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Answer: 5
Finance Commission institutional design: (a) Constitutional mandate: Article 280 requires President to constitute FC every 5 years (or earlier), (b) Composition: Chairman + 4 members with expertise in public affairs, finance, economics, administration, law, (c) Functions: (i) Recommend vertical devolution (Union-State tax share), (ii) Horizontal distribution (among States using criteria like population, area, income distance), (iii) Grants-in-aid to States in need, (iv) Augment State Panchayat/Municipality funds, (d) Impact: FC recommendations shape fiscal federalism; 15th FC (2020-25) recommended 41% devolution, new criteria (demographic performance, tax effort). Illustrates institutionalized fiscal federalism: regular, technical mediation of Centre-State financial claims to balance equity and efficiency.
Answer: True
Federalism as basic structure: (a) SR Bommai (1994): Explicitly held federalism part of basic structure; State governments have constitutional status; President's Rule subject to judicial review, (b) Kesavananda Bharati (1973): Basic structure includes features essential to constitutional identity; federalism (division of powers, State autonomy, judicial review of Centre-State disputes) integral to Indian constitutional design, (c) Implications: Parliament cannot amend Constitution to: (i) Abolish States, (ii) Transfer all powers to Union, (iii) Eliminate judicial review of federal disputes, (iv) Destroy State representation in Parliament, (d) Flexibility within limits: Amendments can adjust federal balance (e.g., GST changing tax powers) but cannot destroy core federal features. Illustrates constitutional federalism: adaptable framework protected by basic structure doctrine against fundamental alteration.
Answer: Reveals how constitutional principles operate in real political, economic, and social contexts, highlighting tensions and adaptations
Case study methodology in federalism: (a) Beyond text: Constitution's federal provisions (Articles 245-263, Seventh Schedule) gain meaning through implementation — case studies show how principles like 'cooperative federalism' or 'basic structure' operate in practice, (b) Contextual understanding: Article 370 case reveals temporary provisions' interpretation; GST Council shows fiscal cooperation mechanics; SR Bommai illustrates judicial safeguards against political misuse, (c) Tensions and adaptations: Cases expose Centre-State conflicts (resources, powers, ideology) and how institutions (courts, Finance Commission, Councils) mediate them, (d) Policy learning: Successes (GST consensus) and challenges (Governor controversies) inform institutional reforms, (e) UPSC relevance: Case studies develop analytical skills to evaluate federalism's evolution, not just recall provisions. Essential for Mains answers requiring application, not just description.
Answer: 97
Legislative distribution framework: (a) Union List (List I): 97 subjects (defence, foreign affairs, currency, railways, etc.) — Parliament exclusive power, (b) State List (List II): 61 subjects (police, public health, agriculture, etc.) — State Legislature exclusive power, (c) Concurrent List (List III): 52 subjects (education, forests, marriage, etc.) — both can legislate; Union law prevails in conflict (Article 254), (d) Residuary powers: Article 248 — Parliament exclusive power, (e) Federal flexibility: Articles 249-253 enable Parliament to legislate on State List in national interest, during Emergency, or for international agreements. Illustrates Indian federalism's core architecture: defined domains with mechanisms for adaptive coordination.
Answer: True
Cooperative federalism framework: (a) Constitutional basis: Seventh Schedule (legislative distribution), Article 263 (Inter-State Council), Article 279A (GST Council), (b) Institutional mechanisms: (i) GST Council: Joint decision-making on indirect taxation, (ii) Inter-State Council: Policy dialogue on disputes/common interests, (iii) NITI Aayog: Governing Council (PM+CMs) for development planning, (iv) Finance Commission: Technical mediation of fiscal claims, (c) Principles: (i) Respect for constitutional domains, (ii) Consensus-building over imposition, (iii) Data-driven decision-making, (iv) Accountability through transparency, (d) Challenges: Political polarization affecting cooperation, capacity gaps in States, implementation gaps in agreements. Illustrates Indian federalism's pragmatic evolution: from competitive (coalition era bargaining) to cooperative (institutionalized dialogue) while preserving constitutional balance.
