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


2. Why in the News


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]

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

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Social

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The 74th Constitutional Amendment Act (1992) inserted Part IX-A (Articles 243P to 243ZG) dealing with municipalities.
  2. Article 280(3)(bb) mandates the Finance Commission to recommend measures to augment the Consolidated Fund of a State to supplement ULB resources.
  3. The 12th Schedule lists 18 functions that may be assigned to municipalities.
  4. Under the 15th FC (2021–26), ULBs were allocated approximately ₹1.21 lakh crore in grants over five years. [S2]
  5. Under the 16th FC (2026–31), ULB grants are ₹3.56 lakh crore; rural local body grants are ₹4.4 lakh crore. [S1]
  6. ULB grants as a share of GDP under both 15th and 16th FCs: approximately 0.12–0.13%. [S4]
  7. The 16th FC split basic grants: 50% untied + 50% tied to sanitation and solid waste management. [S1]
  8. 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]
  9. The 16th FC has made constitution of State Finance Commissions (SFCs) every five years a mandatory eligibility condition for any ULB grant. [S1]
  10. ₹56,100 crore in special wastewater management grants recommended by 16th FC, targeting cities with populations between 10 to 40 lakh. [S1]
  11. India's urban population crossed 470 million circa 2020 and is projected to approach/exceed 600 million during the 2026–30 FC cycle. [S4]
  12. Urban centres generate approximately 67% of India's GDP and 90% of total government revenue. [S4]
  13. The vertical share of tax devolution to states was retained at 41% by the 16th FC — same as the 15th FC recommendation. [S1]
  14. Total FC grants (all categories) under the 16th FC: ₹9.47 lakh crore over five years. [S1]
  15. 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

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. 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%.
  5. 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