Key Concepts

Parliamentary oversight refers to the mechanisms by which Parliament scrutinises the executive's use of public resources, reviews policy implementation, and holds the government accountable. In India's Westminster-derived system, Parliament is constitutionally supreme over the executive — yet structural realities (executive dominance, whip system, thin committee participation) limit the actual exercise of this oversight. Understanding the design versus delivery gap in parliamentary oversight is essential for GS2 analysis.


Constitutional Framework

Parliament's Financial Control

Parliament's control over public finance flows from three constitutional anchors:

MechanismConstitutional BasisFunction
Annual Budget (Money Bill)Article 110, 112–116No expenditure without parliamentary appropriation
Consolidated Fund of IndiaArticle 266All revenues/borrowings; withdrawal only on Parliament's voted appropriation
Comptroller & Auditor GeneralArticles 148–151Post-facto audit of government accounts; reports to Parliament

The Contingency Fund (Article 267) allows emergency withdrawals which are later regularised by Parliament — maintaining technical supremacy while allowing executive flexibility.


CAG — Comptroller and Auditor General of India

Constitutional Position (Articles 148–151)

  • Article 148: CAG appointment by President; removed only by same process as SC judge (impeachment by Parliament on grounds of proved misbehaviour or incapacity)
  • Article 149: Duties and powers as prescribed by Parliament
  • Article 150: Accounts of Union and States maintained in form prescribed by President on CAG's advice
  • Article 151: CAG's reports submitted to President (Union) or Governors (States) → then laid before Parliament/Legislatures

The CAG is thus constitutionally independent — salary charged to Consolidated Fund (not voted); removal requires parliamentary address.

Role and Functions

FunctionDescription
Financial/Regularity AuditVerifies expenditure is within sanctioned amounts and legal authority
Performance Audit"3Es" — Economy, Efficiency, Effectiveness of government programmes
Compliance AuditWhether rules, regulations, and procedures were followed
IT AuditIncreasingly covers government IT systems and digital schemes
Receipt AuditAudits tax and non-tax revenue collections

Limitations of CAG

  • Ex-post audit: CAG audits after expenditure — it cannot prevent wasteful spending, only report it
  • No enforcement power: CAG reports are submitted to Parliament; it is Parliament (via PAC) that acts on them — or doesn't
  • Government response delays: Ministries are often slow to respond to CAG objections (audit paras); many paras remain "outstanding" for years
  • IT audit gap: With increasing use of DBT (Direct Benefit Transfer) and digital platforms, CAG capacity for real-time IT audit remains limited
  • Staffing constraints: Rapid expansion of government schemes outpaces CAG's audit staff capacity

Notable CAG Reports (UPSC-relevant)

Report / FindingYearSignificance
2G Spectrum allocation2010Estimated notional loss of ₹1.76 lakh crore; triggered massive controversy and Supreme Court cancellation of licences
Coal block allocation (Coalgate)2012Notional loss of ₹1.86 lakh crore from non-competitive allocation
Commonwealth Games2011Procurement irregularities, cost overruns
Rafale deal (dissent report by CAG)2019CAG noted pricing secrecy; later cited in Supreme Court proceedings
MGNREGS auditVarious yearsLeakages, ghost beneficiaries, delays in wage payment

Public Accounts Committee (PAC)

Composition and Mandate

  • Oldest parliamentary committee — established 1921 (pre-independence); continued post-1947
  • 22 members: 15 from Lok Sabha + 7 from Rajya Sabha; constituted annually
  • Chairperson: Conventionally from the Opposition (since 1967 convention) — a key accountability feature
  • Function: Examines CAG's audit reports; calls ministry officials; reports findings with recommendations

Powers

  • Can summon secretaries and senior officials
  • Can demand documents and records
  • Recommendations are tabled in Parliament

Limitations

  • Retrospective: Only examines past expenditure (usually 1–2 years old)
  • Non-binding: Recommendations not automatically implemented; departments respond at their pace
  • No follow-up enforcement: No mechanism to penalise non-compliance
  • Thin participation: Only fraction of audit paras actually discussed in PAC

Other Parliamentary Financial Committees

Estimates Committee

  • Mandate: Examines Union Budget estimates; suggests economies; examines whether money is being well spent before appropriation
  • Composition: 30 members from Lok Sabha only (not Rajya Sabha, since Money Bills originate in Lok Sabha)
  • Key distinction from PAC: Forward-looking (estimates) vs. PAC's backward-looking (audit)
  • Limitation: Cannot reduce or increase taxation; cannot question policy — only scrutinise implementation

Committee on Public Undertakings (COPU)

  • Examines working of Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs)
  • Reviews whether PSUs are being run efficiently and in public interest
  • Reports on CAG-audited PSU accounts

Departmentally Related Standing Committees (DRSCs)

Structure

16 DRSCs cover all Union ministries between them. Each committee has members from both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha. They examine:

  • Budget demands for grants (ministry-specific)
  • Bills referred by the Speaker/Chairman
  • Performance of ministries under their jurisdiction
  • Annual reports of ministries

Significance

DRSCs were significantly strengthened after the 1993 reforms. They are a primary forum for pre-legislative scrutiny — examining Bills in detail, calling expert witnesses, and submitting reports with recommendations before the full House debates.

