Friday, March 6, 2026

BTL 876 - Financial Devolution

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 876                                                                                06-03-2026

Financial Devolution

In public finance, devolution is the statutory transfer of powers, responsibilities, and financial resources from a central government to subnational (state, regional, or local) authorities. 

Devolution is often summarized as the transfer of "Funds, Functions, and Functionaries": 

Funds: The allocation of financial resources, including tax-sharing and grants. 

Functions: The legal authority to manage specific sectors like education, health, or local infrastructure. 

Functionaries: The transfer of administrative personnel to carry out these duties at the local level. 

Types of Fiscal Devolution - In federal systems like India, the Finance Commission (a constitutional body under Article 280) recommends how central taxes are shared: 

Vertical Devolution: The distribution of tax proceeds (income tax, GST, corporation tax) from the Union to the States, set at 41% by the 15th and 16th Finance Commissions. 

Horizontal Devolution: The allocation of this 41% pool among different states based on criteria like income distance, population, forest cover, and area.

Criteria: Factors include Income Distance (weighting poorer states higher), Population, Forest and Ecology, and Demographic Performance (rewarding population control).

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

DBC 2365 - Layoff

 

The Banking Tutor 

Daily Banking Concept -  2365 

Layoff 

A layoff is the involuntary termination of an employee's job, typically for reasons unrelated to the employee's performance, such as cost-cutting or organizational changes.

Thursday, March 5, 2026

DBC 2364 - Brokerage Account

 

The Banking Tutor 

Daily Banking Concept -  2364 

Brokerage Account 

A brokerage account is an investment account held at a licensed brokerage firm.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

DBC 2363 - Debt

 

The Banking Tutor 

Daily Banking Concept -  2363 

Debt 

A debt is a financial obligation undertaken by a borrower that must be repaid to the lender, usually with an additional payment of interest.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

BTL 875 - Unearned Income and Unearned Revenue

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 875                                                                                03-03-2026

Unearned Income and Unearned Revenue

While often used interchangeably in business accounting, unearned income and unearned revenue carry distinct meanings depending on whether they refer to an individual's passive earnings or a business's accounting liabilities.

Unearned Income generally refers to passive income received by individuals that is not derived from active employment. Examples include dividends, interest, and inheritance.

Unearned Revenue (also called Deferred Revenue) is an accounting term for money a business receives in advance for goods or services it has yet to deliver. It is recorded as a liability on the balance sheet because it represents an unmet obligation to the customer.

 

Key Differences at a Glance

Primary Meaning        

Unearned Income (Personal Finance) - Passive income not from work.         

Unearned Revenue (Business Accounting) - Advance payments for future delivery.

Accounting Status      

Unearned Income (Personal Finance) Typically treated as income upon receipt.

Unearned Revenue (Business Accounting) - Recorded as a liability, not income.

 

Tax Treatment   

Unearned Income (Personal Finance)Not subject to payroll taxes; may have lower rates.

Unearned Revenue (Business Accounting) - Generally taxable when received, but recognized as revenue later.

Common Examples     

Unearned Income (Personal Finance) - Dividends, Interest, Social Security, Lottery winnings.

Unearned Revenue (Business Accounting)- Prepaid subscriptions, Retainers, Advance rent, Pre-orders.

 

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

DBC 2362 - Diversification

 

The Banking Tutor 

Daily Banking Concept -  2362 

Diversification 

Diversification is the strategy of investing in different asset classes and asset types to reduce portfolio risk associated with price volatility.

Monday, March 2, 2026

DBC 2361 - Positional Goods

 

The Banking Tutor 

Daily Banking Concept -  2361 

Positional Goods 

Products that confer status and are thus both limited in supply and carry premium prices. Examples include properties in highly desirable residential areas, fancy sports cars and upmarket hotels.