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
- The 16th Finance Commission (FC), chaired by Dr. Arvind Panagariya, submitted its report on 1 February 2026, covering the award period 2026-27 to 2030-31. [S1]
- It retained the vertical devolution rate at 41% — the States' share of the divisible pool of central taxes — unchanged from the 15th FC. [S1][S2]
- A near-consensus among States demanded a hike to 50%, but the Commission did not oblige, making this one of the most politically contentious FC awards in recent memory. [S2]
- The structural issue: the Centre's growing reliance on cesses and surcharges (excluded from the divisible pool) effectively shrinks the shareable pie without altering the percentage. [S3]
2. Why in the News
- The 16th FC Report was tabled in Parliament by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on 1 February 2026 alongside the Union Budget 2026-27. [S1]
- An analysis published in The Hindu (4 February 2026) highlighted how the Commission aligned with Centre's fiscal priorities despite a rare consensus among States demanding higher devolution. [S3]
- The Centre's cess-and-surcharge strategy — which keeps revenue outside the divisible pool — has intensified concerns about the erosion of cooperative federalism. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- Finance Commissions are constituted under Article 280 of the Constitution; a new Commission is set up every five years.
- 1st FC (1951) set the precedent of revenue sharing; the framework has evolved from fixed grants to formula-based devolution.
- Key milestone — 14th FC (2015-20): Raised States' share dramatically from ~32% to 42%, the highest ever.
- 15th FC (2020-26): Reduced share marginally to 41%, partly due to J&K bifurcation reducing the States' universe. [S4]
- 16th FC (2026-31): Retained 41%, introduced GDP contribution as a new horizontal criterion (10% weight). [S1][S2]
- The issue of cesses and surcharges crowding out the divisible pool has grown since 2014; it gained peak salience during the 16th FC consultations. [S3]
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
- Maintaining 41% devolution while the divisible pool base itself shrinks (due to cess proliferation) means States receive a nominally unchanged share of a structurally smaller pie. [S3]
- Introduction of GDP as a criterion (10%) rewards economically larger/faster-growing States (likely southern and western States) at the expense of poorer but populous States. [S1]
- States face higher committed expenditure (salaries, pensions, interest) without commensurate revenue transfer, widening the vertical fiscal imbalance.
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 280 mandates the FC to recommend distribution of net proceeds of taxes between Centre and States.
- Article 270: Central taxes are to be distributed; but Article 271 allows Parliament to levy surcharges for Centre's purposes — cesses/surcharges are routed through this provision, legally excluding them from sharing.
- States have no constitutional remedy against cess proliferation; it is a policy choice, not a justiciable matter.
Ethical / Governance (Federalism)
- 18 of 28 States — cutting across political affiliations — demanded 50% devolution, representing a rare federal consensus that the Commission bypassed. [S2]
- The Commission "acknowledged" rather than "heeded" States' fiscal pressures — a posture critics see as Centre-leaning. [S3]
- Cess revenue is 100% retained by the Centre, used for earmarked funds (PM-KISAN, Swachh Bharat, etc.) that often duplicate State functions.
Administrative
- States argue that post-GST, their tax autonomy is curtailed; they cannot levy taxes on services independently. Combined with cess erosion, fiscal space of States is structurally compressed.
- The horizontal devolution formula (inter-se share among States) was also revised — inclusion of GDP criterion benefits States like Maharashtra, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu; disadvantages BIMARU States.
- Grants-in-aid (Article 275) and sector-specific tied grants remain the Centre's tool for directing State expenditure — reducing effective State autonomy.
Historical
- The 14th FC's 42% was seen as a landmark correction; subsequent FCs have not raised it further despite growing State responsibilities (SDRF, health, education).
- Cess proliferation is not new but accelerated post-2014; GST Compensation Cess (excluded from this analysis per the article) adds further complexity. [S3]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Feb 2025: States begin submitting memoranda to 16th FC; Odisha demands ₹12.59 trillion and a 50% divisible pool share. [S2]
- Multiple State memoranda (2025): 18 of 28 States demand increase to 50%; several demand inclusion of cesses/surcharges in divisible pool. [S2]
- 1 February 2026: 16th FC report tabled in Parliament; 41% devolution retained, GDP criterion added. [S1]
- 4 February 2026: Analysis in The Hindu reveals divisible pool shrinkage data (2013–2026 trend). [S3]
- Budget 2026-27: Centre's cess-to-gross-tax ratio estimated at 11%, down from 13.5% in 2021-22 but historically elevated. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The 16th Finance Commission is constituted under Article 280 of the Constitution.
- Chairman of the 16th FC: Dr. Arvind Panagariya (also former Vice-Chairman, NITI Aayog).
- The 16th FC report covers the period 2026-27 to 2030-31 (5 years).
- Vertical devolution retained at 41% — same as the 15th FC.
- The 14th FC had recommended the highest-ever devolution of 42%.
- Cesses and surcharges are excluded from the divisible pool under Article 271 — 100% retained by Centre.
- 18 of 28 States demanded an increase in devolution share to 50% before the 16th FC.
- A new criterion — State contribution to national GDP — was introduced with 10% weight in horizontal devolution.
- In 2021-22, cesses/surcharges accounted for ₹13.5 per ₹100 of Centre's gross tax revenue — the highest in the referenced period.
- The GST Compensation Cess (post-2017) is separate from other cesses and was not included in the divisible pool shrinkage analysis.
- The divisible pool is gross tax revenue minus collection costs, cesses, and surcharges.
- The 16th FC report was tabled in Parliament on 1 February 2026 alongside the Union Budget.
- 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:
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"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)
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"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)
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"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
- Confusing 41% and 42%: 14th FC = 42%; 15th and 16th FC = 41%. Many aspirants conflate them.
- Assuming cesses are part of the divisible pool: They are not — legally excluded under Article 271; this is the core structural issue.
- Confusing vertical and horizontal devolution: Vertical = Centre-to-States share (41%); Horizontal = inter-se distribution among States (formula-based).
- 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.
- 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
- [S1] Report of the 16th Finance Commission for 2026-31 — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/policy/report-summaries/report-of-the-16th-finance-commission-for-2026-31 — (Tier 1/2 equivalent: prsindia.org)
- [S2] 16th Finance Commission retains 41% devolution, introduces GDP criterion — Business Standard — https://www.business-standard.com/budget/news/16th-finance-commission-retains-41-percent-devolution-gdp-criterion-126020101042_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S3] Has the 16th Finance Commission sidelined the States? — The Hindu (article content supplied) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-04/th_international/articleGKPFHKGRH-13366592.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S4] The Report of the Fifteenth Finance Commission — PIB, Government of India — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1693868 — (Tier 1)