49 local bodies fail to announce budget within legal deadline
Kathmandu, July 12
All the local
governments across the country are well-aware that they have to announce their
budget for the upcoming fiscal year by Ashadh 10 of Nepali calendar (June 24 in
case of this year) which is a legal provision in the Intergovernmental
Fiscal Arrangement Act, 2074.
According to it, the village executive and
municipal executive shall at least submit (if not get ratified by the assembly
of the local body) the estimates of revenues and expenditures (budget) of next
fiscal year within Ashadh 10.
But at least 49 local governments,
including the federal capital Kathmandu Metropolis, have not announced their
budgets for the upcoming Fiscal Year 2025/26 by Friday, according to the
Ministry of Federal Affairs and General Administration (MoFAGA).
However, statistics from the National
Association of Rural Municipalities in Nepal (NARMIN) and Municipal
Association of Nepal (MuAN) are different with 13 rural municipalities and 23
municipalities failing to announce their budget even after at least 10 days of
the stipulated date.
Kalanidhi Devkota, Executive Director of
MuAN, said the association is set to update the statistics on Sunday and
expected that some remaining municipalities had submitted their budgets at
their assemblies.
Although there is a calendar to formulate
the annual budget, the MoFAGA had reminded the local governments to report
their budget progress at the Ministry's portal on June 22. But by Friday, July
11, at least 216 (28.69 per cent) local governments have not updated
information in the portal which means the official figure of local bodies that
announced the budget is 537.
There are 753 local governments in Nepal
comprising of six metropolitan cities, 11 sub-metropolises, 276 municipalities
and 460 rural municipalities.
Status of FY 2025/26 Budget of Local
Governments
S.N. |
Province |
Municipalities announced budget |
Municipalities not-announced budget |
Rural municipalities announced
budget |
Rural municipalities non-announced
budget |
Local bodies without budget |
|
Total |
270 |
23 |
447 |
13 |
36 |
1. |
Koshi |
48 |
1 |
88 |
0 |
1 |
2. |
Madhes |
62 |
15 |
50 |
9 |
24 |
3. |
Bagmati |
41 |
4 |
73 |
1 |
5 |
4. |
Gandaki |
27 |
0 |
57 |
1 |
1 |
5. |
Lumbini |
34 |
2 |
71 |
2 |
4 |
6. |
Karnali |
24 |
1 |
54 |
0 |
1 |
7. |
Sudurpaschim |
34 |
0 |
54 |
0 |
0 |
Source: NARMIN and MuAN.
With 15 municipalities and nine rural
municipalities yet to announce their budgets for the upcoming year, Madhes has
become the worst performer among the provinces in the country (see table).
In Bagmati, four municipalities and one rural
municipality are yet to announce their budgets while the number is four in
Lumbini. Koshi, Gandaki and Karnali have one each local body being unable to announce
their budget. Sudurpaschim is the only province that has all of its local
bodies ready with the budget for the next year.
District-wise, Dhanusha has five
municipalities that haven't announced their annual budget for the next fiscal
followed by Saptari (4) and Rautahat (3).
Meanwhile, many municipalities' executives
have only presented their budget statement to the local assemblies but the
latter are yet to endorse it. Without the local assembly endorsing the budget,
it couldn't be executed.
Chronic problem
Missing budget deadline has become a
chronic challenge for many local governments. Last year, out of 753 local
bodies, 103 couldn't present their budget for the current FY 2024/25 even after
the end of the first quarter of the year. According to the statistics from the
MoFAGA in last September, 47 municipalities from Madhes were without budget by
then.
Likewise, 154 local bodies couldn't get
their budget for FY 2023/24 endorsed by the local assembly even after the start
of the new fiscal year. That year as well, local bodies in Madhes performed
poorly with 63 local bodies failing to announce their budget after 25 days of
the deadline. Karnali had four local bodies without budget then while Koshi had
29, Bagmati 24, Sudurpaschim 13 and Gandaki seven.
Similarly, about 193 local bodies couldn’t present
their budget for FY 2020/21 by July 29, about five weeks after the deadline set
by the law.
Kathmandu tales
The Federal Capital city Kathmandu
Metropolis couldn't announce its budget until now and Mayor Balendra Shah
convened its executive meeting after six months on Friday to decide the
unveiling of the budget on Sunday afternoon.
It is said that the primary reason behind
this was the ongoing dispute between Mayor Balendra Shah and the federal
government over the controversial suspension and reinstatement of the KMC's
Chief Administrative Officer Saroj Guragain, which resulted in a prolonged
disruption in the city’s internal governance.
As a result, Mayor Shah could not convene meetings
of the resource estimation and budget ceiling determination committee, the
municipal executive, and the assembly, which are essential for finalising and
approving the budget. Meeting of the municipal executives should be called
every month.
Political reasons
According to local body experts and
representatives, the budgets are delayed due to political conflict between the
political parties at the local level or among the elected representatives.
"We observed that the budget has
become the victim of the internal political conflict. There is a general
tendency of non-cooperation among the political parties at the local
level," said Prakash Tiwari, Chairman of Arjunchaupari Rural Municipality
in Syangja district.
He said that no problems have been
witnessed due to the lack of technical expertise, it's only the human-political
reason behind it.
For example, Kamala Municipality of
Dhanusha district couldn’t present its budget during the first half of the
fiscal year because the opposition party boycotted the government policy and
programmes and filed a case at the High Court in Janakpur. Mayor Bishweshor
Yadav and Deputy Mayor Shiladevi Mandal are from Nepali Congress and opposition
Janata Samajwadi Party obstructed the budget as its candidates were defeated by
them.
President of MuAN, Bhim Prasad Dhungana,
expressed worries over the budget obstructions and said that the political
parties that are active at the local level must remember that there is no
concept of opposition there.
"The mayor and deputy mayor are the
leaders who must think beyond their party-line and about the people," he
said. "If any local body failed to ratify its budget by mid-July there
would be problems in running the day-to-day operations, the municipal executive
can sanction the development budgets. Even the salary distribution is
obstructed."
Dhungana maintained that while there can be
discussions and disputes within the executives and assembly, budget and
development related works shouldn't be obstructed.
Budget process
According to the Intergovernmental Fiscal
Arrangement Act, 2074, the local governments are required to submit the
estimate of their expenditures, and estimated revenue to be collected from own
source, amount to be obtained from revenue sharing, amount to be obtained from
grants and amount needed to meet the budget deficit and sources thereof to the
federal government through the MoFAGA by mid-January each year.
In response, the federal government, with
the consultation of the National Natural Resources and Fiscal Commission
(NNRFC), avails to the provincial and local governments the particulars of
estimated source of fiscal equilisation grants and revenue sharing to be
provided to them in the upcoming FY.
Likewise, the provincial government also
provides fiscal grants in consultation with the NNRFC. After securing the
grants, the local government should estimate the sources of income and set the
budget limit. Then, plans and programmes of villages and towns are selected and
finalised.
Following this, ward-level plans are
selected and prioritised, and the budget formulation begins.
The local governments formulate their
budgets on the basis of their internal revenue and grants from the federal and
provincial governments. Such budget should be passed from the municipal
executive ratified by the local assembly which performs as the policy-making
body.
Without the budget approved by the
municipal assembly, the local bodies can't collect revenue, pay salaries and
execute their development plans and programmes. Further delay might impact the
performance-based grants from the federal government.
Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 13 July 2025.
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