Have States gained from the 16th FC?


Have States Gained from the 16th Finance Commission?

UPSC Study Note | GS-II: Fiscal Federalism & Centre-State Relations


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Commission 16th Finance Commission
Chairperson Dr. Arvind Panagariya
Award Period 2026-27 to 2030-31
Constitutional Provision Articles 270 (divisible pool) & 280 (FC constitution)
Enabling Act Finance Commission (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1951
Vertical Devolution 41% of divisible pool to States (same as 15th FC)
Divisible Pool Coverage ~81% of gross tax revenue in 2025-26 (cess & surcharge excluded)
Taxes in Pool Corporation tax, personal income tax, CGST, Centre's share of IGST
Taxes NOT in Pool Cess, surcharge (Centre retains these entirely)
New Horizontal Parameter GDP contribution of a State — 10% weightage
Parameter Removed States' own tax effort (earlier had 2.5% weight)
Population weight Increased by +2.5 percentage points
Weights Reduced Area, demographic performance, per capita GSDP distance
Prior FC trend 13th FC: 32% → 14th FC: 42% → 15th FC: 41% → 16th FC: 41%

[S1][S2][S3][S4]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance (Federalism)

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Article 270 of the Constitution provides for distribution of net Central tax proceeds between Centre and States. [S2]
  2. Article 280 mandates constitution of a Finance Commission every five years. [S2]
  3. The 16th Finance Commission is chaired by Dr. Arvind Panagariya (former Vice-Chairman, NITI Aayog). [S1]
  4. 16th FC award period: 2026-27 to 2030-31 (five years). [S1]
  5. Vertical devolution recommended by the 16th FC: 41% — unchanged from the 15th FC. [S1][S3]
  6. The 15th FC reduced devolution from 42% to 41% specifically because of the bifurcation of J&K into two Union Territories. [S1]
  7. Cess and surcharge are NOT part of the divisible pool; they are retained entirely by the Centre. [S2]
  8. In 2025-26, the divisible pool was estimated to constitute only ~81% of gross Central gross tax revenue. [S2]
  9. The 14th FC (2015-20) raised States' share from 32% to 42% — the largest single-step increase in Finance Commission history. [S1][S2]
  10. The 16th FC introduced GDP contribution of States as a new horizontal devolution parameter with a weight of 10%. [S3][S4]
  11. The 16th FC removed the 2.5% weight for States' own tax effort from the horizontal formula. [S3]
  12. Corporation tax, personal income tax, CGST, and Centre's share of IGST are among the taxes included in the divisible pool. [S2]
  13. The Finance Commission (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1951 governs the FC's procedures. [S2]
  14. Taxes in the divisible pool do NOT include customs duty (the Centre's share of customs is not part of the shareable pool under Article 270 — it was brought in by the 80th Constitutional Amendment, 2000). [background/S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: Primarily GS-II (Polity & Governance — Federalism, Centre-State Relations, Fiscal Federalism); elements in GS-III (Indian Economy — Public Finance, Budgetary Processes).

Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure; devolution of powers and finances up to local levels - GS-III: Indian Economy — government budgeting; issues of resource mobilisation

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The 16th Finance Commission's retention of 41% vertical devolution has been criticised as insufficient by States. Examine the structural constraints on raising States' share and evaluate the equity-efficiency trade-offs in the horizontal devolution formula." (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "The exclusion of cess and surcharge from the divisible pool undermines cooperative federalism. Critically analyse with reference to constitutional provisions and recent Finance Commission recommendations." (GS-II/III, 250 words) 3. "Has the 16th Finance Commission balanced the competing interests of developed and developing States? Discuss with reference to changes in the horizontal devolution criteria." (GS-II, 150 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Finance Commission — Constitutional Framework (Art. 270, 280) Direct foundation; understand before any FC analysis
Fiscal Federalism in India — Centre-State Financial Relations Broader context: grants, CSS, FRBM, GST Council
GST — Divisible Pool & Compensation CGST/IGST are in divisible pool; GST compensation cess is NOT
14th Finance Commission Recommendations Landmark precedent; set the 42% benchmark that all subsequent FCs are judged against
FRBM Act, 2003 & State Fiscal Responsibility Links to conditions States must meet to access full devolution/borrowing
Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS) Rationalisation Pre-14th FC CSS conditionalities vs post-14th FC untied transfers
7th Schedule — Union List, State List, Concurrent List Revenue assignment underpins why Centre controls the divisible pool
Delimitation & North-South Political Divide Population-based devolution gains from 16th FC intersect with delimitation of parliamentary seats post-2026 Census

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing 14th and 15th FC shares: 14th FC = 42%; 15th FC = 41% (reduced for J&K UTs); 16th FC = 41%. Aspirants often misremember all three as the same or confuse the reason for the 1% cut.
  2. Assuming cess/surcharge is in the divisible pool: It is NOT. This is a frequently tested trap — cess (e.g., Health & Education Cess, Swachh Bharat Cess) accrues entirely to the Centre.
  3. Conflating vertical and horizontal devolution: Vertical = what % goes to States collectively. Horizontal = how that % is split among individual States. The 16th FC changed the horizontal formula but kept vertical at 41%.
  4. Attributing Finance Commission to a Ministry: The FC is a constitutional body under Article 280, not a Ministry-level body; it reports to the President. The Finance Ministry services it but does not control its recommendations.
  5. Confusing Finance Commission with Planning Commission / NITI Aayog: Planning Commission (abolished 2014) handled plan transfers; NITI Aayog has no fiscal transfer role. FC is the sole constitutional body for tax devolution — these three are frequently muddled.

11. Sources


Prepared for UPSC Prelims + Mains | Current as of June 2026