GSDP share as criterion for central-State transfers


GSDP Share as Criterion for Central–State Transfers

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Period Milestone
1951 1st Finance Commission constituted under Article 280; basic devolution formula established
1st–10th FC Criteria varied: population, area, tax effort, fiscal discipline, revenue gap
11th–13th FC Income distance (GSDP-based) introduced as a formal, weighted criterion
14th FC (2015–20) Devolution share raised to 42%; income distance weighted at 50%
15th FC (2021–26) Devolution share slightly reduced to 41%; income distance 45%; "Tax & Fiscal Efforts" 2.5%; population criteria shifted from 1971 Census to 2011 Census
16th FC (2026–31) Income distance 42.5%; new "Contribution to GDP" criterion at 10% (replaces Tax & Fiscal Efforts); devolution share maintained at 41%

[S1][S2][S3]


4. Core Static Facts

Constitutional / Statutory Basis - Article 280 of the Constitution: mandates the President to constitute a Finance Commission every five years. - Article 270: governs the distribution of net proceeds of taxes in the Consolidated Fund of India. - Article 279A: GST Council (relevant to the erosion of divisible pool via cesses).

Devolution Formula — 16th FC (2026–31) [S1]

Criterion Weight (16th FC) Weight (15th FC)
Income Distance (per capita GSDP gap from top-3 States) 42.5% 45%
Population (2011 Census) 15% 15%
Area 15% 15%
Forest & Ecology 10% 10%
Demographic Performance 12.5% 12.5%
Contribution to GDP (new) 10%
Tax & Fiscal Efforts (discontinued) 2.5%

Key Definitions - Income Distance: Difference between a State's per capita GSDP and the per capita GSDP of the average of the top 3 large States with the highest per capita GSDP. [S1] - GSDP base period for 16th FC: average of 2018–19 to 2023–24, excluding pandemic year 2020–21. [S1] - Contribution to GDP: Calculated as the square root of a State's GSDP divided by the sum of square roots of GSDP of all States (dampens concentration effect). [S1] - Divisible Pool: Central taxes net of collection costs and cesses/surcharges—cesses and surcharges are NOT shared with States. [S4] - Vertical devolution: Overall share of States in divisible pool = 41% (unchanged from 15th FC). [S1][S2] - Horizontal devolution: How the 41% is split among States using the formula above.

Implementing Body: Finance Commission (independent constitutional body); Ministry of Finance operationalises recommendations.

Transfer Channels: 1. Tax devolution (divisible pool) 2. Grants-in-Aid (Article 275) 3. Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance (Federalism)

Administrative

Social / Equity


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Finance Commissions are constituted under Article 280 of the Constitution.
  2. The current (16th) Finance Commission covers the period 2026–31.
  3. The share of States in the divisible pool recommended by both the 15th and 16th FCs is 41% (the 14th FC recommended 42%).
  4. Income Distance = difference between a State's per capita GSDP and the average of the top 3 large States with the highest per capita GSDP. [S1]
  5. The 16th FC computes GSDP averages over 2018–19 to 2023–24, excluding 2020–21 (pandemic year). [S1]
  6. The "Contribution to GDP" criterion in the 16th FC uses the square root of a State's GSDP (not the raw GSDP) to dampen concentration. [S1]
  7. "Contribution to GDP" carries 10% weight in 16th FC; it replaced "Tax & Fiscal Efforts" (2.5% in 15th FC). [S1]
  8. Cesses and surcharges collected by the Centre are NOT part of the divisible pool and are therefore not shared with States.
  9. The 15th Finance Commission switched the population criterion base year from 1971 to 2011 Census. [S2]
  10. Demographic Performance carries 12.5% weight in the 16th FC devolution formula, rewarding States for population control. [S1]
  11. States receive central resources via three channels: (i) tax devolution, (ii) grants-in-aid (Art. 275), (iii) Centrally Sponsored Schemes.
  12. The 15th Finance Commission operated for 2020–21 (interim) and then 2021–26 (main), submitting two separate reports. [S2]
  13. Article 270 governs the distribution of taxes in the Consolidated Fund; Article 279A established the GST Council.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: GS-II (Federalism; Finance Commission; Centre–State relations) and GS-III (Fiscal policy; resource mobilisation; taxation).

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States; issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure; devolution of powers and finances." - GS-III: "Government Budgeting; fiscal federalism."

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Finance Commission's increasing reliance on income-distance (GSDP-based) criteria for horizontal devolution prioritises equity over efficiency. Critically examine this claim with reference to the recommendations of the 15th and 16th Finance Commissions." 2. "Southern States argue that the current devolution formula penalises fiscal performers. Should GSDP contribution replace or supplement income distance as a criterion? Discuss with constitutional and policy dimensions." 3. "Growing cesses and surcharges in Union tax revenues have systematically eroded the divisible pool, undermining cooperative federalism. Evaluate the mechanisms available to States to address this asymmetry."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Finance Commission — Structure & History Parent framework; all 16 FCs and their criteria evolution
Fiscal Federalism in India Broader theory underlying Centre–State fiscal relations
GST and Fiscal Autonomy of States GST eliminated States' independent tax powers, heightening dependence on central transfers
Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS) Parallel transfer mechanism; constraints on State spending flexibility
Divisible Pool — Cesses & Surcharges Key mechanism by which Centre retains revenues outside sharing
14th Finance Commission Highest-ever 42% devolution; benchmark for comparison
Inter-State Disparities & Regional Development Equity rationale behind income-distance criterion
Articles 270, 275, 280, 282, 293 Constitutional architecture of Centre–State fiscal transfers

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing vertical and horizontal devolution: Vertical = what share States get overall (41%); Horizontal = how that share is split among States using the formula. Aspirants often merge the two.
  2. Wrong devolution percentage: The 14th FC recommended 42% (historic high); both the 15th and 16th FCs recommended 41%—do not conflate.
  3. Income Distance formula: It is measured from the top-3 States' average, NOT the national average per capita income. A common error is to equate it with per capita income below the national mean.
  4. "Contribution to GDP" is new to 16th FC: Many aspirants still associate the efficiency criterion with "Tax & Fiscal Efforts" (15th FC term). The 16th FC replaced it with the GSDP-based contribution metric.
  5. Cesses ARE collected centrally but NOT shared: Aspirants sometimes assume all central taxes are part of the divisible pool. Cess revenue (e.g., Health & Education Cess, Swachh Bharat Cess) is explicitly excluded.

11. Sources