Critical gap: With growing use of Money Bills to bypass Rajya Sabha, and Bills passed without committee referral, the role of DRSCs has been eroded in recent years. The PRS Legislative Research database shows that in recent Lok Sabha sessions, a significant fraction of Bills were passed without committee referral — reversing the post-1993 reform trend.


Question Hour

Types of Questions

TypeFeature
Starred QuestionsOral answer required; supplementary questions allowed; 20 per day
Unstarred QuestionsWritten answer only; no supplementary; 230 per day
Short Notice QuestionsLess than 10-day notice; accepted at Speaker/Chairman's discretion
Questions to Ministers of Private Members' BillsRare, under Rule 40

Question Hour: First hour of parliamentary sitting — the primary forum for holding ministers accountable in real-time.

Zero Hour

Not in Rules of Procedure but established by convention — immediately after Question Hour. Members raise matters of urgent public importance with no notice requirement. Ministers respond informally. Highly visible but has no formal accountability mechanism — no formal answer required, no vote taken.

Private Members' Business

Reserved for Fridays (in theory). Private Members' Bills can be introduced by non-ministerial MPs. Rarely pass but signal issues, force debates, and create political accountability.


Motion-Based Accountability

MotionConstitutional BasisFunction
Motion of No-ConfidenceArticle 75(3)If passed, government must resign; PM must be member of Lok Sabha
Censure MotionConventionsCriticism of a specific minister
Calling Attention MotionRule 197Draws attention to urgent matters
Adjournment MotionRule 56Raise definite matters of urgent public importance; requires Speaker's permission
Cut MotionsBudget proceduresChallenge specific demand for grants; three types: disapproval, economy, token

Parliament and Delegated Legislation

Parliament delegates rule-making power to the executive through parent statutes. Oversight mechanisms include:

  • Committee on Subordinate Legislation (both Houses) — reviews rules/regulations framed under Acts; ensures they conform to parent statute
  • Laying requirement — most rules must be "laid" before Parliament for 30 sitting days; Parliament can modify or annul
  • Judicial review — courts can invalidate delegated legislation that exceeds parent Act's scope or violates fundamental rights

Key Reforms Needed — Parliamentary Oversight

ReformRationaleStatus
Mandatory committee referral for all BillsPrevent bypassing of DRSC scrutinyNot implemented
Real-time expenditure monitoring by PACReduce ex-post audit lagPartial (PFMS system)
CAG access to PPP project accountsGrowing private role in public infrastructureContested
Strengthen anti-defection law modificationsWhip system kills effective oversightOngoing debate
Longer parliamentary sessionsIndia's Parliament sits among fewest days globallyNot implemented
Independent Budget Office (like US CBO)Non-partisan fiscal analysis to aid ParliamentProposed, not created

Parliament Productivity — A Concern

India's Parliament sessions have shortened over decades:

  • First Lok Sabha (1952–57) averaged 120+ sitting days per year
  • Recent Lok Sabhas average 60–70 sitting days per year
  • By comparison: UK Parliament sits 150+ days, US Congress 140+ days

More disruptions, shorter sessions, and guillotine of Bills (passing without debate) all reduce Parliament's capacity to hold the executive accountable.


Recent Developments (2024–2026)

CAG Reports — Key Findings (2023–2025)

ReportFinding
PM-KISAN Scheme Audit (2023)CAG found payments to ineligible beneficiaries; some beneficiaries received multiple transfers; land verification gaps
Ayushman Bharat – PM-JAY Audit (2024)CAG found empanelled hospitals billing for non-existent patients; data manipulation in claims
MGNREGS Audit (2024)Persistent wage payment delays; ghost job cards; material component irregularities across multiple states
Defence Capital Procurement (2024)CAG flagged delays in procurement of major defence equipment; idle expenditure on cancelled contracts
Smart Cities Mission (2024)Large unspent balances; many projects incomplete despite Mission timeline end (2024)

Bills Without Committee Referral — Worsening Trend

PRS Legislative Research data shows that the 17th Lok Sabha (2019–2024) referred only about 16% of Bills to Standing Committees — a dramatic decline from the 71% referral rate in the 14th Lok Sabha (2004–09). The 18th Lok Sabha (from June 2024) has continued this trend.

This effectively means most legislation passes without independent expert scrutiny — a fundamental weakening of parliamentary oversight.

