A grant-in-aid is money allocated from a central/state government to subnational governments to provide specific services or fund specific projects. Such funding is usually used when the government and the legislature decide that the recipient should be publicly funded but operate with reasonable independence from the state.
A grant-in-aid is money allocated from a central/state government to subnational governments to provide specific services or fund specific projects. Such funding is usually used when the government and the legislature decide that the recipient should be publicly funded but operate with reasonable independence from the state.
In the United Kingdom, most bodies in receipt of grants-in-aid are non-departmental public bodies.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).