As the 16th Finance Commission, headed by Arvind Panagariya, takes feedback from stakeholders, some states have complained to it that the Centre is increasingly taking recourse to cess and surcharge to circumvent its recommendations on tax devolution. Southern states have again raised the issue of giving more weight to the criterion of population control in deciding the transfer of central taxes to the states or else revert the population yardstick to the 1971 Census against the 2011 one considered by the 15th Finance Commission.
The southern states also wanted to reduce the weight given to the income distance criterion and, instead, consider the contribution of states to the national economy as one of the yardsticks.
Finance commissions use different yardsticks to recommend transfer of funds from the Centre to the states.
These generally are income distance, population, area, etc. A few commissions considered additional criteria, such as demographic change, population control, tax efforts, fiscal discipline, forest cover, and index of infrastructure.
The 16th Finance Commission would give its recommendation for the five-year period from 2026-27 to 2030-31.
Divided over divisible pool
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MKStalin says the commission should devolve at least 50 per cent, if not more, of the divisible pool to states. Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah supports this line of thinking.
The divisible pool consists of all Central taxes-income tax, customs duty, excise duty, and goods and services tax-but does not include cess and surcharge.
This story is from the November 27, 2024 edition of Business Standard.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November 27, 2024 edition of Business Standard.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
A global outreach beyond business
An ancient civilisation with a modern outlook, India has a lot of fine strengths – in cinema, sports, art, culture, food, yoga – that it is building on
Union Carbide waste disposal: Protests rock Pithampur, 2 attempt self-immolation
Two persons on Friday attempted self-immolation, adding to tensions in Pithampur, Madhya Pradesh, as protests against the planned disposal of 337 tonnes of hazardous waste from Bhopal's defunct Union Carbide factory continued in the small industrial town.
Over 500 flights delayed, 24 train ops hit in Delhi
Palam airport records zero visibility from 8 am to 9.30 am Friday
AFTER SINDHU, WHO?
Women's badminton faces uncertainty due to a shrinking talent pool, lack of quality coaches, and overreliance on Gopichand
No cause for alarm: Indian health officials on hMPV spread in China
As the world marks the fifth anniversary of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2025, another flu-like illness has emerged, though Indian officials insist there is no reason to panic.
Jefferies: '25 may be year of monetary easing in India
Brokerage raises target price for HDFC, ICICI Bank
Avenue Supermarts hits 15% upper circuit after Q3 update
Avenue Supermarts (owner of DMart retail chain) shares clocked 15 per cent upper circuit in trade on BSE at ₹4,160.4 per share on Friday. Buying in the stock sparked after the company released its Q3 business update.
Film producer Vipul Shah's Sunshine Pictures files DRHP
Film and television producer-director Vipul Shah-backed Sunshine Pictures has filed draft papers with the market regulator Sebi to raise funds through an initial public offering (IPO).
MFs' Equity Buying Topped ₹4 Trillion in 2024
Mutual funds' (MFs) equity buying jumped over twofold in 2024 to top ₹4 trillion for the first time.
Quadrant Future fixes price band at ₹275-290, offer opens on Jan 7
Quadrant Future Tek on Friday said it has fixed the price band at ₹275-290 per equity share for its ₹290-crore initial public offering (IPO) that will open for public subscription on January 7.