Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Union Budget takes note of key 15th Finance Commission suggestion­s

- Zia Haq Zia.haq@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: Key recommenda­tions of the 15th Finance Commission (FC) — the constituti­onal body that decides the shares of the Centre and states in all taxes and revenues — found their way into the Union budget for 2021-22 presented on Monday by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

Separately, HT has learnt that the government has, in its action-taken report on the 15th FC’S report, accepted a recommenda­tion to create a non-lapsable defence and security fund for the first time, but which was not part of the Budget announceme­nts because its implementa­tion will likely be taken up later.

The FC had proposed a dedicated non-lapsable fund called the “modernisat­ion fund for defence and internal security,” or MEDIS. The total indicative size of the proposed fund over the period 2021-26 is ₹238,354 crore. The NK Singh-headed 15th FC submitted its final report to President Ram Nath Kovind on November 9.

Major recommenda­tions of the 15th FC that were incorporat­ed into the Union budget include a boost in health spending, higher borrowing limits for states and a consolidat­ion of centrally sponsored schemes or public programmes implemente­d by states, but largely funded by the Centre.

The 15th FC has also recommende­d a measured fiscal ‘glide path’, or the trajectory the government should take towards fiscal consolidat­ion.

The commission has made its recommenda­tion public for the first time. It has suggested that 41% of the net proceeds of the Centre’s taxes be devolved to states over the next five years. This is nearly the same as the commission’s report for 2020-21. The previous FC had increased the devolution to states by 10 percentage points to 42%.

The one percentage point downward adjustment had to be done on account of the erstwhile state of Jammu & Kashmir being carved into two Union territorie­s — Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh — in 2019.

The 15th FC suggested India reduce its headline fiscal deficit to 4% in the next five financial years, suggesting a gentle tapering off of extra borrowings.

An imprint of this was visible in the Budget as the finance minister, in her budget speech, clearly outlined a similar glide path. The government is committed to bringing the fiscal deficit to below 4.5% of the GDP by 2025-26, she said.

The commission said it “recalibrat­ed the relative shares of union and states in gross revenue receipts” by cutting the grants component by 1% to allow the Centre to find the resources for the defence fund.

To meet long-term expenses for defence infrastruc­ture, the 15th FC recommende­d creation of a non-lapsable defence and internal security fund either through allocation from the divisible pool of funds shared by the Centre and states or through a cess. With its acceptance, a permanent defence fund for the country is set to be created for the first time.

“No recommenda­tion of the 15th FC has been overtly rejected,” an official said, requesting not to be named.

The Centre will also converge and cut down the number of centrally sponsored schemes to rationaliz­e them. “On the recommenda­tion of the 15th Finance Commission, we have undertaken a detailed exercise to rationalis­e and bring down the number of centrally sponsored schemes. This will enable consolidat­ion of outlays for better impact,” Sitharaman said.

Boosting state government­s’ finances, which have been hit both by the pandemic and poor realizatio­n of the Goods and Services Taxes (GST) because of the Covid-19 outbreak and the lockdown imposed to curb its spread, the Budget has provisione­d to allow states a normal ceiling of net borrowing at 4% of gross state domestic product (GSDP) for the year 2021-2022.

“A portion of this ceiling will be earmarked to be spent on incrementa­l capital expenditur­e. Additional borrowing ceiling of 0.5% of GSDP will also be provided subject to conditions. States will be expected to reach a fiscal deficit of 3% of GSDP by 2023-24, as recommende­d by the 15th Finance Commission,” the finance minister said.

The 15th Finance Commission had recommende­d, based on uniform norms of assessing revenues and expenditur­e of the states and the Union, total revenue deficit grants of ₹294,514 crore over the award period for 17 states.

Accepting this proposal with a slightly lower allocation, Sitharaman said: “I have also provided, on the commission’s recommenda­tion ₹118,452 crore as Revenue Deficit Grant to 17 states in 20212022, as against ₹74,340 crore to 14 states in 2020-2021.”

Reacting to the announceme­nts in the budget, Anil Desai, who had been a consultant to the 11th Finance Commission, said, “The big relief for states I think is that the 15th FC has kept devolution of central taxes at 41% at a time when a lost of mistrust had crept in between Centre and states.”

THE 15TH FC SUGGESTED INDIA REDUCE ITS HEADLINE FISCAL DEFICIT TO 4% IN THE NEXT FIVE FINANCIAL YEARS

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