Report of The 15th Finance Commission For 2021 26
Report of The 15th Finance Commission For 2021 26
Report of The 15th Finance Commission For 2021 26
Why in news?
The share of states in the central taxes for the 2021-26 period is
recommended to be 41%, same as that for 2020-21.
This is less than the 42% share recommended by the 14th Finance
Commission for 2015-20 period.
The adjustment of 1% is to provide for the newly formed UTs of Jammu and
Kashmir, and Ladakh from the resources of the centre.
The criteria for distribution of central taxes among states for 2021-26 period
is same as that for 2020-21.
However, the reference period for computing income distance and tax efforts
are different.
2015-18 for 2020-21 and 2016-19 for 2021-26
Hence, the individual share of states may still change.
The criteria used by the Commission to determine each state’s share in
central taxes, and the weight assigned is as follows:
1. Income distance - 45%
2. Population (2011) - 15%
3. Area - 15%
4. Forest and Ecology - 10%
5. Demographic performance - 12.5%
6. Tax Effort - 2.5%
Income distance: Income distance is the distance of a state’s income from
the state with the highest income.
Income of a state has been computed as average per capita GSDP during the
three-year period between 2016-17 and 2018-19.
A state with lower per capita income will have a higher share to maintain
equity among states.
Demographic performance: As per its Terms of Reference, the
Commission used the population data of 2011 for its recommendations.
The demographic performance criterion has been used to reward efforts
made by states in controlling their population.
States with a lower fertility ratio will be scored higher on this criterion.
Forest and ecology: This is arrived at by calculating the share of the dense
forest of each state in the total dense forest of all the states.
Tax and fiscal efforts: This criterion has been used to reward states with
higher tax collection efficiency.
It is measured as the ratio of the average per capita own tax revenue and the
average per capita state GDP during the 3 years between 2016-17 and
2018-19.
GRANTS
Over the 2021-26 period, the following grants will be provided from the
centre’s resources:
17 states will receive grants worth Rs 2.9 lakh crore to eliminate revenue
deficit.
Sector-specific grants
Sector-specific grants of Rs 1.3 lakh crore will be given to states for eight
sectors which are -
health, school education, higher education, implementation of
agricultural reforms, maintenance of PMGSY roads, judiciary, statistics,
and aspirational districts and blocks
A portion of these grants will be performance-linked.
State-specific grants
1. social needs
2. administrative governance and infrastructure
3. water and sanitation
4. preservation of culture and historical monuments
5. high-cost physical infrastructure
6. tourism
The total grants to local bodies will be Rs 4.36 lakh crore (a portion of grants
to be performance-linked) including:
i. Rs 2.4 lakh crore for rural local bodies
ii. Rs 1.2 lakh crore for urban local bodies
iii. Rs 70,051 crore for health grants through local governments
The grants to local bodies will be made available to all three tiers of
Panchayat - village, block, and district.
The health grants will be provided for:
i. conversion of rural sub-centres and primary healthcare centres (PHCs)
to health and wellness centres (HWCs)
ii. support for diagnostic infrastructure for primary healthcare activities
iii. support for urban HWCs, sub-centres, PHCs, and public health units at
the block level
Grants to local bodies (other than health grants) will be distributed among
states based on population and area, with 90% and 10% weightage,
respectively.
The Commission has prescribed certain conditions for availing these grants
(except health grants). The entry-level criteria include:
i. publishing provisional and audited accounts in the public domain
ii. fixation of minimum floor rates for property taxes by states and
improvement in the collection of property taxes (an additional
requirement after 2021-22 for urban bodies)
No grants will be released to local bodies of a state after March 2024 if the
state does not constitute State Finance Commission and act upon its
recommendations by then.
State disaster management funds will have a corpus of Rs 1.6 lakh crore
(centre’s share is Rs 1.2 lakh crore).
FISCAL ROADMAP
The Commission suggested that the centre bring down fiscal deficit to 4% of
GDP by 2025-26.
For states, it recommended the fiscal deficit limit (as % of GSDP) of:
i. 4% in 2021-22
ii. 3.5% in 2022-23
iii. 3% during 2023-26
The Commission observed that the recommended path for fiscal deficit for
the centre and states will result in a reduction of total liabilities of -
i. the centre from 62.9% of GDP in 2020-21 to 56.6% in 2025-26,
ii. the states on aggregate from 33.1% of GDP in 2020-21 to 32.5% by
2025-26
It recommended forming a high-powered inter-governmental group to:
i. review the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act (FRBM)
ii. recommend a new FRBM framework for centre as well as states, and
oversee its implementation
Revenue mobilisation
GST
The inverted duty structure between intermediate inputs and final outputs
present in GST needs to be resolved.
Under the inverted duty structure, import duty on finished goods is low
compared to the import duty on raw materials used in production.
Resultantly, domestic manufacturing becomes uncompetitive as against
imported finished goods.
Revenue neutrality of GST rate should be restored.
It has notably been compromised by multiple rate structure and several
downward adjustments.
Rate structure should be rationalised by merging the rates of 12% and 18%.
States need to step up field efforts for expanding the GST base and for
ensuring compliance.
OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS
Health
A threshold should be fixed for annual allocation to CSS below which the
funding for a CSS should be stopped.
The objective is to phase out CSS which outlived its utility or has
insignificant outlay.
Third-party evaluation of all CSS should be completed within a stipulated
timeframe.
Funding pattern should be fixed upfront in a transparent manner and be kept
stable.