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South's Tax Revolt
Outlook
|April 11, 2025
The objection of southern states over tax devolution alludes to broader challenges in India’s federal structure exacerbated by the impending delimitation exercise
WHEN Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah landed in Delhi last year, it wasn’t for a routine meeting. He arrived with a mission, and a protest. Flanked by finance officials and party leaders, he led a massive demonstration in the capital, demanding a fairer share of central tax revenues for southern states. The message was loud and clear: the South, which contributes significantly to India’s economy, feels shortchanged in tax devolution.
At the heart of the protest was what the Karnataka government called a “fiscal injustice.” Despite being one of the highest tax-contributing states, Karnataka’s share in central devolution had dropped sharply. Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana also voiced similar concerns. The numbers tell a striking story. In the Indian Union, the southern states are economic powerhouses, yet they receive proportionally less in central transfers than many northern states.
“This is how taxes work. One would want to give funds to those states that need them the most,” says Alok Prasanna Kumar, co-founder of the Delhi-based Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy, an independent think-tank specialising in legal research to make better laws and improve governance for public good.
The simmering discontent over tax distribution is not just an economic issue; it has now boiled down to a political and constitutional flashpoint. It raises fundamental questions about fairness in India’s federal structure. And with the looming 2026 delimitation exercise, which will redraw parliamentary constituencies based on population, the battle over revenue devolution is taking on even greater urgency.
The South Tax Movement
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