Answer: Dynamic negotiation between Centre and States with institutional mechanisms adapting to contemporary challenges while preserving constitutional balance
Contemporary federalism trends (2014-2024): (a) Fiscal federalism: GST Council (cooperative taxation), Finance Commission devolution (41% to States), compensation negotiations — balancing national market integration with State fiscal autonomy, (b) Political federalism: Article 370 abrogation (Union power to reorganize States) balanced by Supreme Court direction for Statehood restoration and elections; Governor-State tensions highlighting need for clear conventions, (c) Legislative federalism: Farm Laws (2020) repealed after State protests, illustrating States' role in agricultural policy (State List subject); 105th Amendment restoring State OBC list powers, (d) Judicial federalism: Courts mediating Centre-State disputes (water, resources, executive powers) while respecting separation of powers, (e) Adaptive mechanisms: NITI Aayog rankings, Digital India platforms, climate action coordination — new tools for cooperative governance. Core continuity: Constitution's flexible federal design enabling negotiation, adaptation, and balance amid changing political, economic, social contexts. Essential for UPSC Mains analytical understanding.
Answer: one-half
Federal amendment safeguard: (a) Article 368(2) proviso: Amendments affecting: (i) election of President, (ii) extent of executive power of Union/States, (iii) Supreme Court/High Courts, (iv) distribution of legislative powers (Seventh Schedule), (v) representation of States in Parliament, (vi) Article 368 itself, require ratification by legislatures of not less than half of States, (b) Procedure: After Parliament passes amendment with special majority, Bill sent to State Legislatures; simple majority in each suffices, (c) Rationale: Protects federal balance by preventing Union from unilaterally altering core federal features, (d) Case study: 101st Amendment (GST) required State ratification as it affected legislative distribution. Illustrates constitutional federalism: procedural safeguard ensuring States' voice in fundamental constitutional changes affecting their autonomy.
Answer: True
Article 252 cooperative federalism mechanism: (a) Trigger: Two or more State Legislatures pass resolutions requesting Parliament to legislate on State List subject, (b) Parliamentary action: Parliament enacts law applicable only to consenting States, (c) Subsequent adoption: Other States may adopt the law by passing resolution in their Legislature; law then applicable to them too, (d) Amendment/repeal: Only Parliament can amend/repeal such law, even for States that adopted later, (e) Use cases: Water disputes, environmental protection, inter-State transport — subjects requiring uniform regulation but within State domain. Illustrates flexible federalism: enables uniform legislation on State subjects through voluntary State consent, preserving autonomy while addressing inter-State challenges.
Answer: unverified media reports and political considerations
Rameshwar Prasad v. Union of India (2006): Facts: Bihar Assembly elections 2005 resulted in hung Assembly; Governor recommended President's Rule citing horse-trading based on media reports, without floor test. SC held: (a) Governor's satisfaction must be based on objective material, not unverified media reports or political considerations, (b) Floor test is primary method to test majority; Governor cannot pre-empt Assembly's right to test majority, (c) Dissolution of Assembly is extreme step; revival possible if proclamation invalidated. Reinforced SR Bommai principles; curbed arbitrary use of Article 356 for political ends. Illustrates judicial protection of federal balance: State autonomy against Centre overreach via gubernatorial discretion.
Answer: reasonable and in public interest
Article 301 jurisprudence: (a) Atiabari Tea Co. (1961): Freedom of trade under Article 301 not absolute; subject to regulatory measures (e.g., licensing, safety standards) that are reasonable and in public interest, but not to compensatory taxes that directly impede trade, (b) Automobile Transport (1962): Clarified compensatory taxes (fees for facilities like roads) permissible if non-discriminatory and proportionate to benefits provided, (c) Subsequent cases: Balance between free flow of goods (national economic integration) and State regulatory powers (public health, environment, revenue), (d) GST impact: Subsumed multiple State/Union taxes, reducing barriers to inter-State trade; Council mechanism resolves rate/regulation disputes. Illustrates judicial role in calibrating economic federalism: enabling national market while respecting legitimate State interests.
