• India
  • Jan 11

What is tax devolution?

The Centre has released tax devolution of Rs 1,73,030 crore to state governments, as against the devolution of Rs 89,086 crore in December 2024.

A higher amount is being devolved this month to enable states to accelerate capital spending and finance their development and welfare-related expenditures, the Finance Ministry said.

What is tax devolution?

• Tax devolution is the distribution between the Union and states of the net proceeds of taxes.

• Currently, 41 per cent of taxes collected by the Centre is devolved to states on a regular instalments.

• The releases of states’ share (tax devolution) is as per the accepted recommendations of the Finance Commission for its award period.

• One of the core tasks of a Finance Commission as stipulated in Article 280(3)(a) of the Constitution is to make recommendations regarding the distribution between the Union and the states of the net proceeds of taxes from the divisible pool. 

• The divisible pool is that portion of gross tax revenue which is distributed between the Centre and states. The divisible pool consists of all taxes, except surcharges and cess levied for specific purpose, net of collection charges.

• This is the most important task of any Finance Commission, as the share of states in the net proceeds of Union taxes is the predominant channel of resource transfer from the Centre to states.

• The sharing of revenue has provided states with sufficient stability of unconditional revenue to pursue their diverse development objectives.

What is the Finance Commission?

• The Finance Commission is constituted by the President under Article 280 of the Constitution, mainly to give its recommendations on distribution of tax revenues between the Union and the states and among the states themselves.

• The Fifteenth Finance Commission was constituted on November 27, 2017 against the backdrop of the abolition of the Planning Commission (as also of the distinction between Plan and non-Plan expenditure) and the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax (GST), which has fundamentally redefined federal fiscal relations.

• In November 2020, the Fifteenth Finance Commission, led by chairman N.K. Singh, submitted its report for the period 2021-22 to 2025-26 to the then President Ram Nath Kovind. 

• In November 2023, the Union Cabinet cleared the Terms of Reference of the 16th Finance Commission to suggest the ratio for devolution of taxes between the Centre and states and also review financing disaster management initiatives, for five years beginning April 1, 2026.

• On December 31, 2023, the government appointed former vice chairman of NITI Aayog Arvind Panagariya as the chairman of the 16th Finance Commission.

• The panel will make its recommendations available by October 31, 2025, covering an award period of five years commencing on April 1, 2026.

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