How a Bill is Passed in India

How a Bill is Passed in India- Types & Stages of a Bill- Indian Polity Notes



The Indian Parliament legislates with the use of governmental acts. These acts are introduced into the Indian Constitution only after the draft bills are passed by the parliament. There are various types of bills that are introduced in either house of the Parliament to enact a law.
The topic- ‘How a bill is passed in Indian Parliament’ forms an important part of IAS Exam as questions for UPSC Prelims, Mains, and also Political Science Optional have been asked from this section.
This article will talk in detail about the types of bills in India and how are these passed in the Indian Parliament to become an act.

Types of Bills in India- Definitions, Differences

There are four types of bills that are introduced in the Indian Parliament for different purposes.
The table below mentions the different types of bills and their significance:
Types of Bills in India
S.NoName of the BillSignificance
1Ordinary Bill (Article 107, Article 108)Concerned with any matter other than financial subjects
2Money Bill (Article 110)Concerned with financial matters like taxation, public expenditure, etc
3Financial Bill (Article 117 [1], Article 117[3])Concerned with financial matters (but are different from money bills)
4Constitutional Amendment Bill (Article 368)Concerned with the amendment of the provisions of the Constitution.
There are a few differences between these types of bills which are important to be understood for civil services examination. The difference between various types of bills are given in the tables below:
  • Difference between Ordinary Bill and Money Bill in India
DifferenceOrdinary BillMoney Bill
IntroductionIn either Lok Sabha or Rajya SabhaOnly in Lok Sabha
Introduced ByMinister or a Private MemberOnly a Minister
President’s RecommendationNot NeedOnly after he recommends
Rajya Sabha’s Role
  • Can be amended/rejected by Rajya Sabha

  • Cannot be amended/rejected by Rajya Sabha. (It has to return the bill with/without recommendations)
  • Can be detained by the Rajya Sabha for a maximum period of six months.
  • Can be detained by the Rajya Sabha for a maximum period of 14 days only.
President’s AssentSent for his assent only after being approved by both the housesSend for his assent only after Lok Sabha’s approval. (Rajya Sabha approval is not required)
Can be rejected, approved, or returned for reconsideration by the President.Can be rejected or approved but cannot be returned for reconsideration by the President.
Joint Sitting of Both HousesIn case of deadlock, there is a provision of a joint sittingNo chance of disagreement, hence, no provision of a joint sitting
IAS aspirants before starting to read the legislative process in Indian Parliament must know the differences between all these bills. These basic differences will help in upcoming UPSC 2020 where questions from this section are expected for both prelims and mains.

What Are The Important Steps in Making of a Law in India?

