Participatory Governance Development administration in most advanced countries of the West is the primary
responsibility of local government institutions in the urban as well as the rural
levels. In developing countries like India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, the
shadow of their colonial heritage still looms large. Even decades of independence
have failed to throw up truly autonomous structure of governance that enjoys
genuine power over programme-formulation and implementation. Afflicted with
the scarcity of resources, the local self-governing institutions have failed to
dominate the development process in most developing countries. Conversely, the
developed countries have accorded respectful status to their decentralised
governance bodies and have vested them with adequate resources and powers to
enable them to initiate, guide and regulate the process of socio-economic
development in their respective institutions.
Local government institutions in Great Britain, particularly counties, have been
able to transform the urban as well as the rural jurisdictions. Regional Economic
Councils and Prefects have enjoyed enormous powers in France. Russia was
known for its strong local government bodies, while the American regional and
local organisations enjoy massive authority in most segments of development,
and more particularly education.
There is a truly participatory democracy in most Western nations. This is the
upshot of long healthy traditions of grass-roots democracy. It has made
development administration in these nations people-centred and responsive.
Indicative Planning Starting with France which adopted the system of indicative planning in 1946 in a
structured manner, most other developed countries have, at one time or the other,
created institutions of planning for giving direction to their socio-economic
development. Unlike the practice in developing countries, these developed nations
have not adopted “detailed” or intensive planning. Their planning has been an
instrument of indicating the direction of growth and of providing guidelines to the
private sector. The objective of the exercise is to integrate the efforts of the
government and the private sector in the areas of socio-economic change.