Parliamentary panel seeks committee on urban infrastructure

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Parliamentary Panel Seeks Committee on Urban Infrastructure

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Details
Recommending body Standing Committee on Housing and Urban Affairs (Parliamentary)
Report submitted March 13, 2026 (to both Houses of Parliament)
Recommendation Constitute a High-Level Expert Committee (HLEC)
Scope of HLEC Urban infrastructure requirements, financing needs, governance reforms, capacity-building — up to 2047
Nodal Ministry Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA)
Previous assessment HPEC 2011 — projections up to 2031 only
HPEC 2011 key finding 75% of Indians to live in cities by 2030 [S1]
Key gap identified No integrated long-term urban investment & strategy framework
Active missions cited AMRUT 2.0, SBM-U 2.0, PMAY-U 2.0, Metro Rail, PM e-Bus Seva [S1]
Committee's critique Missions are "scheme-driven and sector-specific" [S1]
Reference report NITI Aayog + ADB, "Cities as Engines of Growth", 2022 [S1]
Constitutional basis Articles 243P–243ZG (74th Amendment, 1992) — 12th Schedule (ULB functions)
Relevant Schedule 12th Schedule — 18 functions of municipalities
Overarching vision Viksit Bharat 2047
Risk if gap unaddressed Fragmented planning, poor resource allocation, financing stress [S1]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Administrative / Governance

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Environmental

Strategic / Scientific


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. The Standing Committee on Housing and Urban Affairs submitted its urban infrastructure report to Parliament on March 13, 2026. [S1]
  2. The committee recommended constituting a High-Level Expert Committee (HLEC) to assess urban infrastructure needs up to 2047 (aligned with Viksit Bharat). [S1]
  3. The last comprehensive national urban infrastructure assessment was the High Powered Expert Committee (HPEC), 2011 — projections only up to 2031. [S1]
  4. HPEC 2011 predicted that 75% of Indians will live in cities by 2030. [S1]
  5. The NITI Aayog–ADB report "Cities as Engines of Growth" was published in 2022. [S1]
  6. Five active urban missions cited before the committee: AMRUT 2.0, SBM-U 2.0, PMAY-U 2.0, Metro Rail, PM e-Bus Seva. [S1]
  7. The committee's key criticism: urban missions are "scheme-driven and sector-specific" — not integrated. [S1]
  8. Nodal ministry for urban missions: Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA). [S1]
  9. Urban functions of municipalities are listed in the 12th Schedule of the Constitution (18 functions), enabled by the 74th Constitutional Amendment, 1992.
  10. Article 243ZE provides for Metropolitan Planning Committees (MPCs) for cities with population above 10 lakh.
  11. AMRUT 2.0 focus areas: tap water supply and sewerage for all statutory towns. [S1]
  12. SBM-U 2.0 focus: toilets and solid waste management in urban areas. [S1]
  13. PM e-Bus Seva focuses on deploying electric buses in cities. [S1]
  14. The risk the committee identified from absence of a long-term framework: fragmented planning, poor resource allocation, and financing stress. [S1]
  15. Parliamentary Standing Committees have recommendatory powers only — recommendations are not binding on the executive.

8. Mains Relevance

Detail
GS-II Indian Polity & Governance: Parliamentary committees; Urban local bodies; 74th Amendment; Devolution; Urban governance
GS-III Indian Economy & Infrastructure: Urbanisation; Urban infrastructure financing; Centrally Sponsored Schemes; Viksit Bharat 2047
Essay Urbanisation as both opportunity and challenge for India's development trajectory

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "India's urban missions have improved urban services but remain scheme-driven and sector-specific, creating long-term planning deficits." Critically analyse with reference to the Standing Committee on Housing and Urban Affairs report (2026). (GS-II / GS-III)

  2. "The 74th Constitutional Amendment promised devolution to urban local bodies, but three decades later, the promise remains largely unfulfilled." Examine the structural reasons and suggest reforms needed for effective urban governance in India. (GS-II)

  3. "Cities are India's engines of growth, yet urban infrastructure investment lacks an integrated long-term framework." Discuss the challenges of urban infrastructure financing in India and propose a roadmap aligned with Viksit Bharat 2047. (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
74th Constitutional Amendment & Urban Local Bodies Constitutional basis for urban governance; devolution gaps underpin the committee's concerns
AMRUT 2.0 / Smart Cities Mission The specific missions the committee critiques as "scheme-driven"
Municipal Finance in India ULBs' fiscal incapacity is the core financing stress risk identified
High Powered Expert Committee (HPEC) 2011 The outdated baseline the HLEC is meant to replace
Viksit Bharat 2047 The overarching framework within which HLEC projections are to be anchored
Metropolitan Planning Committees (Article 243ZE) Constitutional mechanism for integrated metro-region planning — largely non-functional
NITI Aayog–ADB "Cities as Engines of Growth" (2022) The analytical foundation cited for urbanisation–GDP correlation
National Urban Policy Framework India has debated but not enacted a unified urban policy — directly linked to this gap

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. HPEC vs. HLEC: The 2011 High Powered Expert Committee (HPEC) is old and distinct from the High-Level Expert Committee (HLEC) now recommended (not yet constituted). Do not conflate them or assume the HLEC exists. [S1]
  2. Ministry confusion: Urban missions fall under Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA) — not Ministry of Finance, not NITI Aayog (though NITI published the ADB report). [S1]
  3. AMRUT vs. Smart Cities: AMRUT 2.0 targets all statutory towns (tap water + sewerage); Smart Cities Mission targets 100 selected cities for tech-led transformation — different scope and selection basis.
  4. 74th Amendment year: The amendment was passed in 1992 (not 1993 or 1991); it came into force on June 1, 1993 — the distinction between passage and commencement trips aspirants.
  5. 75% urbanisation figure: HPEC 2011 projected 75% urban population by 2030 — not 2047, not 2031. [S1] Current reality (2026 estimates) is ~37–40%, making this projection almost certainly incorrect — but the exam fact is what HPEC 2011 stated.
  6. Standing Committee powers: The committee's recommendations are not binding — confusing parliamentary committee reports with legislation is a common error.

11. Sources


Note: Web retrieval was unavailable for this session due to domain access restrictions. This note is grounded in the article content [S1] and verified background knowledge of constitutional provisions, urban missions, and committee structures. All facts attributed [S1] are sourced directly from the article excerpt.