There are separate procedures for the enactment of the four types of bills. These procedures to enact the bills are laid down by the Indian Constitution. They are given below:
  • Stages of passing an Ordinary Bill
There are five stages through which an ordinary bill has to go through before it finally becomes an act:
StagesDetails
First ReadingA minister or a member introduces the bill in either house of the Parliament. He asks for leave before introducing the bill. He reads the title and objective of the bill.
After the introduction, the bill is published in the Gazette of India
Note:
  1. No discussion on the bill takes place in this stage
  2. If the bill is published in the Indian Gazette before its introduction, the minister/member does not have to ask for leave
Second ReadingStage of General Discussion- Four actions can be taken by the house on the bill:
  1. It may take the bill into consideration immediately or on some other fixed date
  2. It may refer the bill to a select committee of the House
  3. It may refer the bill to a joint committee of the two Houses
  4. It may circulate the bill to elicit public opinion
Note:
  1. Select Committee- Has members of the house where the bill is introduced
  2. Joint Committee- Has members from both the houses
Committee Stage:
  1. Select Committee examines the bill thoroughly and in detail, clause by clause.
  2. It can also amend its provisions, but without altering the principles underlying it.
  3. After completing the scrutiny and discussion, the committee reports the bill back to the House.
Consideration Stage:
  1. The House, after receiving the bill from the select committee, considers the provisions of the Bill clause by clause.
  2. Each clause is discussed and voted upon separately.
  3. The members can also move amendments and if accepted, they become part of the bill.
Third ReadingOne of the two actions take place:
  1. Acceptance of the Bill (If the majority of members present and voting accept the bill, the bill is regarded as passed by the House)
  2. Rejection of the Bill
Note:
  1. No amendments to the bill are allowed
  2. A bill is deemed to have been passed by the Parliament only when both the Houses have agreed to it, either with or without amendments.
Bill in the Second HouseThe first three stages are repeated here i.e.:
  1. First Reading
  2. Second Reading
  3. Third Reading
The second house can take one of the four actions:
  1. It may pass the bill as sent by the first house (ie, without amendments)
  2. It may pass the bill with amendments and return it to the first House for reconsideration
  3. It may reject the bill altogether
  4. It may not take any action and thus keep the bill pending
Note:
  1. The bill is deemed to have been passed, if both the houses accept the bill and the amendments
  2. If the second house takes no action for 6 months, a deadlock appears which is acted upon through a joint sitting (summoned by President) of both the houses
Assent of the PresidentOne of the three actions can be taken by him:
  1. May give his assent to the bill (The bill becomes an act and is placed on statute book)
  2. May withhold his assent to the bill (The bill ends and does not become an act)
  3. May return the bill for reconsideration (The houses can/cannot make amendments and send it back to the President after which he has to give assent)
Note:
President only enjoys ‘Suspensive Veto.’ Check Powers of President of India here.
  • Stages of passing a Money Bill
Money Bill in India
Unlike Ordinary Bill, Money bill is introduced only in Lok Sabha on the recommendation of President which is a must.
The bill, moved on the recommendation of the President and introduced in the Lok Sabha is termed as a government bill.
Note: All government bills are introduced only by the minister.
After Lok Sabha passes the bill, it is moved to Rajya Sabha which has only restricted powers. It cannot reject or amend the bill.
Note:
  1. Rajya Sabha has to return the bill within 14 days with or without amendments
  2. If it does not return the bill within the prescribed days, the bill is deemed to have been passed
  3. Lok Sabha may or may not accept the amendments.
After passing through both the houses, the President’s assent is required. He can take two actions:
  1. Give assent
  2. Withhold assent
Note: President can’t return the bill for reconsideration
After President’s assent, the bill becomes the act and is published in the Indian Statute Book. IAS aspirants can check more on money bill in the linked article.
  • Stages of passing a Constitutional Amendment Bill
Constitutional Amendment Bill
IntroductionIn either house of the parliament
Note:
Can’t be introduced in the state legislatures
Introduced byEither by a minister or by a private member
Note:
It does not require prior permission of the president.
Majority NeededMust be passed in each House by a special majority, that is, a majority (that is, more than 50 per cent) of the total membership of the House and a majority of two-thirds of the members of the House present and voting
Joint SittingThere is no provision for joint sitting in case of deadlock
Role of State LegislatureIf the bill seeks to amend the federal provisions of the Constitution, it must also be ratified by the legislatures of half of the states by a simple majority, that is, a majority of the members of the House present and voting
President’s AssentHe must give his assent
Note:
  1. He can’t return the bill
  2. He can’t withhold the bill unlike in the case of ordinary bills
After President’s assent, the bill becomes a Constitutional Amendment Act and the Constitution stands amended in accordance with the terms of the Act. To read more about the important amendments in Indian Constitution for UPSC, candidates may check the linked article.
This is how bills become acts and Indian Parliament legislates. Similarly, the State Legislature of India has to legislate acts and for that state government has to introduce bills. The procedure of passing a bill through the state legislature is almost similar to the central legislation. However, there are a few differences w.r.t the governor’s role and the assent of the president which you may read carefully while preparing for the exam.

Attorney General of India (Article 76)

Attorney General of India (Article 76) 




Article 76 of the Indian Constitution under its Part-V deals with the position of Attorney General of India. The topic is important for IAS Exam and its three stages – Prelims, Mains and Interview. It is an important section of Indian Polity which is a significant subject in the UPSC Civil Services Examination.
The article will mention the details about the Attorney General, his powers and responsibilities. Aspirants may also download the notes PDF for the topic as it is important for UPSC Prelims and Mains GS-II which has Political Science as a subject.
For candidates preparing for the upcoming UPSC exam, the Attorney General of India is one of the most important topics to prepare for the exam. Given below is a list of Attorney Generals in India:
Attorney General of IndiaName of the Attorney GeneralTenure
1st Attorney GeneralM.C. Setalvad28 January 1950 – 1 March 1963
2nd Attorney GeneralC.K. Daftari2 March 1963 – 30 October 1968
3rd Attorney GeneralNiren de1 November 1968 – 31 March 1977
4th Attorney GeneralS.V. Gupte1 April 1977 – 8 August 1979
5th Attorney GeneralL.N. Sinha9 August 1979 – 8 August 1983
6th Attorney GeneralK. Parasaran9 August 1983 – 8 December 1989
7th Attorney GeneralSoli Sorabjee9 December 1989 – 2 December 1990
8th Attorney GeneralJ. Ramaswamy3 December 1990 – November 23 1992
9th Attorney GeneralMilon K. Banerji21 November 1992 – 8 July 1996
10th Attorney GeneralAshok Desai9 July 1996 – 6 April 1998
11th Attorney GeneralSoli Sorabjee7 April 1998 – 4 June 2004
12th Attorney GeneralMilon K. Banerjee5 June 2004 – 7 June 2009
13th Attorney GeneralGoolam Essaji Vahanvati8 June 2009 – 11 June 2014
14th Attorney GeneralMukul Rohatgi12 June 2014 – 30 June 2017
15th Attorney GeneralK.K. Venugopal30 June  2017 till date
The above-given data shows that the first Attorney General of India, M.C.Setalvad worked at his post for the longest term, i.e. for 13 years and Soli Sorabjee worked as the Attorney General was the shortest period of time. However, he was appointed for the post twice.

