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Municipal fiscal reality: (a) Constitutional authorization: Article 243X empowers State Legislatures to authorize Municipalities to levy taxes, duties, tolls, fees, (b) Ground reality: Most Municipalities rely heavily on grants: (i) Limited tax base: Informal economy, property undervaluation, tax evasion limit Municipal own revenue, (ii) Collection capacity: Municipalities lack staff, systems, enforcement mechanisms for efficient tax collection, (iii) Political resistance: Local taxation may face voter, business resistance; Municipal representatives reluctant to levy taxes fearing electoral backlash, (c) Grant dependence: (i) State grants: Assigned revenues, grants-in-aid from State Consolidated Fund form major Municipality revenue, (ii) Central schemes: Funds from Centrally Sponsored Schemes (AMRUT, Smart Cities) supplement Municipality resources, (iii) Conditional grants: Many grants tied to specific schemes, limiting Municipality flexibility in resource allocation, (d) Implications: (i) Fiscal autonomy: Grant dependence limits Municipality autonomy in planning, prioritizing local needs, (ii) Accountability: Less accountability when funds come from higher governments rather than local taxation, (iii) Capacity building: Need for training, systems to enhance Municipality revenue collection, financial management, (e) Illustrates fiscal federalism gap: Constitutional framework enables Municipal taxation; ground reality requires capacity building, political will, adequate revenue sources for meaningful fiscal autonomy.