New Delhi:NK Singh, a former bureaucrat and head of the fifteenth finance commission, has a message for Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the need to consult state governments before enacting important laws such as the recently passed farm laws that have seen strong protest from the farmers of Punjab and Haryana.
The former IAS officer turned politician, who was handpicked by then finance minister Arun Jaitley in November 2017 to decide the all-important formula for division of revenue between the Centre and States, also underscored the need to have an expert body like the planning commission, which was scrapped by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2014.
The decision to scrap Planning Commission was seen as a strong rejection of the centralised path of economic development laid by the country’s first Prime Minister Jawahar Lal Nehru as PM Modi announced its replacement with a new think tank called NITI Aayog in his first Independence Day speech from the iconic Red Fort in August 2014.
Addressing the annual convention of industry body FICCI on Friday, NK Singh emphasised on the need to restore fiscal trust between the Centre and States by revisiting the seventh schedule of the Constitution, which delineates the area of responsibility between the Central government and States.
“Many have argued that the trust between various forms of government is waning. Are there new seeds of suspicion and mistrust,” asked the former bureaucrat while emphasising the need to fiscally empower all tiers of government by revisiting the basic structure of governance in the country.
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NK Singh said the division of functions under the seventh schedule, which divides the subjects of governance into three lists - Union, State and Concurrent lists, have been eroded over the years. He said it was primarily due to two reasons – establishment of the Planning Commission in 1950s for the centralised planning and shifting of education and forest from the State list to Concurrent list in 1976 through a constitutional amendment.
During the emergency, the Indira Gandhi government carried out the 42nd amendment in the constitution.
“It significantly changed the dynamics,” NK Singh observed.
The former bureaucrat, who also headed the all-important revenue and expenditure departments in the ministry of finance, said that in 2010 Justice MM Punchhi Commission on the Centre-State relations recommended creation of an Interstate Council for consultation between the Union and States for legislation on concurrent subject.
Under the Constitution, the Union government and States can both legislate on the subjects mentioned in the concurrent list but in case of a conflict, the laws passed by Parliament will prevail over the state laws.
He said that even the MM Punchhi Commission was of the view that the Centre should only transfer those subjects into the concurrent list which are crucial for achieving demonstrable national interests.
NK Singh’s comment comes at a time when Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government is facing strong resistance from farmer groups over the three agriculture laws passed in the Monsoon session in September this year.