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How does understanding public finance for WASH help civil society organisations (CSOs) to enhance their work in the community, and are budget related data too hard to access, read and understand? And if so, what can be done to address it?

TitleTracking budgets for rural WATSAN : an assessment of districts Ganjam and Nuapada in Odisha, India
Publication TypeWorking Paper
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsAgarwala, T, Shiva, R
Secondary TitleDecentralised Public Finance for WASH: Policy and Practice Learnings
Number3b
Pagination29 p. : 3 boxes, 13 fig., 6 tab.
Date Published04/2020
PublisherCentre for Budget and Governance Accountability (CBGA), IRC and WaterAid India
Place PublishedNew Delhi, India
Publication LanguageEnglish
Abstract

The objective of the paper is to aid the efforts of civil society organisations (CSOs) engaging with the issues of fiscal governance in the water and sanitation (WASH) sector in Odisha. It presents the use of budget tracking in rural water and sanitation (WATSAN) programmes, for Ganjam and Nuapada districts in Odisha. The period of study was from January 2019 to November 2019. The paper also presents a set of recommendations and suggestions for government and CSOs who would be tracking and analyzing the budgets for WATSAN programmes operational in different districts of Bihar, taking the case of Ganjam and Nuapada as examples. The crucial questions which the paper tries to address are: 1. How does understanding public finance for WASH help CSOs to enhance their work in the community?; and 2. Are budget related data too hard to access, read and understand? And if so, what can be done to address it?

This paper is part of a series on "Decentralised Public Finance for WASH: Policy and Practice Learnings", which is based on two core projects: Watershed - Capacity Building Support for Civil Society Organisations to Leverage Water and Sanitation Programmes in Bihar and Odisha supported by IRC and Tracking and Analysing Budget Allocations and Utilisation for WASH by Rural Local Bodies, supported by WaterAid India, using the Life Cycle Cost Approach covering two districts each from both the States namely Gaya and Samastipur from Bihar and Nuapada and Ganjam from Odisha.

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