India’s Quasi-Federal Structure

Constitutional Framework

  • Federal Features
    • Written Constitution with a well-defined amendment procedure providing a foundational governance structure for India.
    • Dual Polity: ga overnment system at both the Union and State levels ensuring decentralised administration.
    • Bicameralism: Rajya Sabha (Council of States) representing state interests; checks potential majoritarianism in Lok Sabha.
    • Division of Powers: legislative powers through three lists in Schedule VII between Union and States.
  • Unitary Features
    • Strong Centre: division of powers tilted toward the central government; primacy to Parliamentary legislation on the Concurrent List.
    • Single Constitution and Citizenship: uniform laws and rights apply to all citizens across the country.
    • Parliamentary Authority: Article 3 empowers Parliament to change state territories, areas, and boundaries without state consent.
    • Others: Integrated Judiciary, All India Services, Emergency powers, Parliament makes laws for international treaty obligations.

Contemporary Challenges

  • Fiscal Centralisation: GST implementation is impacting the financial autonomy of States, reducing revenue control significantly.
  • Administrative and Political Centralisation: The Disaster Management Act during COVID-19 imposed nationwide lockdowns with minimal state consultation.
  • Other issues: Reservation of bills by Governors for Presidential Assent, devolution of taxes by the Finance Commission.

Addressing Challenges

  • NITI Aayog embodies the ‘Team India’ spirit, bringing the Centre and States as equal partners in nation-building.
  • GST Council provides platforms for dialogue, reinforcing the “self-rule with shared-rule” principle for democracy.
  • Institutions foster Centre-State cooperation for balanced development, evolvinga  dynamic balance between unity and regional autonomy.

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