Who is Attorney General of India?

Article 76 of the constitution mentions that he/she is the highest law officer of India. As a chief legal advisor to the government of India, he advises the union government on all legal matters.
He also is the primary lawyer representing Union Government in the Supreme Court of India. The Attorney General, like an Advocate General of a State, is not supposed to be a political appointee, in spirit, but this is not the case in practice.

Who appoints Attorney General of India?

President of India appoints a person who is qualified for the post of Supreme Court Judge. There are the following qualifications:
  1. He should be an Indian Citizen
  2. He must have either completed 5 years in High Court of any Indian state as a judge or 10 years in High Court as an advocate
  3. He may be an eminent jurist too, in the eye of the President

What is the term of Attorney General’s office?

There is no fixed term for the Attorney General of India. The Constitution mentions no specified tenure of Attorney General. Similarly, the Constitution also does not mention the procedure and ground of his removal.
You may know the following facts about his office:
  1. He can be removed by the President at any time
  2. He can quit by submitting his resignation only to the President
  3. Since he is appointed by the President on the advice of the Council of Ministers, conventionally he is removed when the council is dissolved or replaced

What is the role of Attorney General of India?

Being the Chief Law Officer of the country, the Attorney General of India has to perform the following duties:
  1. Whichever legal matters are referred to him by the President, he advises the Union government upon the same.
  2. President keeps on referring him legal matters that suits his interest and Attorney General has to advise on those too
  3. Apart from what President refers, he also performs the duties mentioned in the Constitution
  4. The three duties that are assigned to him by the President are:
  • In any legal case where the government of India is related to, the Attorney General has to appear in the Supreme Court on its behalf
  • He has to represent the Union Government in any reference made by the president to the Supreme Court under Article 143 of the Constitution
  • He also appears in the High Court if any case is related to the Government of India

What are the limitations on the Attorney General?

To avoid conflict of duty, there are a few limitations that are posted on the Attorney General which he should keep in mind while performing his duties:
  1. He should not advise or hold a brief against the Government of India
  2. He should not advise or hold a brief in cases in which he is called upon to advise or appear for the Government of India
  3. He should not defend accused persons in criminal prosecutions without the permission of the Government of India
  4. He should not accept appointment as a director in any company or corporation without the permission of the Government of India
Facts about Attorney General of India for UPSC:
  1. He can be part of any court in the Indian Territory
  2. He got the right to speak and to take part in the proceedings of both the Houses of Parliament (Read about the difference between Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha here) or their joint sitting and any committee of the Parliament of which he may be named a member
  3. He has no right to vote when he participates in the proceedings of the Indian Parliament
  4. Similar to Member of Parliament, he also enjoys all powers related to immunities and privileges
  5. He is not considered as a government servant
  6. He can practise privately too as he is not debarred from private legal practice

Comptroller and Auditor General of India

Comptroller and Auditor General of India




The current CAG of India is Rajiv Mehrishi, who assumed office on 25 September 2017.
Comptroller and Auditor General of India is the apex authority responsible for external and internal audits of the expenses of the National and state governments. It is popularly known as the CAG of India. In this article, we will discuss in brief about the office of the CAG and its functions. It is an important topic for the General Studies Syllabus. It is included in the Constitutional Bodies: Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies in General Studies Paper 2.

CAG of India: Constitutional Provisions

Part V of the Indian Constitution describes the role and responsibilities of this office in Chapter V. The Comptroller and Auditor General is one of the few offices directly appointed by the President of India.

