Why is it in News?
- On November 17, the 16th Finance Commission submitted its report to the President of India.
- Key expectations:
- Vertical devolution (share of Union taxes to States) and
- Horizontal distribution formula across States (Article 280).
- Important focus: recommendations for panchayat & municipal finances (Art. 280(3)(bb) & (c)).
Relevance
- GS 2: Polity & Governance (73rd/74th Amendments, fiscal decentralisation, local government)
- GS 3: Economy (fiscal federalism, vertical–horizontal devolution, public finance)
- GS 2: Centre–State Relations (role of Union FC vs SFCs)
Constitutional Framework for Finance Commissions
Union Finance Commission (UFC) – Article 280
- Constituted every 5 years.
- Mandate includes:
- Vertical & horizontal tax devolution.
- Measures to strengthen State finances.
- Augment the Consolidated Fund of States for panchayats & municipalities.
State Finance Commissions (SFCs) – 73rd & 74th Amendments
- Each State must set up an SFC every 5 years.
- Recommends:
- Local share in State taxes.
- Assignment of revenue handles.
- Conditional/unconditional grants.
- Devolution of functions & functionaries.
Local Governments: Functional & Fiscal Architecture
Functions
- Assigned through the 11th Schedule (29 subjects) for panchayats & 12th Schedule (18 subjects) for municipalities.
- However:
- These lists are illustrative, not mandatory.
- States decide actual functional assignments → wide inter-State variation.
Revenue Powers
- Local bodies collect:
- Property tax
- Advertisement tax
- Market fee, tolls, user charges, etc.
- But large mismatch exists between:
- Revenue capacity
- Expenditure responsibilities (water, sanitation, public health, rural roads, asset maintenance).
Impact
- States often assign functions without funds & staff →
- Operational inefficiency
- Dependence on higher-level transfers
- Weak service delivery
- Fiscal deficits at local levels.
Role & Challenges of SFCs
- Over 100 SFC reports submitted across States.
- Major issues:
- Delays in constitution & report submission.
- Poor record of acceptance by State legislatures.
- Recommendations often ignored or partially implemented.
- Result: local bodies must rely heavily on Union FC transfers, not States.
What Previous Union Finance Commissions Did
Key Pattern
- Six UFCs have issued local government recommendations so far.
- Persistent issues:
- Could not quantify actual resource needs of 2.7 lakh panchayats & 5,000 municipalities.
- Relied on ad hoc lump-sum grants.
13th FC (Turned Point)
- Introduced formula-based transfers:
- Grant as a percentage of the divisible pool.
- Rationale:
- Inflation neutrality
- Buoyancy with Union tax revenues
- Consulted legal experts; pushed for predictable growth-linked transfers.
14th & 15th FCs (Reversal of 13th FC Approach)
- Returned to lump-sum grants.
- Introduced conditionalities:
- “Basic” (unconditional)
- “Performance-based” (conditional)
- Problem:
- Each FC changed reform conditions, creating discontinuity.
- 13th FC: 6 conditions (mostly unmet by States).
- 14th FC: new and unrelated set of conditions.
- 15th FC: different conditions again.
Core Issues in Local Government Fiscal Federalism
1. Vertical–Horizontal Imbalance
- Local governments do not have predictable, adequate revenue streams.
- Functional responsibilities grow but revenue handles remain restricted.
2. Assignment Problem
- No dedicated constitutional list for:
- Local functions
- Local revenue sources
- States exercise wide discretion → fiscal asymmetry.
3. Overdependence on Union FC
- Weak SFC implementation forces panchayats/municipalities to rely on central transfers.
4. Conditionality Instability
- Reform-linked grants change every 5 years →
- No continuity
- No long-term incentive alignment.
What Is Expected from the 16th Finance Commission?
- Move beyond ad hoc or lump-sum grants.
- Assess actual resource requirements of 2.7 lakh panchayats & 5,000 municipalities.
- Provide stable, formula-driven, buoyancy-linked transfers.
- Standardise performance conditions instead of frequent redesign.
- Strengthen local bodies as institutions of:
- Economic development
- Social justice
Comprehensive Significance
- Strengthens decentralised governance, core to the 73rd & 74th Amendments.
- Potentially creates India’s first consistent, long-term local fiscal framework.
- Aligns local governance with national goals:
- Drinking water
- Sanitation
- Public health
- Rural/urban infrastructure.


