Why are Finance Commission grants to cities still so limited?
Why Are Finance Commission Grants to Cities Still So Limited?
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note — GS-II / GS-III
1. At a Glance
- Urban local bodies (ULBs) generate ~90% of total government revenue and ~67% of India's GDP, yet receive only ~0.13% of GDP as Finance Commission (FC) grants — a ratio virtually unchanged across the 15th and 16th FCs. [S4]
- Article 243W (74th Constitutional Amendment, 1992) mandated devolution to ULBs, but the 3-tier fiscal architecture — Centre → States → ULBs — leaves cities at the bottom with the least bargaining power. [S2]
- The 16th Finance Commission (2026–31) has recommended ₹3.56 lakh crore for ULBs over five years, yet critics argue this remains structurally inadequate relative to urbanisation pace and service needs. [S4]
- This is a perennially tested UPSC theme sitting at the intersection of fiscal federalism, urban governance, and the 74th Amendment.
2. Why in the News
- March 2026: The article by Tikender Singh Panwar in The Hindu (9 March 2026) critiques the 16th FC's urban devolution framework, noting the per-capita grant stagnation despite India's urban population projected to cross 600 million by 2026–30. [S4]
- January 2026: Government accepted the 16th FC's recommendation to retain the vertical share of devolution at 41% of divisible pool; ₹1.4 lakh crore allocated to states as FC grants for FY 2026–27. [S1]
- The 16th FC report (submitted 2025–26) introduced new grant categories — Special Infrastructure Grants and Urbanisation Premium Grants — for selected ULBs, but kept headline ULB allocation at ₹3.56 lakh crore. [S1][S3]
3. Background & Evolution
| Milestone | Key Development |
|---|---|
| 1992 | 74th Constitutional Amendment — inserted Part IX-A; Articles 243P–243ZG; created statutory basis for ULBs and State Finance Commissions (SFCs) |
| Article 280(3)(bb) | Mandated Finance Commissions to recommend augmentation of state Consolidated Funds for local bodies |
| 11th FC (2000–05) | First FC to seriously address ULB grants; small, largely tied allocations |
| 13th FC (2010–15) | Introduced performance-based grants; conditionality on SFC constitution |
| 14th FC (2015–20) | Significantly increased overall tax devolution (32%→42%), but ULB share remained marginal |
| 15th FC (2021–26) | Recommended ₹1.21 lakh crore for ULBs over 5 years; introduced basic (80%) + performance-based (20%) split; tied grants to property tax growth and SFC formation [S2][S3] |
| 16th FC (2026–31) | Recommended ₹3.56 lakh crore for ULBs; retained basic/performance structure; added wastewater management grants (₹56,100 crore for cities with pop. 10–40 lakh) [S1][S3] |
- Predecessors: Nagar Palika Acts, State Municipal Acts governed ULB finances pre-1992 without constitutional protection.
- 12th Schedule (74th Amendment) lists 18 functions ULBs may be assigned — but assignment is at state discretion, creating structural underfunding.
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional / Legal Basis - Article 243W — powers, authority and responsibilities of municipalities - Article 243X — power to impose taxes; devolution from states to ULBs - Article 280(3)(bb) — FC mandate to recommend local body resource augmentation - 12th Schedule — 18 functions (e.g., urban planning, regulation of land use, public health, slum improvement) - 74th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 — created constitutional status for ULBs
Key Numbers (15th FC, 2021–26) - Total ULB grants recommended: ₹1.21 lakh crore [S2] - As % of GDP: ~0.12–0.13% [S4] - Grant split: 80% basic / 20% performance-based [S2][S3] - Condition from 2022–23: property tax growth must track state GSDP growth rate [S2]
Key Numbers (16th FC, 2026–31) - Total ULB grants: ₹3.56 lakh crore (~₹75,000 crore/year) [S1][S4] - Rural local body grants: ₹4.4 lakh crore [S1] - Total FC grants (all categories): ₹9.47 lakh crore [S1] - Special wastewater grants: ₹56,100 crore for cities with pop. 10–40 lakh [S1] - Vertical devolution share retained: 41% of divisible pool [S1] - Untied portion of basic grant: 50% [S1] - 50% of basic grant tied to: sanitation and solid waste management [S1] - Mandatory condition: State Finance Commissions (SFCs) must be constituted every 5 years for any ULB grant eligibility [S1]
Implementing Body - Nodal ministry: Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA) - FC secretariat under: Ministry of Finance - Urban planning and ULB finance: governed by respective State Municipal Acts
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- ULBs generate ~67% of GDP but receive ~0.13% of GDP — a severe fiscal mismatch that suppresses urban infrastructure investment. [S4]
- Per-capita urban grant from 16th FC works out to roughly ₹5,900/year against an urban population of 600 million — grossly inadequate for capital expenditure on water, sewerage, and transport. [S4]
- Own-source revenue (OSR) of Indian ULBs is among the lowest globally (~0.5% of GDP vs. 2–3% in comparable middle-income nations); FC conditions pushing property tax reforms seek to correct this. [S2]
Legal / Constitutional
- The 74th Amendment constitutionalised ULBs but left actual devolution of 12th Schedule functions to state discretion — states routinely retain functions (e.g., water supply, planning authorities) in parastatal bodies, starving ULBs of revenue.