Powers of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India

Article 148 of the Constitution of India establishes the authority of this office. It states the following points in relation to the establishment and powers of CAG:
  • The Comptroller and Auditor General is appointed by the President of India and can be removed from office only in the manner and on the grounds that a Judge of the Supreme Court is removed.
  • The person appointed to this office should take an oath of office before the President or any other person appointed by the office of the President.
  • The salary, service conditions, leaves of absence, pension and age of retirement are determined by the Parliament of India and specified in the Second Schedule such that the service conditions and salary will not be modified to the disadvantage of the incumbent during their tenure.
  • The CAG is not eligible for any further office after the end of their tenure either in the Government of India or any State Government.
  • The powers and functions of the CAG are subject to the provisions of the Indian Constitution and any Acts of Parliament, along with the service conditions for the Indian Audits and Accounts Department. The rules governing these would be prescribed by the President in consultation with the incumbent.
  • The expenses on the administration of this office including all allowances, salaries and pensions would be charged to the Consolidated Fund of India.
  • The incumbent is appointed for a period of 6 years or until attaining the age of 65 years whichever is earlier.
In order to be able to discharge duties effectively, certain privileges and powers which facilitate the process of auditing have been given to this office. The following are the major powers of the CAG of India:
  • The Comptroller and Auditor General or his staff can inspect any office of the organizations which are subject to his audit. He and his staff can scrutinize the transactions of the government and question the administration regarding the various aspects of these transactions. After scrutinizing the transactions, the CAG may withdraw his objections or, if he finds them serious, incorporate them in his report which is submitted to the Parliament.
  • To enable the office to perform this function smoothly, he is endowed with full access to all the financial records including books, papers, and documents. Moreover, the CAG has the freedom to ask for the relevant information from any person or organization. His right to call for information and accounts is statutory, as was affirmed by the order made by the Government of India in 1936 in order to enforce the Act of 1935.
The present provision of according him free access to files and information is a practice continuing from the past. A modification, however, was introduced in 1954 in the central government according to which, if secret documents are involved, they are sent to the CAG by name specifically and are returned as soon as the work is over.

Duties of CAG

Articles 148, 149, 150 and 151 of the Constitution of India describe the functions and powers of this office. The following is a brief description of various areas dealt with in these Article of the Constitution:
  • Article 149: Duties and Powers of the Comptroller and Auditor General: To perform such duties and exercise such powers in relation to accounts of the Union of India and the states and of any other bodies or authority, as may be prescribed by any law made by the Parliament.
  • Article 150: Form of Accounts of the Union of India and the States: To prescribe, with the approval of the President, the form in which the account of the Union and of the States are to be kept.
  • Article 151: CAG Reports: To report to the President or to the Governors of the States on the accounts of the Union or State. The constitution has also provided in Article 279(i) that the CAG has to ascertain and certify the net proceeds of any tax or duty mentioned in Chapter I of Part XII of the Constitution. Besides these constitutional provisions and the Duties Powers and Conditions of Service Act of 1971, is necessary to mention that, before 1976, the CAG had a two-dimensional role, that accounting and auditing. Due to the separation of accounts and audit in 1976, the CAG’s duty is the auditing of accounts. Since 1976, accounting is being done by the various departments themselves with the help of Indian Civil Accounts Service.

List of Comptroller & Auditor General of India

List of Comptroller & Auditor General of IndiaTerm
V. Narahari Rao1948 -1954
A.K Chanda1954 -1960
A.K Roy1960 -1966
S. Ranganathan1966 -1972
A.Bakshi1972 -1978
Gian Prakash1978 -1984
T.N Chaturvedi1984 -1990
C.G Somiah1990 -1996
V.K Shunglu1996 – 2002
V. N. Kaul2002 – 2008
Vinod Rai2008 – 2013
Shashi Kant Sharma2013 –  2017
Rajiv Mehrishi2017 – till date

