Bengaluru Set to Shine: Siddaramaiah’s Bold Bid for 50% Tax Share and Urban Uplift
Updated: June 13, 2025 22:40
Image Source: The Economic Times
Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah has made an emotional appeal to the 16th Finance Commission to grant Karnataka a revolutionary increase in its share of central taxes to 50% and a whopping ₹1.15 lakh crore investment to transform Bengaluru's infrastructure. The move is to rectify what Siddaramaiah describes as a "stark imbalance" between the economic contribution of the state and its fiscal returns from the Centre.
Key Highlights:
50% of Central Taxes: Siddaramaiah asked the Finance Commission to increase Karnataka's share of central taxes from the existing 3.647% (against 4.713% of the earlier commission) to a whopping 50%, considering the state contributes disproportionately to the country's GDP and GST collections.
Fiscal Imbalance: Karnataka contributes 8.7% of Indian GDP and is the second-largest GST collector but gets only 15 paise for every rupee of accruals to Union taxes—a gap of more than ₹80,000 crore of losses during the last award period.
Reform Proposals: The CM called for cess and surcharge cap at 5%, inclusion of non-tax revenues in the divisible pool, and a 20% cut in the weight of the income-distance criterion. He proposed greater weightage to performance of states so that better performing states are encouraged and not penalized.
Bengaluru Infrastructure Spur: Siddaramaiah had sought a special ₹1.15 lakh crore investment in Bengaluru, highlighting the city's central role in Karnataka's economy and the need to fill infrastructural gaps, especially in the wake of the recent floods and civic woes.
Regional Equity: The CM emphasized reducing regional differences in the backward regions of Kalyana Karnataka and Malnad, and proposed replacing discretionary grants with a formula-driven proportion of 0.3% of the gross union receipts.
Criticism of Current Policy:Siddaramaiah has criticized the effectiveness of revenue deficit grants and requested the Centre to do away with such policies and instead have a system that encourages efficiency and economic input instead of deficit budgets.
Siddaramaiah's conditions, if accepted, would be a new standard for fiscal federalism and further speed up Karnataka's development process.
Source: The Economic Times, The New Indian Express