HomeNewsOpinionPredictability in monthly tax devolution could benefit state finances

Predictability in monthly tax devolution could benefit state finances

Clarity on devolution will help the states to better plan their capex spending and also better assess their borrowing needs for the last two quarters of this fiscal

July 27, 2023 / 17:21 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
tax
For state governments, tax devolution is a formula-linked and untied source of revenue, which they can spend according to their expenditure priorities.

Tax devolution from the Centre to states accounts for a little over a quarter of the total revenue receipts of the latter. The government of India (GoI) devolved a higher amount of taxes to the states in June 2023 and July 2023 vis-a-vis the amount released in each of the two previous months.
Predictability in this important revenue stream may help the states to plan their capital spending and narrow the gap between the actual and the indicated issuance of state government securities (SGS).

The proportion of gross tax revenues (excluding cesses and surcharges) that the GoI should transfer as tax devolution to state governments is decided by the Finance Commission (FC). The commission is appointed by the President of India to give recommendations for a period of five years. We are in the third year of the Fifteenth Finance Commission’s award period of FY2022-26, and based on its recommendations, the GoI has been transferring 41 percent of its divisible pool as devolution to the states. For state governments, tax devolution is a formula-linked and untied source of revenue, which they can spend according to their expenditure priorities.
Individual states’ share in the tax devolution depends on the criteria and weights recommended by each FC.

Story continues below Advertisement

Rise In Transfers

The GoI makes an estimate of tax devolution in its budget for each fiscal and shares a varying proportion of that each month with the states. The actual amount that the states receive as tax devolution in a fiscal may differ from the budget estimate (BE). For instance, the actual tax devolution to states in FY2021 trailed the BE by a considerable Rs 1.6-1.9 trillion due to the lower-than-estimated gross tax revenues of the GoI. This trend reversed in FY2022: the GoI released Rs 9 trillion as tax devolution to the states, sharply exceeding the budgeted Rs 6.7 trillion. This massive increase included some prior period adjustments not just for FY2021 but also for FY1997-2018. This trend of higher-than-budgeted tax devolution continued in FY2023, with the GoI releasing Rs 9.5 trillion to the states compared to the budgeted Rs 8.2 trillion.