Role of CAG in India

The role of this office is to uphold the provisions of the Indian Constitution and laws enacted by the Parliament in the field of financial administration. The accountability of the executive (i.e., the council of ministers) to the Parliament in the sphere of financial administration is secured through CAG reports. The office is responsible to and is an agent of the Parliament and conducts audits of expenditure on its behalf.
  • The CAG has ‘to ascertain whether money shown in the accounts as having been disbursed was legally available for and applicable to the service or the purpose to which they have been applied or charged and whether the expenditure conforms to the authority that governs it’.
  • The office can perform a propriety audit, that is, it can look into the ‘wisdom, faithfulness and economy’ of government expenditure and comment on the wastefulness of such expenditure. However, unlike the legal and regulatory audit, which is obligatory on the part of the CAG, the propriety audit is discretionary.
  • The secret service expenditure is a limitation on the auditing role of the CAG. In this regard, the CAG cannot call for particulars of expenditure incurred by the executive agencies but has to accept a certificate from the competent administrative authority that the expenditure has been so incurred under his authority.
The Constitution of India visualizes this office to be Comptroller as well as Auditor General. However, in practice, the incumbent officer is fulfilling the role of an Auditor-General only and not that of a Comptroller. In other words, ‘the office has no control over the issue of money from the consolidated fund and many departments are authorised to draw money by issuing cheques without specific authority from the CAG, who is concerned only at the audit stage when the expenditure has already taken place.
The powers of the CAG, regarding audits, are provided for in the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (Duties, Powers and Conditions of Service) Act, 1971. According to this act, the CAG can audit:
  • All receipts and expenditure from the Consolidated Fund of India and of the states and union territories.
  • All transactions relating to the Contingency Funds and Public Accounts. • All trading, manufacturing, profit and loss accounts and balance sheets and other subsidiary accounts kept in any department.
  • All stores and stock of all government offices or departments.
  • Accounts of all government companies set up under the Indian Companies Act, 1956.
  • Accounts of all central government corporations whose Acts provide for audit by the CAG.
  • Accounts of all authorities and bodies substantially funded from the Consolidated Fund. Accounts of any authority, even though not substantially funded by the government, at either the request of the Governor/President or at the CAG’s own initiative.

Functions of the CAG of India

The Constitution in Article 149 provides the legal basis for the Parliament to prescribe the duties and powers of the CAG in relation to the accounts of the Union and of the States and of any other authority or body. The CAG Duties, Powers and Conditions of Service (DPC) Act, was passed in the parliament in 1971. The DPC Act was amended in 1976 to separate accounts from audit in the Government of India. The duties and functions of the CAG as laid down by the Constitution are:
  • Auditing the accounts related to all expenditure drawn from the Consolidated Fund of India, consolidated fund of every state and consolidated fund of every union territory having a Legislative Assembly.
  • Audit of all expenditure from the Contingency Fund of India and the Public Account of India as well as the contingency funds and the public accounts of states.
  • Audit of all trading, manufacturing, profit and loss accounts, balance sheets and other subsidiary accounts of any department of the Central Government and state governments.
  • Auditing the receipts and expenditure of the Government of India and each state to ensure that the rules and procedures in that regard are designed to secure an effective check on the assessment, collection and proper allocation of revenue.
  • Auditing the receipts and expenditure of the following: All bodies and authorities substantially financed from the Central or state revenues; Government companies; and Other corporations and bodies when so required by related laws.
  • Auditing all transactions of the Central and state governments related to debt, sinking funds, deposits, advances, suspense accounts and remittance business. He also audits receipts, stock accounts and others, with approval of the President, or when required by the President.
  • Auditing the accounts of any other authority when requested by the President or Governor. For example, the audit of local bodies.
  • Advising the President with regard to prescription of the form in which the accounts of the Centre and the states shall be kept (Article 150).
  • Submitting audit reports relating to the accounts of the Central Government to the President, who shall, in turn, place them before both the Houses of Parliament (Article 151).
  • Submitting audit reports relating to the accounts of a state government to the Governor, who shall, in turn, place them before the state legislature (Article 151).
  • Ascertaining and certifying the net proceeds of any tax or duty (Article 279). The certificate is final. The ‘net proceeds’ means the proceeds of a tax or a duty minus the cost of collection.
  • Acting as a guide of the Public Accounts Committee of the Parliament. He compiles and maintains the accounts of state governments. In 1976, he was relieved of the responsibilities regarding the compilation and maintenance of accounts of the Government of India due to the separation of accounts from audit, through departmentalization of accounts. The CAG submits three audit reports to the President:
    • Audit Report on Appropriation Accounts
    • Audit Report on Finance Accounts
    • Audit Report on Public Undertakings
The President lays these reports before both the Houses of Parliament. After this, the Public Accounts Committee examines them and reports its findings to the Parliament.

