Siddaramaiah: Change in Finance Commission's norms to 'affect interests of south'
Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Saturday raised questions on a recommendation made to 15th Finance Commission of using population data from 2011.
Bengaluru: Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Saturday raised questions on a recommendation made to 15th Finance Commission of using population data from 2011.
Siddaramaiah in a Facebook post said that the move would 'affect the interests of the south'.
Also Read: Rahul Gandhi: Demonetisation was insane, says Chidambaram
Though he backed the idea to transfer resources to less developed regions, the Chief Minister stressed on the need to 'redress regional imbalances in development.'
Also Read |
Police Mahasangha seeks sanction to prosecute Siddaramaiah for nepotism, misuse of power
"Question is should this be done by under-investing in the south? Should development & population control not be incentivized?" the Chief Minister asked.
He further advised the Center to 'bring new thinking to the table' to adress the issue.
"The 15th Finance Commission must bring new thinking to the table & give incentives to tax mobilization effort, growth engines like Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Coimbatore, Kochi etc., and education & empowerment of women (proxy for population control)," he wrote.
The Centre earlier recommended the 15th Finance Commission of using population data from the 2011 Census, instead of the 1971 Census, for distribution of central tax revenues.
Also Read |
Karnataka CM, ministers receive e-mail bomb threat; probe initiated
Also Read: Amit Shah: TDP's decision to quit NDA 'unfortunate, unilateral'
The Commission decides the ratio in which central tax revenue should be divided among the states, after every five years. (ANI)