India can draw important lessons from this policy shift in the United States regarding disaster resilience and mitigation funding. Given India’s vulnerability to cyclones, floods, and earthquakes-a function of rapid urbanization coupled with climate change-government investment in preventive infrastructure is vital for minimizing long-term costs associated with recurring natural calamities.
The move towards curtailing public spending on hazard mitigation underscores challenges India may face should fiscal constraints force countries to reprioritize disaster readiness budgets over other national projects. However, such reductions risk magnifying future damages both socially and economically.
For India’s policymaking context: reliance on state-level initiatives or private-sector funding alone may prove insufficient without sustained central support akin to what HMGP provided states until its scaling back. A proactive approach combining robust public investments with extensive community-based resilience planning could serve as a model for safeguarding vulnerable populations while confronting increasing hazards linked specifically to extreme-weather events worldwide-including those observed across South Asia annually.