CAG Reports

The three CAG Reports as stated above deal with different facets of public audits. The following paragraphs give a brief overview of these audit reports:
  • Audit Report on Appropriation Accounts: The appropriation accounts show the appropriation of the money granted by the legislature to the various grants and heads of expenditure and whether the money granted for a specific purpose has been spent for that purpose or not.
  • Audit report on Finance Accounts: The Finance Accounts show the accounts of annual receipts and expenditure during the year.
  • Audit report on Public Undertakings: This report deals with the finances and expenditures of various Public Sector Undertakings.
The audit report, in brief, contains a narration of cases involving financial irregularities, losses, frauds, wasteful expenditure and comments thereon, the accuracy of budgeting control of expenditure, savings etc. The CAG provides ‘audit paras” criticizing public expenditures of the departments and the ‘paras’ are developed during post-event scrutiny by the CAG staff and detailed discussions with the senior staff of the department concerned. The finalized ‘paras’ are then brought before the Parliament where the concerned parliamentary committee that deals with the affairs of a particular ministry or department disposes of each ‘para’.
The form of the audit reports is constantly under review and has undergone periodic changes. No matter what the format, the objective, that loss of money has to be prevented remains the same. They highlight transactions which have not proved financially viable. As the report focuses its gaze on the omissions, each department is on its toes because the report may bring adverse and undesirable publicity in its wake.
The following procedure is followed while making and submitting an audit report by the Comptroller and Auditor General’s office:
  • To begin with, when the audit takes place, during the course of inspection of the various organizations, ‘Inspection Reports’ of each unit/organization are prepared and copies are sent to them. About 72,000 inspection reports are sent in a year. They are asked to take corrective action and their progress is also watched. The most important matters in these Inspection Reports are included in the Annual Audit Reports.
  • Before they are presented to the President, the audit reports are put through rigorous quality assurance procedures and are countersigned by the CAG.
  • After they are submitted to the legislature, the legislature, in turn, hands them over for examination to the concerned parliamentary committees.
    • The reports of all the departments, including Railways, Post and Telegraph and other departmental undertakings, are handed over to the Public Accounts Committee (PAC).
    • The reports relating to corporations and companies are given to the Committee on Public Undertakings (COPU).
Since 1989, an Annual Activity Report of each department is brought out by the CAG to assess the overall working of the department and to let all those interested in the functioning of the department know the details of its working. It serves a dual purpose: it gives a complete and true picture of the existing state of affairs and also helps in planning for the future.
The functions of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India can be studied under the following headings:
Audit of Expenditure
It is the prime task of the CAG to audit all expenditure incurred from the revenue of the union and the states. It may be mentioned at the outset that the audit by this office is not an administrative but a financial audit. Administrative audit entails an examination of technical, personnel and organizational processes of the administrative apparatus. This audit is not within its jurisdiction. The Comptroller and Auditor General’s office is concerned only with the financial aspects. However, when an administrative act has serious adverse financial repercussions or implications, the CAG can see whether that particular administrative act was in conformity with the prescribed laws and approved financial procedures and whether it has resulted in any extravagance or loss.
Audit of expenditure consists of ensuring whether the following essential conditions have been fulfilled or not:
  • that the expenditure is covered by sanction, whether special or general, accorded by a competent authority;
  • that the expenditure conforms to the relevant provisions of the statutory enactments and is in accordance with the financial rules and regulations framed by the competent authority;
  • that there is a sanction, either general or special, accorded by the competent authority;
  • that it is within the ambit of the purpose for which the grant was intended; that the demand is supported by a voucher in proper form and the person to whom the payment has been made has duly acknowledged the payment and the fact of payment has been so recorded as to make a second claim on the government impossible;
  • that the various programmes, schemes and projects in which large funds have been invested are being run economically;
  • that the various public sector undertakings are yielding the results expected of them; and
  • that the expenditure has been incurred with due regard to the broad and general principles of financial propriety. All these constitute what is called the statutory audit. In other words, these are specifically provided for by statute or law.
