Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Why ‘special status’ for states is no longer feasible

- Zia Haq letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Parties from Andhra Pradesh have staged a virtual political revolt against the Bharatiya Janata Party (Bjp)-led NDA government, seeking a special status category for the southern state.

Amid the ongoing political upheaval, here’s a primer on how the Centre-state financial relations have changed with the 14th Finance Commission and extending special favours is no longer a sound arrangemen­t. Sharing of financial resources between the Centre and states is important for any successful federation-based democracy. Any country that has more than one level of government meets the essential condition of being a federation. Some Indian states are richer than others.

The Constituti­on, through Article 280 to 281, provides for a unique mechanism in Finance Commission­s for division of taxes and revenues vertically — between the Centre and states, and horizontal­ly— among all states, based on their levels of developmen­t, prosperity and regional needs. Finance minister Arun Jaitley has said that the demand for special status by some states is no longer tenable after the 14th Finance Commission, which was a watershed, as it recommende­d that the states’ share in net proceeds of Union tax revenues should increase from 32% to 42%.

It also suggested that sharing of taxes should be the primary route for transfer of resources to states. With this, it virtually made concession­s such as additional funds through ‘special status’ administra­tively redundant. Besides granting states a much larger share of the financial pie, the 14th Finance Commission set aside the distinctio­n between plan and non-plan expenditur­e. It instead stressed higher devolution from the ‘divisible pool’, which is where all government income is first collected before being divided.

In other words, the 14th Finance Commission devised a new mechanism for the flow of resources between the Centre and the states and also across states without any scope for political mediation or bargaining. The era of favouring one state over another is deemed to have ended with the dismantlin­g of the Planning Commission, which used to allocate funds to states.

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