Has the 16th Finance Commission sidelined the States?


Has the 16th Finance Commission Sidelined the States?

UPSC Study Note — GS-II | Indian Polity & Governance | Fiscal Federalism


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Constitution provision Article 280
Chairman Dr. Arvind Panagariya
Award period 2026-27 to 2030-31
Report tabled 1 February 2026
Vertical devolution 41% of divisible pool to States
States demanding 50% 18 of 28 States [S2]
New horizontal criterion State GDP contribution — 10% weight [S1]
Divisible pool excludes Cesses, surcharges, collection costs
15th FC devolution Also 41% (2020-26) [S4]
14th FC devolution 42% (2015-20)
Enabling body Ministry of Finance (Department of Expenditure)

Divisible pool squeeze — data from article: [S3] - 2013–19: ₹93–95 of every ₹100 central collection → divisible pool; cesses = ₹5–7 - 2021-22: divisible pool share fell to ₹86.5; cesses rose to ₹13.5 - 2025-26 (estimate): ₹89 divisible, ₹11 cesses/surcharges


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance (Federalism)

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The 16th Finance Commission is constituted under Article 280 of the Constitution.
  2. Chairman of the 16th FC: Dr. Arvind Panagariya (also former Vice-Chairman, NITI Aayog).
  3. The 16th FC report covers the period 2026-27 to 2030-31 (5 years).
  4. Vertical devolution retained at 41% — same as the 15th FC.
  5. The 14th FC had recommended the highest-ever devolution of 42%.
  6. Cesses and surcharges are excluded from the divisible pool under Article 271 — 100% retained by Centre.
  7. 18 of 28 States demanded an increase in devolution share to 50% before the 16th FC.
  8. A new criterion — State contribution to national GDP — was introduced with 10% weight in horizontal devolution.
  9. In 2021-22, cesses/surcharges accounted for ₹13.5 per ₹100 of Centre's gross tax revenue — the highest in the referenced period.
  10. The GST Compensation Cess (post-2017) is separate from other cesses and was not included in the divisible pool shrinkage analysis.
  11. The divisible pool is gross tax revenue minus collection costs, cesses, and surcharges.
  12. The 16th FC report was tabled in Parliament on 1 February 2026 alongside the Union Budget.
  13. States cannot unilaterally raise income tax or service tax post-GST — making FC devolution their primary revenue lever.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-II — Indian Constitution, Governance, Federalism

Syllabus headings: - "Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure, devolution of powers and finances up to local levels" - "Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States, issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure" - "Finance Commission — role and functions"

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The 16th Finance Commission's decision to maintain vertical devolution at 41% amid growing cess proliferation raises fundamental questions about fiscal federalism in India. Critically examine." (GS-II)

  2. "The divisible pool under Indian fiscal federalism is increasingly being eroded by policy choices rather than constitutional design. Analyse with reference to the role of cesses and surcharges." (GS-II / GS-III)

  3. "Near-consensus among States for higher devolution was bypassed by the 16th Finance Commission. Does this reflect a structural Centre-tilt in India's intergovernmental fiscal relations? Discuss." (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Finance Commission (Article 280) Constitutional basis; compare all 16 FCs
GST and fiscal federalism Post-GST curtailment of State tax autonomy compounds devolution concerns
Cesses and Surcharges (Article 271) Legal mechanism enabling the divisible pool squeeze
FRBM Act and State fiscal deficits States' borrowing limits add pressure when transfers fall short
14th Finance Commission Landmark 42% devolution — key comparison point
Cooperative vs Competitive Federalism Normative framework for evaluating FC recommendations
Planning Commission to NITI Aayog Abolition of plan transfers shifted more power to FC; context for current tensions

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing 41% and 42%: 14th FC = 42%; 15th and 16th FC = 41%. Many aspirants conflate them.
  2. Assuming cesses are part of the divisible pool: They are not — legally excluded under Article 271; this is the core structural issue.
  3. Confusing vertical and horizontal devolution: Vertical = Centre-to-States share (41%); Horizontal = inter-se distribution among States (formula-based).
  4. Attributing the GDP criterion to earlier FCs: The GDP contribution as a horizontal criterion (10%) is a 16th FC innovation — not present in earlier FCs.
  5. Assuming all States opposed the 16th FC: The consensus was on demanding more, not unanimous opposition to the award. Richer States actually benefit from the new GDP criterion.

11. Sources