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Devolution discrimination debate: Siddaramaiah's claims vs Sitharaman’s rebuttal

"There are factual errors, false monetary claims, misleading statements, and selective mention of certain losses allegedly suffered without mentioning the gains that have accrued to the state in the 15th Finance Commission period," Sitharaman said in a note on February 7 rejecting Karnataka's claims.

February 08, 2024 / 18:15 IST
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On the same day as the Karnataka government launched a protest in the heart of Delhi, accusing the Centre of unfair treatment towards the state in tax devolutions and grants-in-aid over the past few years, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on February 7 termed these claims as "wrong and mischievous" in a point-by-point rebuttal.

"There are factual errors, false monetary claims, misleading statements, and selective mention of certain losses allegedly suffered without mentioning the gains that have accrued to the state in the 15th Finance Commission (FC) period," Sitharaman said in a note.

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Karnataka's claim: Chief Minister Siddaramaiah has claimed that the state has lost an estimated Rs 62,098 crore over five years in tax share from the divisible pool on account of the sharing pattern laid out by the 15th Finance Commission.

FM's response: During the 14th Finance Commission's five-year award period (2015-16 to 2019-20) Karnataka received Rs 1,51,309 crore as tax devolution. However, in the first four years of the 15th finance panel's period (2021-22 to 2025-26), Karnataka would have already received Rs 1,29,854 crores by March 2024.

The Government of India has projected a further release of Rs 44,485 crore in the Interim Budget for FY 2024-25 taking the total to Rs 1,74,339 crore in five years. This is higher than the 14th FC period despite the precipitous drop in revenue during the Covid-19 period.

Sitharaman further said that in a bid to inflate its false claim of losses, the government of Karnataka has included shortfalls for the next two financial years namely 2024-25 and 2025-26.