The government will merge most of the 208 centrally sponsored rural development schemes to ensure that the funds reach the district-level bodies directly, and not through state governments.
This will be part of a new rural development policy to be unveiled by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at the conference of chief ministers on rural development and poverty alleviation, on Tuesday.
"The prime minister will propose that almost all centrally assisted rural development schemes be merged to create individual district plans," said an official in the prime minister's office.
This will be a radical departure from past practice where the state, and not the district, was considered the administrative unit for rural development.
The crux of the prime minister's proposal is that it will be up to the districts to come up with plans for their development. These are to be conceived and implemented by the zilla parishads or the district development or planning boards, which will be constituted for each district.
The centrally sponsored schemes not likely to be included in the list will be the big ones like the Indira Gandhi Awas Yojana and the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana.
The prime minister will also talk about the "vertical and horizontal proliferation of schemes and programmes and therefore a multiplication of effort" while implementing rural development schemes.
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