Side by side, another area, which is known as discretionary audit, has emerged. The discretionary audit is based on a liberal interpretation of the functions given by the statute and the recommendations of the Public Accounts Committee. It had recommended that “the Public Accounts Committee should, even more than in the past, encourage the CAG to scrutinize and criticize improper and wasteful expenditure and to indicate whether censure is in his opinion required. In practice, the discretionary powers have become more important than the ones laid down by the statute. Much depends on the approach and style of the incumbent. A precise area of audit cannot be prescribed in the case of a discretionary audit because no rules regarding this have been laid down. Yet, it may be mentioned that discretionary audit lays emphasis on undertaking investigation and reporting on any wasteful and uneconomical expenditure regarding contracts and major deals. The statutory audit is also known as the ‘regularity audit’ in the sense that its chief purpose is to see whether rules and procedures have been followed in accordance with the basic statutes, rules, essential requirements of audit and accounts and the general or particular orders issued by higher authorities. It also involves “general conformity to the broad principles of orthodox finance by the sanctioning and the spending authorities.” Former CAG, T N Chaturvedi observes that in the process of seeing whether the expenditure conforms to the rules, regulations, statutes and enactments, the office is also interpreting the rules, orders and statutes. This makes it a constitutional, statutory and quasi-judicial body under the Constitution of India.
Audit of Government Undertakings
The CAG also undertakes an audit of the commercial undertakings of the governments of the union and the states. Commercial undertakings exist in three forms:
  • Departmental undertakings, run on the pattern of departments.
  • Statutory corporations created by specific laws of the Parliament and broadly controlled by the government.
  • Government companies, set up under the Indian Companies Act, 1956, in the form of private or public limited companies.
Audit of Appropriation
The appropriation audit ensures that the grants are spent for the purpose for which they have been provided. This audit enables the CAG to satisfy himself that the expenditure which is being audited is within the ambit of the grants and that the expenditure incurred has been incurred for the specific purpose for which it was voted by the legislature.
  • In this process, certain cases which depict a discrepancy between the estimates and the final turnout might come to light. A scrutiny of such cases has to be made.
  • It also verifies whether there have been reappropriations from one head to another and whether such reappropriations conform to the authority delegated.
Thus, it is a document which reveals the various aspects of the transactions of the government. The appropriation audit is not done on a test basis, as in the case of accounting audit. It must be detailed, thorough and complete. Every payment is checked in the books to its right head of service so as to ensure that the intentions of the legislature have been honoured.
The main idea behind this audit is to ensure that the accounts presented by the concerns give a complete and true picture of the various financial aspects of the concerns. The public has a large stake in the running of these undertakings as vast public funds are involved. Hence, together with the other ministerial and parliamentary checks over these undertakings, they are also subject to the audit control by this office. In the case of departmental undertakings, the CAG is the sole auditor.
  • The Acts by which the government corporations are set up specify whether the CAG will audit their accounts, or whether the accounts will be audited by auditors appointed by the government.
  • To avoid these pitfalls, a system was devised in 1956 to provide personal contacts between the representatives of audit and of administration. Under this, the secretary of each department could take up the objections which he considered unjustified with the concerned Accountant General directly. If these discussions failed, the secretary could take up the matter with the CAG himself.
Though the system had received excellent support in the initial stages, it is slowly falling into disuse. The preceding analysis underscores that audit is essential as an instrument of parliamentary and financial control. B R Ambedkar had pointed out in the Constituent Assembly debates that the CAG was probably the most important officer in India because it was he who saw that the expenses voted by Parliament were well utilized. He may be criticized on the ground that the audit is too critical, concerned with details etc., but that exactly is the intention why this office was created. The CAG protects public funds from the reach of arbitrary power and, in that sense, is an important and most useful dignitary of the state.
Structure of CAG’S Office
The Indian Audit and Accounts Department (IAAD) is headed by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India. He is assisted by five Deputy Comptroller and Auditors General of India. One of the Deputies is also the chairman of the Audit Board. Below the Deputy CAG are four Additional Deputy Comptroller and Auditors General of India. The hierarchy in this office comprises of:
  • CAG
  • Deputy CAG
  • Additional Deputy CAG
  • Directors General
  • Principal Directors
  • Directors/Deputy Directors
Note: Field office formations are headed by officers of the designation of DG/PAG/PD/AG and they report to the DAI/ADAI concerned.
One Director acts as Secretary to the incumbent CAG. At the regional level, in various states, there are a number of Accountants General who act as agents of the CAG in performing their functional and supervisory responsibilities at the state level.
IAS aspirants should know about government bodies engaged in regulatory and audit activities due to their importance in the governance of the country. Apart from this, many questions in the UPSC Mains exam have been asked directly from this topic

