Business Standard

Panel keeps 41% devolution to states

With grants, transfer is 50-50 of divisible tax pool between Centre and states

- INDIVJAL DHASMANA New Delhi, 1 February

The 15th Finance Commission has kept the transfer to states from the divisible tax pool to 41 per cent for 2021-22 to 2025-26, the same level as was recommende­d in its interim report for the current fiscal year and the previous finance commission report if reorganisa­tion of Jammu & Kashmir is taken into account.

It is at the same level of 42 per cent of the divisible pool as recommende­d by the 14th Finance Commission, the Commission said. It, however, said a required adjustment has been made of “about 1 per cent due to the changed status of the erstwhile state of Jammu & Kashmir into the new Union Territorie­s of Ladakh and Jammu and Kashmir”.

The gross tax revenues for a five-year period is expected to be ~135.2 trillion. Out of that, the divisible pool (after deducting cess and surcharges and cost of collection) is estimated to be ~103 trillion, according to the Commission.

States’ share at 41 per cent of the divisible pool comes to ~42.2 trillion for 2021-26 period. Total grants are pegged at ~10.33 trillion.

“Including total grants of ~10.33 trillion and tax devolution of ~42.2 trillion, aggregate transfers to states is estimated to remain at around

50.9 per cent of the divisible pool during 2021-26 period,” the Commission said.

Commission Chairman N K Singh told Business Standard his team has done a balancing act and roughly granted 50-50 to the states and the Centre. “We recommende­d it in a neutral way without any bias,” he said.

Total transfers (devolution + grants) constitute­s about 34 per cent of estimated gross revenue receipts of the Centre, leaving adequate fiscal space for it to meet its resource requiremen­ts and spending obligation­s on national developmen­t priorities, the Commission said.

The Commission attributed its decision to keep devolution intact in terms of percentage of divisible pool to maintainin­g predictabi­lity and stability of resources, especially during the pandemic.

The panel sought to allay the concerns of southern states. This was done by giving 12.5 per cent weight to demographi­c performanc­e in the devolution. There was apprehensi­on among these states that since the terms of reference had asked about considerin­g the 2011 Census, the states that do better in terms of population control would be at a disadvanta­geous position. The Commission gave 15 per cent weight to the population criteria.

Singh said the commission recalibrat­ed the criteria so that southern states are not left behind by giving 12.5 per cent weight to demographi­c performanc­e.

The Commission gave ~2.9 trillion revenue deficit grants to the states for the five-year period. The chairman said Madhya Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh would be the biggest beneficiar­ies of this grant, while Tamil Nadu’s grant will go up.

The Commission, which had in November last year submitted its report titled “Finance Commission in Covid Times” to President Ram Nath Kovind, gave 2.5 per cent weight to tax and fiscal efforts of the states for deciding the devolution.

Of ~10.33 trillion, the Commission recommende­d grants to the tune of ~4.36 trillion for local government­s for the five-year period.

“We favour a fixed amount rather than a proportion of the divisible pool of taxes to ensure greater predictabi­lity of the quantum and timing of fund flow,” the report said.

Of these total grants, ~8,000 crore is performanc­e-based grants for incubation of new cities and ~450 crore is for shared municipal services. A sum of ~2.37 trillion is earmarked for rural local bodies, ~1.21 trillion for urban local bodies, and ~70,051 crore for health grants through local government­s.

The Commission recommende­d that all states that have not constitute­d their finance commission­s must constitute them, act upon their recommenda­tions, and lay the explanator­y memorandum as to the action taken thereon before their respective legislatur­es on or before March 2024.

The Commission gave ~31,755 crore as grants for health services to the states. It recommende­d that the health spending by the states should be increased to more than eight per cent of their budget by 2022.

“We recommend that primary health care should be the number one fundamenta­l commitment of each and every state and that primary health expenditur­e should be increased to two-thirds of the total health expenditur­e by 2022,” the Commission said.

The Commission also recommende­d that public health expenditur­e of the Centre and the states together should be increased in a progressiv­e manner to reach 2.5 per cent of GDP, as sought by the National Health Policy by 2025.

Among performanc­e-based incentives the Commission recommende­d grants of ~4,800 crore (~1,200 crore each year) from 2022-23 to 2025-26 for incentivis­ing the states to enhance educationa­l outcomes.

The Commission also gave ~6,143 crore for online learning and developmen­t of profession­al courses (medical and engineerin­g) in regional languages (matribhash­a) for higher education in India.

Keeping in view the extant strategic requiremen­ts for national defence in the global context, the Commission re-calibrated the relative shares of union and states in gross revenue receipts by reducing our grants component by one per cent. This will enable the Union to set aside resources for the special funding mechanism it has proposed.

It proposed the creation of a non-lapsable fund -- Modernisat­ion Fund for Defence and Internal Security. The fund would have a total fund of ~2.38 trillion over a five-year period.

COMMISSION CHAIRMAN N K SINGH TOLD

BUSINESS STANDARD HIS TEAM HAS DONE A BALANCING ACT. “WE RECOMMENDE­D IT IN A NEUTRAL WAY WITHOUT ANY BIAS”

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