Answer: True
PESA federal-tribal interface: (a) Constitutional basis: Fifth Schedule (Article 244(1)) for tribal areas in States except Northeast; PESA Act, 1996 operationalizes self-governance, (b) Key provisions: (i) Gram Sabha as primary unit with powers over land, resources, customs, (ii) Consultation with Gram Sabha for land acquisition, mining leases, (iii) Protection of tribal customs, community resources, traditional management, (c) Implementation challenges: (i) State laws diluting PESA provisions, (ii) Bureaucratic resistance to devolving powers, (iii) Capacity gaps in tribal communities for effective governance, (iv) Conflicts with forest/environment laws (FRA, Forest Conservation Act), (d) Federal dimension: States responsible for implementation; Union monitors through Ministry of Tribal Affairs. Illustrates asymmetric federalism: special arrangements for tribal autonomy within constitutional framework; effectiveness depends on political will, capacity building, and respect for tribal agency.
Answer: Indian federalism is a dynamic, flexible system balancing national unity with regional diversity through institutional mechanisms, judicial oversight, and political negotiation
Indian federalism evolution (case studies synthesis): (a) Constitutional design: Quasi-federal with unitary bias (residuary powers with Union, Emergency provisions, All India Services) to ensure national unity in diverse post-Partition context, (b) Institutional mechanisms: Finance Commission (fiscal devolution), GST Council (cooperative taxation), Inter-State Council (policy dialogue), Zonal Councils (regional cooperation) enable Centre-State coordination, (c) Judicial oversight: SR Bommai (curbing Article 356 misuse), Article 370 judgment (interpreting temporary provisions), water disputes cases (balancing State rights with national interest) ensure constitutional balance, (d) Political negotiation: Coalition era (1989-2014) strengthened State bargaining power; GST implementation required consensus-building across parties/States, (e) Adaptive flexibility: Federalism evolves through amendments (101st-GST, 105th-State OBC lists), judicial interpretation, administrative practice to address contemporary challenges (digital governance, climate change, identity politics). Core principle: Unity in diversity — strong Centre for national integrity, autonomous States for regional expression, cooperative mechanisms for shared governance. Essential for UPSC Mains conceptual understanding.
Answer: Supreme Court
Inter-State water disputes framework: (a) Article 262(1): Parliament may by law provide for adjudication of disputes relating to waters of inter-State rivers, (b) Article 262(2): Such law may exclude jurisdiction of Supreme Court or any other court over such disputes, (c) Inter-State Water Disputes Act, 1956: Establishes ad-hoc tribunals for specific disputes; awards have same force as Supreme Court orders, (d) 2019 Amendment: Creates permanent tribunal, fixed timelines, implementation monitoring, (e) Judicial review: Supreme Court retains power to examine tribunal awards for jurisdictional errors, violation of natural justice, constitutional principles (not re-appreciation of facts). Balances specialized expertise for technical water disputes with constitutional supremacy and judicial oversight.
Answer: True
Single citizenship federal design: (a) Constitutional provision: Articles 5-11 establish single citizenship for entire India; no State citizenship, (b) Advantages: (i) Equal rights across States (movement, residence, employment under Article 19), (ii) Uniform fundamental rights enforcement, (iii) National integration despite linguistic/cultural diversity, (iv) Simplified administration (one passport, one voter ID), (c) Contrast with USA: Dual citizenship (federal + State) allows States to define certain rights (e.g., voting in State elections, property ownership rules), (d) Trade-off: Single citizenship strengthens national unity but may limit State autonomy in defining citizen privileges. Reflects Constituent Assembly's priority for unity in diverse post-Partition India.
