Paper: GS – II, Subject: Polity, Topic: Federalism, Issue: Finance Commission and Federal Imbalance.
Context:
The article evaluates the recommendations of the Sixteenth Finance Commission (2026–31). It highlights a key issue that the Commission strengthens local bodies but weakens the fiscal position of States.
Key Takeaways:
CORE ARGUMENT OF THE ARTICLE:
- The Sixteenth Finance Commission strengthens local bodies significantly
- However, it does so at the cost of reducing the fiscal autonomy and share of States.
- This results in a shift towards centralisation through discretionary funding mechanisms.

HOW LOCAL BODIES ARE STRENGTHENED:
- The Commission has allocated a very large amount of about ₹7.91 lakh crore to local bodies.
- Out of this, around ₹4.4 lakh crore is allocated to rural local bodies and about ₹3.6 lakh crore to urban local bodies.
- The funding structure includes basic grants and performance-based grants.
- Basic grants, which form about 80 percent of the allocation, ensure stable funding for essential services such as water supply, sanitation, and local infrastructure.
- Performance-based grants, which form about 20 percent, incentivise efficiency, transparency, and better governance at the local level.
- Additional incentives are linked to urbanisation and improvements in municipal governance.
- These measures strengthen grassroots governance and improve service delivery closer to citizens.
- However, these funds increasingly bypass State governments, which reduces the control of States over local bodies.
IMPACT ON STATES:
- Although the nominal share of States remains at 41 percent, their effective share reduces to around 36 percent.
- Smaller States, especially northeastern States, are likely to face greater losses due to changes in the devolution formula.
- The discontinuation of revenue deficit grants removes an important support mechanism for fiscally weaker States.
- The Commission does not adequately address the revenue imbalances created by the GST system.
STRUCTURAL SHIFTS IDENTIFIED:
- There is a shift from rule-based transfers to discretionary transfers controlled by the Union government.
- There is a move away from statutory and accountable funding towards less transparent mechanisms.
- There is also a shift from need-based allocation to performance-based criteria.
CONSTITUTIONAL AND FEDERAL CONCERNS:
- The reduced importance of Article 275 weakens equity-based fiscal support to States.
- The increased reliance on Article 282 enhances discretionary power of the Union.
- The Commission treats local bodies as separate stakeholders in fiscal distribution.
- However, local bodies constitutionally function under the authority of State governments as per the 73rd and 74th Amendments.
- Direct funding from the Union to local bodies bypasses States and weakens the federal structure.
CORE CRITIQUE:
- The strengthening of local bodies is a positive step for decentralisation.
- However, it should not come at the expense of weakening States.
- Increasing discretionary funding risks undermining cooperative federalism.
CONCLUSION:
- The Sixteenth Finance Commission promotes stronger local governance through higher and performance-linked funding.
- At the same time, it reduces the fiscal space and autonomy of States.
- A balanced approach is required to ensure that Union, States, and local bodies are all strengthened without disturbing the federal equilibrium.
Source: (The Indian Express)
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