Negotiating Universalism in India and Latin America

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Central Government
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Federal Transfers
Fiscal decentralization
fiscal federalism theory
GDP Growth
GLS Model
Greater Fiscal Decentralization
IAS Officer
Incumbency Advantage
Indian federation
Inter-governmental Transfers
intergovernmental relations
Intergovernmental Transfers
Interpersonal Inequality
Interregional Inequality
Lakh Crores
Latin America
Local Development
MMR Vaccine
National Level Measures
NITI Aayog
political economy research
Redistributive Capacity
Regional GDP
Regional GDP Growth
regional inequality
social policy evaluation
Subnational Governments
Subnational politics
Subnational Units
subnational welfare policy outcomes
welfare state analysis
Welfare state universalism

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367709402
  • Weight: 417g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book explores how vertical inter-governmental political and fiscal bargains and horizontal variation in political, social and economic conditions across regions contribute to or undermine the provision of inclusive and sustainable social policies at the subnational level in Latin America and India.

The question of how to advance universal social rights while reducing territorial inequalities has been a central dilemma for Latin America and India. After several decades of ambitious decentralization reforms in both regions, the balance between local accountability versus centralized planning remains a theoretical and empirical problem in need of systematic exploration. The chapters in this volume incorporate both federal and decentralized unitary states, pointing to common political tensions across unitary and federal settings despite the typically greater institutionalization of regional autonomy in federal countries. The contributors examine the territorial dimension of universalism and explore, in greater and empirical detail, the causal links between fiscal transfers, social policies and outcomes, and highlight the political dynamics that shape fiscal decentralization reforms and the welfare state.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Regional & Federal Studies.

Andrés Mejía Acosta is Senior Lecturer at the Department of International Development, King’s College London, UK, and Associate Researcher at the Centre for the Study of Business and Economics, University of the Americas (UDLA), Ecuador.

Louise Tillin is Reader in Politics and Director of King’s India Institute, King’s College London, UK. She is an editor of the journal Regional and Federal Studies.