Answer: Cooperative federalism with flexible mechanisms to address unforeseen challenges
GST compensation case study: (a) Legal framework: GST Act guaranteed 14% annual revenue growth compensation to States for 5 years, funded by GST compensation cess, (b) Challenge: Economic slowdown (2019-20) reduced cess collections; compensation shortfall threatened State finances, (c) Solution: Centre borrowed ₹1.1 lakh crore on behalf of States (back-to-back loans) to meet compensation; States repaid from future cess collections, (d) Federal principles: (i) Honored commitment despite fiscal stress, (ii) Flexible mechanism preserved State revenues without amending Constitution, (iii) Dialogue through GST Council resolved crisis. Illustrates cooperative federalism in practice: institutional mechanisms enabling adaptive problem-solving while respecting fiscal autonomy.
Answer: objective
SR Bommai safeguards on Article 356: (a) Presidential satisfaction must be based on objective material (e.g., Governor's report, Assembly proceedings, independent verification), not subjective opinion or political consideration, (b) Satisfaction subject to judicial review: Courts can examine if material relevant, if mala fide, if constitutional standards violated, (c) Floor test primary method to test majority; Governor cannot dismiss Ministry without testing majority on Assembly floor, (d) Assembly dissolution not automatic; can be revived if proclamation struck down. Landmark judgment curbing arbitrary use of Article 356; strengthened federal balance by protecting State autonomy against political misuse while preserving Union power for genuine constitutional breakdown.
Answer: True
Emergency federalism transformation: (a) Legislative: Article 250 empowers Parliament to legislate on State List; laws cease 6 months post-Emergency, (b) Executive: Article 353(b) allows Union to give directions to States on 'manner of exercise' of executive power, (c) Financial: Article 360 (Financial Emergency) enables Centre to direct States on financial propriety, reduce salaries, reserve Money Bills, (d) Rationale: Ensure coordinated national response to existential threats (war, external aggression, armed rebellion), (e) Safeguards: Parliamentary approval, judicial review (SR Bommai), time limits, restoration of federal normalcy post-Emergency. Illustrates Indian federalism's flexibility: unitary features for crisis management, federal structure for normal governance.
Answer: Discrimination between States by virtue of any entry in the Legislative Lists
Inter-State trade framework: (a) Article 301: Freedom of trade/commerce/intercourse throughout India, (b) Article 302: Parliament may impose restrictions in public interest, (c) Article 303(1): Neither Parliament nor State Legislature can make law giving preference to one State over another or discriminating between States by virtue of any entry in Legislative Lists, (d) Article 303(2) exception: Preference allowed to address scarcity of goods, (e) Article 304: States may impose reasonable restrictions on goods from other States with Presidential assent. Balances economic unity (free flow of goods) with regulatory needs (public health, scarcity management); prevents economic Balkanization while allowing legitimate State interests.
Answer: Scheduled Tribes
Article 275 grants framework: (a) General grants: To States in need of assistance, determined by Finance Commission recommendations, charged on Consolidated Fund of India (not subject to annual vote), (b) Specific grants: For welfare of Scheduled Tribes in States, improvement of administration in Assam, etc., (c) Distinction from Article 282: Article 275 grants for constitutional obligations; Article 282 grants for any public purpose (discretionary), (d) Implementation: Finance Commission assesses State needs, recommends grant amounts; Parliament appropriates funds. Illustrates fiscal federalism: Centre supports States' constitutional obligations while respecting State autonomy in expenditure priorities.
Answer: True
Tribal autonomy framework: (a) Fifth Schedule: Tribal areas in States except Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram; provides for Tribal Advisory Councils, Governor's special powers, restrictions on land transfer, (b) Sixth Schedule: Autonomous District Councils (ADCs) in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram; ADCs have powers over: land, forests, agriculture, village administration, inheritance, marriage, social customs; can make laws subject to Governor/President assent, (c) Rationale: Protect tribal identity, culture, resources while integrating with State/Union framework, (d) Challenges: ADC-State jurisdiction conflicts, capacity constraints, development vs conservation balance. Illustrates asymmetric federalism: differentiated autonomy for historically marginalized regions within constitutional unity.