- Article 243Y requires states to constitute SFCs every five years; chronic non-compliance by many states has been used as justification to restrict FC grants — the 16th FC has now made SFC constitution a hard eligibility condition. [S1]
- No direct Centre-to-ULB fiscal channel in the Constitution; all FC grants route through states, adding a principal-agent problem at the state level.
Administrative / Governance
- Tied grants (50% of basic grant locked to sanitation/solid waste) limit ULB autonomy to prioritise local needs such as housing or road maintenance. [S1]
- Performance-based conditionalities (property tax, audit, ODF status) disproportionately disadvantage smaller ULBs with weak administrative capacity.
- Parastatal proliferation: Development authorities (e.g., BDA, DDA, HUDA) control lucrative planning and land functions, hollowing out ULB jurisdiction and revenue base.
- Fragmented urban agglomerations (peri-urban areas outside notified ULBs) remain outside the FC grant perimeter entirely.
Social
- Urban poor — estimated at >100 million — are the primary consumers of ULB-provided services (water, sanitation, waste, roads); under-funding directly translates to service deficits in slums and informal settlements. [S4]
- Gender dimension: Women bear disproportionate burden of poor urban sanitation and water access — constraints the 16th FC attempts to address through wastewater management grants. [S1]
Ethical / Governance
- The FC's emphasis on "cities must expand own-source revenue" shifts fiscal responsibility downward while the Centre retains the bulk of elastic tax revenues (GST, income tax) — a vertical fiscal imbalance critique.
- Conditionality-heavy grant architecture creates a compliance theatre risk: states tick boxes (form SFCs, pass property tax resolutions) without substantive urban fiscal reform.
- Transparency deficit: SFC reports are often delayed, not tabled, or not acted upon by state governments, making the FC's own conditionality enforcement weak.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Jan 2026: Government formally accepted 16th FC recommendations; vertical devolution retained at 41%; ₹1.4 lakh crore to states as FC grants for FY 2026–27. [S1]
- 2025–26: 16th FC introduced Urbanisation Premium Grants — a new category acknowledging rapid urbanisation — and Special Infrastructure Grants for selected cities. [S1][S3]
- Feb 2026: MoHUA Demand for Grants 2026–27 analysis by PRS noted continued dependence of ULBs on Central scheme transfers (AMRUT, Smart Cities) rather than untied FC grants. [S3]
- March 2026: Debate intensified ahead of 16th FC implementation over whether ₹3.56 lakh crore (keeping ULB share at ~0.13% of GDP) represents meaningful reform or institutional inertia. [S4]
- 16th FC mandatory SFC conditionality: First time a FC has made SFC constitution a binary eligibility gate (not merely a performance indicator) for all ULB grants. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The 74th Constitutional Amendment Act (1992) inserted Part IX-A (Articles 243P to 243ZG) dealing with municipalities.
- Article 280(3)(bb) mandates the Finance Commission to recommend measures to augment the Consolidated Fund of a State to supplement ULB resources.
- The 12th Schedule lists 18 functions that may be assigned to municipalities.
