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Centre may seek higher share in tax devolution from 16th Finance Commission

The Centre’s demand for a larger chunk in the devolution pie could very well be at crosshairs with states, with some seeking a hike in their stakes in the divisible pool of taxes to as much as 50 percent

December 04, 2024 / 15:04 IST
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The 16th Finance Commission headed by the former vice-chairman of Centre's topmost think-tank NITI Aayog Arvind Panagariya will make its report available by October 31, 2025 covering a period of five years starting April 1, 2026.

States may lose out on their shares in taxes as the Centre is likely to seek a bigger slice of tax devolution to the 16th Finance Commission, scheduled for May 2025, because of elevated market borrowings and repayments.

“As part of the submission, the Union government will seek to increase its share, which means to decrease the share of states in the tax devolution. This recommendation would be supported by expenditure carried out in the past by the Centre and the tax receipts it receives,” an official told Moneycontrol, adding that while borrowings and interest payments are on the rise, expenditure is not being utilised productively in the economy.

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There have been attempts to push spending through infrastructure development, capital expenditure remained muted as the government has spent up 42 percent of the budgeted Rs 11.11 lakh crore for FY25 so far, compared with 54.7 percent spent during the April-October period last fiscal.

Loans, including those disbursed to states for infrastructure facelift, has declined close to 13 percent up to October as freebies gained priority over capex because of the elections.