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6) Infrastructure Growth — 6/10

  • Delhi Metro Phase-III added key links (e.g., Grey Line opened in Oct 2019), improving access for outer areas like Najafgarh.

  • This made commutes faster and safer for many daily travellers.

  • Roads, drainage and buses matter too, but public bus expansion lagged the metro pace in this period.

  • We score medium: metro expansion is a clear win, but we wanted broader, documented gains across roads + buses.

  • Overall, the city moved forward, but not evenly across all modes.
    Example: Grey Line (Dwarka–Najafgarh) started in 2019, easing travel. Embassy of Japan in India mint

7) Water & Sanitation Access — 6.5/10

  • Tap water reach improved; a large majority of homes had access by 2019–20.

  • But sewage treatment still lagged demand, and the Yamuna stayed polluted—showing the gap between pipes in and treatment out.

  • People care about hours of supply and water quality; both remain mixed across colonies.

  • We credit coverage gains, deduct for treatment and river health.

  • Result: a good but unfinished story.
    Example: High network coverage, but treatment gaps keep Yamuna dirty. delhiplanning.delhi.gov.in ORF Online

8) Fiscal Responsibility — 8.5/10

  • CAG records show Delhi kept a revenue surplus from 2014–15 to 2018–19.

  • Surplus means the state didn’t overshoot on day-to-day spending and could fund capital works or cut debt.

  • Delhi also launched an Outcome Budget (2017–18)—a public document that links money → outputs → outcomes.

  • This is rare in India and raises transparency for citizens.

  • We reward sound finances + clear reporting.
    Example: Outcome Budget + revenue surplus for multiple years. Comptroller and Auditor General of India+1 delhiplanning.delhi.gov.in

9) Environmental Health — 4.5/10

  • Despite efforts (odd-even, etc.), air quality stayed very poor in 2019; PM2.5 annual average was around 108 μg/m³ (very unhealthy).

  • 2020 saw some lockdown-related improvement, but the regional airshed problem (stubble, industry, weather) keeps pollution high.

  • People experienced many “very poor/severe” days, a real health risk.

  • We recognise policy effort, but we score outcomes people breathe every day.

  • Hence the low score.
    Example: 2019 pollution emergency; PM2.5 ~108 μg/m³; better in 2020 due to lockdown. Hindustan Times TIME cpcb.nic.in

10) Social Equity — 7/10

  • From Oct 2019, women could ride government buses for free; studies show their ridership share rose ~20% by 2023.

  • Clinics and school upgrades especially help low-income families in outer wards.

  • Some targeted welfare arms struggled to reach every eligible group, reminding us that design + delivery both matter.

  • We reward steps that make access cheaper and safer for women and the poor.

  • Score reflects big, inclusive moves, with room to deepen coverage.
    Example: Free bus travel for women improved mobility and safety. The Indian Express WRI India

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