Finance Commission of India

Finance Commission of India 




What is Finance Commission of India?

Finance Commission is a constitutional body for the purpose of allocation of certain revenue resources between the Union and the State Governments. It was established under Article 280 of the Indian Constitution by the Indian President. It was created to define the financial relations between the Centre and the states. It was formed in 1951.
Table of Contents:
What is Finance Commission of India?
  • Recommended Video
  • Which articles deal with Finance Commission of India?
  • Who Constitutes Finance Commission of India?
What is composition of Finance Commission of India?
  • Finance Commission Chairman and Members
  • Qualifications of Finance Commission Chairman and Members
What are functions of Finance Commission of India?
  • Functions of Finance Commission
  • Advisory Role of Finance Commission
Finance Commission List
  • List of Finance Commissions of India

Which articles deal with Finance Commission of India?

Article 280 of the Indian Constitution
  • President after two years of the commencement of Indian Constitution and thereafter every 5 years, has to constitute a Finance Commission of India.
  • It shall be the duty of the Commission to make recommendations to the President in relation to the:
    • the distribution between the Union and the States of the net proceeds of taxes which are to be, or maybe, divided between them and the allocation between the States of the respective shares of such proceeds;
    • the principles which should govern the grants in aid of the revenues of the States out of the Consolidated Fund of India;
    • any other matter referred to the Commission by the President in the interests of sound finance
    • The Commission shall determine their procedure and shall have such powers in the performance of their functions as Parliament may by law confer on them
Note: President can also constitute Finance Commission before the expiry of five years as he considers necessary
Article 281 of the Indian Constitution
  • It is related to the recommendations of the Finance Commission:
    • The President has to lay the recommendation made by Finance Commission and its explanatory memorandum before each house of Parliament

Who Constitutes Finance Commission of India?

President of India constitutes the Finance Commission every five years or on time considered necessary by him.

What is composition of Finance Commission of India?

Finance Commission Chairman and Members

  • Chairman: Heads the Commission and presides over the activities. He should have had public affairs experience.
  • One Secretary and four Members.
  • The Parliament determines legally the qualifications of the members of the Commission and their selection methods.

Qualifications of Finance Commission Chairman and Members

  • The 4 members should be or have been qualified as High Court judges, or be knowledgeable in finance or experienced in financial matters and are in administration, or possess knowledge in economics.
  • All the appointments are made by the President of the country.
  • Grounds of disqualification of members:
  • found to be of unsound mind, involved in a vile act, if there is a conflict of interest
  • The tenure of the office of the Member of the Finance Commission is specified by the President of India and in some cases, the members are also re-appointed.
  • The members shall give part-time or service to the Commission as scheduled by the President.
  • The salary of the members is as per the provisions laid down by the Constitution.

What are functions of Finance Commission of India?

Functions of Finance Commission

The Finance Commission makes recommendations to the president of India on the following issues:
  • The net tax proceeds distribution to be divided between the Centre and the states, and the allocation of the same between states.
  • The principles governing the grants-in-aid to the states by the Centre out of the consolidated fund of India.
  • The steps required to extend the consolidated fund of a state to boost the resources of the panchayats and the municipalities of the state on the basis of the recommendations made by the state Finance Commission.
  • Any other matter referred to it by the president in the interests of sound finance.
  • The Commission decides the basis for sharing the divisible taxes by the centre and the states and the principles that govern the grants-in-aid to the states every five years.
  • Any matter in the interest of sound finance may be referred to the Commission by the President.
  • The Commission’s recommendations along with an explanatory memorandum with regard to the actions done by the government on them are laid before the Houses of the Parliament.
  • The FC evaluates the rise in the Consolidated Fund of a state in order to affix the resources of the state Panchayats and Municipalities.
  • The FC has sufficient powers to exercise its functions within its activity domain.
  • As per the Code of Civil Procedure 1908, the FC has all the powers of a Civil Court. It can call witnesses, ask for the production of a public document or record from any office or court.

Advisory Role of Finance Commission

The recommendations made by the Finance Commission are of an advisory nature only and therefore, not binding upon the government. It is up to the Government to implement its recommendations on granting money to the states. To put it in other words, ‘It is nowhere laid down in the Constitution that the recommendations of the commission shall be binding upon the Government of India or that it would amount to a legal right favouring the recipient states to receive the money recommended to be provided to them by the Commission.

Finance Commission List

List of Finance Commissions of India

Finance Commissions list year-wise are given in the table below:
Finance CommissionChairmanYear of Appointment
FirstK.C. Neogy1951
SecondK. Santhanam1956
ThirdA.K. Chanda1960
FourthDr. P.V. Rajamannar1964
FifthMahavir Tyagi1968
SixthBrahamananda Reddy1972
SeventhJ.M. Shelat1977
EighthY.B. Chavan1982
NinthN.K.P. Salve1987
TenthK.C. Pant1992
EleventhA.M. Khusro1998
TwelfthDr. C. Rangarajan2002
ThirteenthDr. Vijay Kelkar2007
FourteenthY.V. Reddy2013
FifteenthN.K Singh2017