Disaster Federalism Crisis: Is India’s Relief System Failing States?

Syllabus: Disaster and disaster management.

Background

  • India’s inter-governmental disaster financing system reveals widening asymmetry between Union and States, highlighted recently in the Centre’s allocation to Kerala after the July 2024 Wayanad landslides.
  • Against Kerala’s documented loss of ₹2,200 crore, the Union approved only ₹260 crore, signalling a shift away from cooperative federalism towards a more centralised, conditional model.

Present Disaster-Response Architecture

  • Under the Disaster Management Act, 2005, funding operates through a two-tier structure:
    • State Disaster Response Fund (SDRF): Cost-shared in 75:25 ratio (or 90:10 for Himalayan/north-eastern States); enables immediate relief.
    • National Disaster Response Fund (NDRF): Fully Union-funded; supports States when a calamity is classified as “severe”.
  • Though federal in design, the system exhibits central drift in practice.

Structural Weaknesses in India’s Disaster Financing

  • Outdated Relief Norms
    • Compensation rates—₹4 lakh per life lost and ₹1.2 lakh for fully damaged houses—have barely changed in a decade, covering subsistence, not reconstruction.
  • Ambiguous Classification
    • The Act does not define “severe disaster”, enabling wide Union discretion in determining NDRF eligibility.
  • Procedural Delays
    • Support is not automatic; States must navigate sequential clearances, central assessments, and high-level approvals, delaying timely relief.
  • Weak Allocation Formula
    • Finance Commission uses population and area, ignoring actual hazard profiles.
    • Vulnerability is proxied by poverty, not a disaster-risk index, leading to misaligned allocations.

The Wayanad Case: Exposing Institutional Gaps

  • Centre cited Kerala’s ₹780 crore SDRF balance and earlier ₹529 crore interest-free loan to justify reduced aid.
  • However, SDRF balances often represent committed works, not surplus funds; rules restrict usage to immediate relief, not reconstruction.
  • Delayed classification of the landslide as “severe” limited access to NDRF, unlike larger packages for Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Assam, etc.
  • Similar mismatches occurred after Cyclone Gaja (2018) and Karnataka floods (2019), revealing a system driven by bureaucratic negotiation rather than solidarity.

Global Best Practices

  • Countries use objective triggers for transparent, rapid support:
    • U.S. FEMA uses per capita damage thresholds.
    • Mexico’s FONDEN used rainfall/wind triggers for automatic release.
    • Philippines relies on rainfall and fatality indices.
    • African and Caribbean insurance pools use satellite-based loss assessment.
    • Australia links aid to a state’s spending relative to revenue.
  • These systems demonstrate how rule-based triggers can reduce discretion and speed up relief.

Way Forward: Rebuilding Federal Spirit

  • The 16th Finance Commission can:
    • Update relief norms to reflect actual costs.
    • Replace population-based criteria with a comprehensive vulnerability index.
    • Ensure disaster support remains grant-based, not loan-driven.
  • Disaster funds should be under State operational control, with Union oversight limited to post-audit, not prior approvals.

Conclusion

  • Disasters test not just physical resilience but also institutional federalism.
  • When relief becomes negotiation instead of cooperation, fiscal federalism weakens.
  • India must shift from procedural charity to a rules-based partnership to ensure timely, equitable, and constitutional disaster response.
  • The Wayanad tragedy is a warning—before the next crisis, the fiscal foundations of disaster relief need urgent reform.

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