- Under the 15th FC (2021–26), ULBs were allocated approximately ₹1.21 lakh crore in grants over five years. [S2]
- Under the 16th FC (2026–31), ULB grants are ₹3.56 lakh crore; rural local body grants are ₹4.4 lakh crore. [S1]
- ULB grants as a share of GDP under both 15th and 16th FCs: approximately 0.12–0.13%. [S4]
- The 16th FC split basic grants: 50% untied + 50% tied to sanitation and solid waste management. [S1]
- From 2022–23 onward, states must demonstrate property tax growth in line with state GSDP growth to qualify for performance grants (15th FC condition). [S2]
- The 16th FC has made constitution of State Finance Commissions (SFCs) every five years a mandatory eligibility condition for any ULB grant. [S1]
- ₹56,100 crore in special wastewater management grants recommended by 16th FC, targeting cities with populations between 10 to 40 lakh. [S1]
- India's urban population crossed 470 million circa 2020 and is projected to approach/exceed 600 million during the 2026–30 FC cycle. [S4]
- Urban centres generate approximately 67% of India's GDP and 90% of total government revenue. [S4]
- The vertical share of tax devolution to states was retained at 41% by the 16th FC — same as the 15th FC recommendation. [S1]
- Total FC grants (all categories) under the 16th FC: ₹9.47 lakh crore over five years. [S1]
- Article 243Y requires states to constitute SFCs; SFCs are the state-level analogues of the Union Finance Commission for local bodies.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper(s): - GS-II: Indian Constitution — Federalism; Functions and responsibilities of the Union and States; Devolution of powers and finances; Issues relating to urban local bodies - GS-III: Indian Economy — Mobilisation of resources; Fiscal federalism
Specific Syllabus Headings: - "Devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein" - "Government Budgeting" (fiscal transfers, conditionalities) - "Role of Finance Commission in centre-state-local body fiscal relations"
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "Despite constitutional recognition under the 74th Amendment, urban local bodies remain fiscally emaciated. Critically examine the structural reasons for the limited Finance Commission grants to cities and suggest reforms." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "The 16th Finance Commission's urban devolution recommendations maintain the status quo of 0.13% of GDP for cities. Analyse the implications for urban service delivery and India's urbanisation goals." (GS-II/III, 15 marks) 3. "Tied grants with conditionalities distort the fiscal autonomy of urban local bodies without necessarily improving outcomes. Do you agree? Substantiate with examples from successive Finance Commissions." (GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| 74th Constitutional Amendment & Part IX-A | Direct constitutional foundation for ULB existence, powers, and FC obligations |
| State Finance Commissions (SFCs) | Constitutionally mandated state-level FCs for local bodies; now a hard eligibility condition under 16th FC |
| AMRUT 2.0 / Smart Cities Mission | Central schemes that compensate for low FC grants but introduce tied, project-based spending |
| Vertical and Horizontal Fiscal Imbalance in India | Macro framework explaining why revenues centralise but expenditure responsibilities decentralise |
| Property Tax Reform in ULBs | Core FC conditionality; key lever to expand ULB own-source revenue |
| Parastatal Bodies and Urban Governance | DDA, BDA, water boards etc. that usurp 12th Schedule functions from ULBs, hollowing out their fiscal base |
| Municipal Bonds / Urban Infrastructure Financing | Alternative financing mechanism beyond FC grants; SEBI regulations on municipal bonds |
| 15th vs. 16th Finance Commission: Comparative Analysis | Direct MCQ and essay fodder; comparative devolution philosophy |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing Article 243P–243ZG scope: Aspirants often conflate Part IX (Panchayats, 73rd Amendment) with Part IX-A (Municipalities, 74th Amendment); the 11th Schedule is for Panchayats and the 12th Schedule for Municipalities — not interchangeable.
- Misattributing the FC's legal mandate: The FC's obligation for local bodies comes from Article 280(3)(bb) (for urban) and (c) (for rural) — not from Article 243W or 243X directly.
- Overstating ULB autonomy: The 74th Amendment does not mandate states to transfer all 18 Schedule functions; it only empowers states to do so — a common misconception that ULBs have guaranteed constitutional functions.
- Confusing the 41% vertical share with ULB share: The 41% is the states' share of the divisible pool (Centre-State devolution); the ULB share is a small subset of the grants component, not of this 41%.
- Assuming FC grants are untied by default: Under both 15th and 16th FCs, 50% of the basic grant is tied (to sanitation/solid waste); only the remaining 50% is untied — aspirants frequently reverse this.
11. Sources
- [S1] Government Accepts 16th Finance Commission's Recommendation to Retain Vertical Share at 41% — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2221390 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S2] Report of the 15th Finance Commission for 2021–26 — Summary — https://prsindia.org/policy/report-summaries/report-15th-finance-commission-2021-26 — (Tier 1: prsindia.org)
- [S3] Report of the 16th Finance Commission for 2026–31 — Summary — https://prsindia.org/policy/report-summaries/report-of-the-16th-finance-commission-for-2026-31 — (Tier 1: prsindia.org)
- [S4] Tikender Singh Panwar, "Why are Finance Commission grants to cities still so limited?", The Hindu, 9 March 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-09/th_international/articleGOOFMJ8I7-13789226.ece — (Tier 4: thehindu.com; also article excerpt as primary source)