18th Lok Sabha — Key Developments (June 2024 onwards)

  • Opposition INDIA bloc won 232 seats; NDA formed government with 293 seats; strong opposition for the first time since 2014 in terms of opposition cohesion.
  • K. Suresh (Congress) was elected as Lok Sabha Speaker-designate in the initial contest — signalling opposition strength — but Om Birla (BJP) was re-elected as Speaker by voice vote.
  • Deputy Speaker post remains vacant (as in 17th Lok Sabha) — a convention violation. The Constitution (Article 93) mandates election of a Deputy Speaker; this post has been vacant since 2019 with no precedent in post-independence history.
  • PAC reconstituted with opposition chairperson — per convention, PAC Chairperson from opposition; currently held by a Congress member.

Waqf Amendment Bill — Committee Controversy (2024)

The Waqf (Amendment) Bill 2024 was referred to a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) amid Opposition demand — a positive instance of committee referral for a contentious Bill. The JPC submitted its report in early 2025 after extensive hearings, though opposition members filed dissent notes. The Bill was subsequently passed in April 2025.

Budget Session — Parliamentary Productivity

  • The Union Budget 2025–26 was presented on 1 February 2025 by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman (her 8th consecutive budget — a record).
  • Budget session sittings remain concentrated in Feb-May; monsoon sessions shorter; winter sessions disrupted.

CAG — Institutional Developments

  • Girish Chandra Murmu served as CAG (2020–2024).
  • V. Narahariah was appointed CAG in 2024.
  • CAG's iAudit digital platform now uses data analytics and AI tools to identify anomalies in large government datasets — enabling more comprehensive audit coverage.

PYQ Relevance

Mains GS2:

  • "The CAG is the guardian of the public purse. Yet its reports rarely lead to systemic change. Examine." (analysis type)
  • "How effective is Parliamentary oversight of the executive in India? Identify structural weaknesses and suggest reforms." (2018-type)
  • "What is the role of the Public Accounts Committee? How does it differ from the Estimates Committee?" (short answer)
  • "Zero Hour is a unique Indian parliamentary innovation. Comment on its effectiveness as an accountability tool." (GS2)

Prelims:

  • CAG is appointed under — Article 148
  • CAG's reports on Union finances are submitted to — President of India
  • PAC Chairperson is conventionally from — Opposition party
  • Which committee examines budget estimates before expenditure? — Estimates Committee
  • Estimates Committee has members from — Lok Sabha only (30 members)

Key Terms

Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG)

  • Definition: Constitutional authority under Article 148 who audits the accounts of Union and State governments, certifying whether funds were spent on authorised purposes and with financial propriety.
  • Origin: Inherited from the British Auditor-General; constitutionalised at Independence to ensure legislative control over executive expenditure.
  • UPSC: Articles 148–151; differences between CAG and internal audit; role in financial accountability; appointment/removal similar to a judge of the Supreme Court.

Public Accounts Committee (PAC)

  • Definition: A Parliamentary standing committee that examines CAG's audit reports after expenditure has occurred, scrutinising whether public money was spent with regularity and economy.
  • Origin: Established in 1921 under the Montagu-Chelmsford reforms; post-independence chairmanship conventionally given to the Leader of Opposition since 1967.
  • UPSC: Key difference from Estimates Committee (pre-expenditure); PAC has no power to direct government, only recommends; only Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha members serve (15+7).

Estimates Committee

  • Definition: Parliamentary committee of 30 Lok Sabha members that examines budget estimates before expenditure, suggesting economies and improvements in policy implementation.
  • Origin: Constituted after Independence as a permanent body; distinct from PAC which is post-facto.
  • UPSC: Only Lok Sabha members; no Rajya Sabha representation — contrast with PAC and CoD; examines "if policies implicit in estimates are sound."

Committee on Public Undertakings (COPU)

  • Definition: Parliamentary committee that examines the working of public sector undertakings (PSUs) to assess their commercial viability and operational efficiency.
  • Origin: Created in 1964; modelled partly on PAC but specialised for state-owned enterprises.
  • UPSC: Examines whether PSUs are being managed per sound business principles; reports laid before Parliament.

Appropriation Audit

  • Definition: An audit conducted by the CAG to verify whether money granted by Parliament has been spent on the specific purposes for which it was sanctioned.
  • Origin: Core function of supreme audit institutions globally; in India flows from Article 114 (Appropriation Bills).
  • UPSC: Distinct from performance audit (examines economy/efficiency/effectiveness — the 3Es) and compliance audit; all three are CAG functions.

Parliamentary Standing Committees

  • Definition: Permanent committees of Parliament (currently 24 Departmentally Related Standing Committees plus financial committees) that provide continuous oversight of ministries, scrutinise legislation, and examine budgets.
  • Origin: 17 DRSCs were introduced in 1993 following a major parliamentary reform; the number was raised to 24 in July 2004 to cover all ministries/departments.
  • UPSC: Distinguish from ad hoc committees (Joint Select, Inquiry); standing committees provide pre-legislative scrutiny; their reports are not binding on the government.