Fiscal Federalism in India

Context

  • The Union Government accepted the recommendations of the 16th Finance Commission (FC16) and retained the States’ share in the divisible pool at 41%. Further, the horizontal devolution formula, local body grants, and disaster management corpus were also accepted.
  • However, several structural reforms were deferred, including:
    • Amendment of Fiscal Responsibility Legislation (FRL)
    • Regulation of off-budget borrowings
    • Power sector distribution reforms
    • Subsidy rationalisation

Associated Issues

  • Shrinking Divisible Pool of Taxes
    • The 41% share applies only to the divisible pool of taxes, not to total gross tax revenues.
    • Cesses and surcharges, which are retained entirely by the Union government, lie outside the divisible pool and have been increasing.
    • Consequently, the divisible pool as a share of gross tax revenues has steadily declined:
      • 89.2% during the FC13 period
      • 82.1% during the FC14 period
      • 78.3% during the FC15 period
    • This means 41% of a shrinking base does not translate into an equivalent share of total tax collections for States.
  • Discontinuation of Several Grants
    • FC16 discontinued multiple fiscal support mechanisms for States, including:
      • Revenue Deficit Grants
      • Sector-specific Grants
      • State-specific Grants
    • These instruments earlier provided targeted fiscal relief to States facing structural revenue constraints.
  • End of GST Compensation and Fiscal Stress
    • The GST compensation mechanism ended in June 2022, which earlier guaranteed 14% annual growth in State GST (SGST) revenues.
    • Several States have faced significant fiscal stress after its removal.
    • For instance, Tamil Nadu estimated a revenue shortfall of nearly ₹20,000 crore in 2024–25.
    • While aggregate SGST revenues may appear buoyant, distributional fiscal stress across States persists.
  • Off-Budget Borrowings and Weak Fiscal Rules
    • FC16 documented the practice of States borrowing through government controlled entities and servicing these liabilities through the budget.
    • Such borrowings remain outside official deficit calculations, creating hidden fiscal liabilities.
    • The Commission recommended:
      • Discontinuation of off-budget borrowings
      • Amendments to Fiscal Responsibility Legislation (FRL) frameworks
    • However, the Union government accepted borrowing ceilings in principle but deferred action on off-budget borrowings and FRL reforms.
  • Rising Debt Burdens in Several States
    • FC16’s inter-State comparison highlights fiscal stress in several States:
      • Punjab:
        • Debt to GSDP ratio: 42.9% (2023–24)
        • Revenue deficit: 3.7% of GSDP
        • Borrowing largely used for salaries and debt servicing rather than capital investment.
      • West Bengal Outstanding liabilities: 38.3% of GSDP.
    • These cases suggest persistent fiscal stress despite existing fiscal rules, which are often weakly enforced.
  • Shift in Horizontal Devolution Criteria
    • FC16 replaced the tax and fiscal effort criterion used earlier in the devolution formula.
    • Under FC15, States received 2.5% weight based on tax revenue efficiency relative to economic capacity.
    • FC16 replaced it with a “contribution to GDP” criterion, assigned a 10% weight.
    • This allocates resources based on each State’s share in national GDP (square root of GSDP share).
    • Thus, beneficiaries of this will be large high-income States such as Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Karnataka.
    • States with lower per capita income and greater fiscal needs, including Bihar, Jharkhand, and Uttar Pradesh will be in disadvantaged positions.
  • Conditionality in Local Body Grants
    • FC16 recommended ₹7,91,493 crore in grants to rural and urban local bodies.
    • These grants are divided into basic and performance grants.
    • Access to funds depends on conditions such as:
      • Constituted local bodies
      • Audited financial accounts
      • Timely constitution of State Finance Commissions
    • Performance grants also require:
      • Benchmarks for own-source revenue generation
      • Compliance with Central database systems
      • While individually justified, these conditions increase dependence on Central monitoring.
    • Evidence of this issue: During the FC15 period, only 62.6% of the recommended urban local body grants were actually released.

Way Forward

  • Restore the Equalisation Principle: Devolution criteria should balance economic capacity with fiscal need and development disparities.
  • Rationalise Cesses and Surcharges: Greater inclusion of these revenues in the divisible pool would strengthen fiscal federalism.
  • Reform Fiscal Responsibility Frameworks: Clear and enforceable rules are required to regulate off-budget borrowings and improve fiscal transparency.
  • Address Post-GST Fiscal Gaps: States require structural revenue stabilisation mechanisms after the end of GST compensation.
  • Strengthen Cooperative Federalism: Fiscal arrangements must involve greater Centre-State consultation and shared responsibility.
  • Improve Governance Capacity of States: Enhancing institutional and administrative capacity can help States meet conditionalities tied to grants.

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