Finance Commission

Indian Polity & Governance
Constitution VerifiedUPSC Verified
Version 1Updated 5 Mar 2026

Article 280 of the Constitution of India: (1) The President shall, within two years from the commencement of this Constitution and thereafter at the expiration of every fifth year or at such earlier time as the President considers necessary, by order constitute a Finance Commission which shall consist of a Chairman and four other members to be appointed by the President. (2) Parliament may by law …

Quick Summary

The Finance Commission is a constitutional body established under Article 280, constituted every five years by the President to ensure equitable distribution of financial resources between Union and State governments.

Comprising a Chairman and four expert members, it serves as the cornerstone of India's fiscal federalism. The Commission's primary functions include recommending tax devolution formulas (determining how central tax revenues are shared with states), suggesting grants-in-aid for revenue deficit states and specific purposes, and proposing measures to strengthen local bodies post-73rd and 74th Amendments.

From the 1st Commission (1951) to the current 15th Commission (2020-2025), the body has evolved significantly, adapting to changing economic realities, constitutional amendments, and contemporary challenges like GST implementation, climate change, and digital governance.

The 15th Commission introduced performance-based incentives worth ₹1 lakh crore, maintained states' tax share at 41%, and allocated ₹4.36 lakh crore for local bodies. Key constitutional articles include 280 (Finance Commission), 270 (tax distribution), 275 (grants-in-aid), and 282 (Union's grant power).

The Commission operates independently with quasi-judicial authority, though its recommendations aren't legally binding. Its relationship with the GST Council and NITI Aayog reflects India's evolving governance architecture.

For UPSC, the Finance Commission is crucial for understanding fiscal federalism, center-state relations, and contemporary governance challenges, frequently appearing in both Prelims and Mains through questions on composition, functions, recommendations, and comparisons with other constitutional bodies.

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  • Article 280: Finance Commission constituted every 5 years by President
  • Composition: Chairman + 4 members (experts in finance/economics/administration)
  • Functions: Tax devolution, grants-in-aid, local body strengthening, special references
  • 15th FC (2020-25): 41% tax share, ₹1L crore performance incentives, ₹4.36L crore local grants
  • Key criteria: Population, area, income distance, fiscal capacity, demographic performance
  • Not legally binding but constitutional weight
  • Quasi-judicial independence
  • Post-73rd/74th Amendments: local body mandate added
  • GST era: coordinates with GST Council for revenue distribution

Vyyuha Quick Recall - FINANCE Mnemonic:

F - Five-year constitution cycle under Article 280 I - Independent quasi-judicial body with constitutional weight N - N.K.

Memory Palace Technique: Visualize the Finance Commission as a constitutional bridge connecting Union (revenue collection) and States (expenditure needs). The bridge has five pillars (five-year cycle), is supervised by five engineers (Chairman + 4 members), and uses a sophisticated traffic management system (devolution formula) to ensure smooth flow of resources while rewarding good driving behavior (performance incentives).

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