels post-pandemic, and, despite ongoing fiscal consolidation, Combined Debt/GDP again inched up last year. We therefore propose a new, post-pandemic fiscal architecture built on five pillars that is anchored in debt and is holistic (encompassing centre and states), dynamic (responsive to changing macro conditions and market signals), sustainable and conservative -- so as to help create fiscal space to respond to future shocks.</p> </div>2024-11-20T00:00:00+0530Copyright (c) 2024 https://ippr.in/index.php/ippr/article/view/320No Such Thing as Gender-Neutral Trade Policy2024-11-20T09:20:12+0530Pallavi Bajajpallavibajaj@gmail.com<div> <p class="IPPRAbstractBody">Trade policy is not gender neutral. As a matter of fact, it cannot be. To counter the inherent disadvantages of social, institutional, and structural constructs, as well as access and capacity constraints specific to women, policy, including trade policy, needs to actively and continuously neutralize these disadvantages, and create an ecosystem where men and women are on the same playing field in economic activity, and therefore, in trade. It needs to be gender-balancing, at the very least. It needs to effectively address the inherent gender-specific limitations to access and capacity that women face in participating in trade. This requires better representation from women, effective stakeholder engagement, and continuous collaboration between the public and private sectors, and must leverage the strength, reach, and scale offered by digital technologies and platforms.</p> </div>2024-11-20T00:00:00+0530Copyright (c) 2024 https://ippr.in/index.php/ippr/article/view/321Decoding the Trends and Composition of Public Expenditure in India2024-11-20T09:25:01+0530Jos Chathukulamjoschathukulam@gmail.com<div> <p class="IPPRBody"><strong><em><span lang="EN-GB">“Public Expenditure in India: Policies and Development Outcomes”</span></em></strong><span lang="EN-GB"> by Gayithri Karnam, offers an empirical understanding of historical trends and composition of public expenditure in India at the central and the sub-national levels; the effectiveness of public expenditure control systems and accountability issues; the political economy of spending decisions; public expenditure reforms undertaken in India; and international best practices that can guide the course-correction process in India. </span></p> </div>2024-11-20T00:00:00+0530Copyright (c) 2024