Framework: Types of Bodies

India's governance architecture operates through three tiers of bodies beyond the core executive:

Type Basis Examples
Constitutional Bodies Directly created by the Constitution CAG (Art 148), UPSC (Art 315), ECI (Art 324), Finance Commission (Art 280)
Statutory Bodies Created by an Act of Parliament SEBI, TRAI, CCI, NGT, NHRC, CVC, Lokpal
Non-Statutory Bodies Created by executive resolution/order NITI Aayog, NBT, Planning Commission (defunct)

Key distinction for exam: Constitutional bodies can only be abolished/modified by constitutional amendment. Statutory bodies can be wound up by Parliament amending the parent Act. Non-statutory bodies can be dissolved by executive order alone.


SEBI — Securities and Exchange Board of India

Feature Detail
Statutory basis SEBI Act, 1992
Set up 1988 (non-statutory) → statutory from 30 January 1992
Composition Chairman + up to 9 members (2 from Ministry of Finance, 1 from RBI, up to 5 others — at least 3 whole-time)
Current Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey (1987-batch IAS, Odisha cadre; assumed charge 1 March 2025 for 3-year term; succeeded Madhabi Puri Buch — India's first woman SEBI Chairman)
Headquarters Mumbai

Three-fold powers:

  1. Regulatory — registers and regulates intermediaries (stock brokers, mutual funds, FPIs, credit rating agencies, depositories)
  2. Investigative — calls for information, conducts inspections, compels production of records
  3. Quasi-judicial — holds inquiries, passes orders including penalties, debarment, and disgorgement of profits

Appeal: SEBI orders → Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) → Supreme Court

2024-25 developments:

  • Algo Trading Framework (4 February 2025): Mandates safer retail participation in algorithmic trading — APIs replaced by exchange-approved Algo-IDs; brokers must have kill-switch capability; phased implementation with full enforcement from August 2025
  • FPI Disclosure Norms (2024): Tightened beneficial ownership disclosure to prevent minimum public shareholding circumvention
  • SEBI data: algorithmic trading accounts for 97% of FPI profits and 96% of proprietary trader profits in F&O (FY2024)

TRAI — Telecom Regulatory Authority of India

Feature Detail
Statutory basis TRAI Act, 1997
Established 20 February 1997
Amended TRAI (Amendment) Act, 2000 — separated regulatory (TRAI) from adjudicatory (TDSAT) functions
Composition 1 Chairperson + 2 full-time Members + 2 part-time Members
Current Chairperson Anil Kumar Lahoti
Headquarters New Delhi

Functions: Tariff regulation, Quality of Service (QoS) standards, spectrum management recommendations to DoT, consumer protection, interconnection regulations.

Important distinction: TRAI's tariff orders are binding; but its recommendations on spectrum, licensing, and policy are advisory (government may accept or reject).

TDSAT (Telecom Disputes Settlement & Appellate Tribunal):

  • Created by TRAI Amendment Act, 2000 — fully independent of TRAI
  • Adjudicates disputes between telecom service providers, and between providers and consumers
  • Hears appeals against TRAI orders
  • Composition: Chairperson (retired SC judge or retired Chief Justice of HC) + 2 Members
  • Appeal from TDSAT: Supreme Court directly

2024-25 developments:

  • 5G rapid expansion — India among fastest globally in 5G rollout; TRAI issued recommendations on spectrum sharing, leasing, terahertz spectrum
  • OTT Regulation: TRAI held open house discussions (May 2024) on regulating OTT communication apps; framework still under consultation as of 2026

CCI — Competition Commission of India

Feature Detail
Statutory basis Competition Act, 2002
Operational 20 May 2009 (enforcement provisions)
Composition 1 Chairperson + 2 to 6 Members
Current Chairperson Ravneet Kaur — first woman to head CCI (appointed 2023); additionally given charge of NFRA Chairperson (3 April 2025)
Headquarters New Delhi

Key functions:

  • Section 3: Prohibits anti-competitive agreements (cartels, bid-rigging, market allocation, exclusive dealing)
  • Section 4: Prevents abuse of dominant position
  • Combination Regulations: Merger/acquisition approvals above threshold

Appeal: CCI orders → NCLAT (National Company Law Appellate Tribunal) → Supreme Court

Competition (Amendment) Act, 2023 — Presidential assent 11 April 2023:

Change Detail
Deal Value Threshold New: transactions > ₹2,000 crore with substantial India operations require CCI approval — targets Big Tech acquisitions of nascent startups
Merger Timeline Reduced from 210 days to 150 days; prima facie opinion within 30 days (else deemed approved)
Settlement Mechanism Parties can settle before final order (Section 48A) — vertical restraints and abuse of dominance cases
Global Turnover Penalties Penalties for anti-competitive agreements and abuse of dominance now based on global turnover (not India turnover only)
Hub-and-Spoke Cartels Expanded scope to parties not directly in identical trade
Limitation Period 3-year limitation for filing complaints (new)

2024-25 major orders:

  • Google Android penalty (₹1,337.76 crore): NCLAT upheld CCI's 2022 penalty on 29 March 2024 (with modifications); Google's SC appeal pending
  • First settlement order (May 2025): CCI passed India's first-ever settlement order under Section 48A — Google Android TV case, penalty ₹20.24 crore
  • E-commerce investigation: Ongoing probe into anti-competitive smartphone exclusive launches by Amazon/Flipkart with major smartphone brands
  • CCI registered 54 antitrust cases and received 149 merger filings in 2025

NGT — National Green Tribunal

Feature Detail
Statutory basis National Green Tribunal Act, 2010
Established 18 October 2010
Significance India was the 3rd country (after Australia and New Zealand) to establish a specialised environmental court
Current Chairperson Justice Prakash Shrivastava (retired Chief Justice, Calcutta HC; appointed 21 August 2023)
Principal Bench New Delhi

Composition:

  • Chairperson: Retired judge of the Supreme Court (as specified by NGT Act, Section 5)
  • Judicial Members: Retired High Court judges; minimum 10, maximum 20
  • Expert Members: Experts in environment, forest, natural resources; minimum 10, maximum 20
  • Each bench must include at least 1 Judicial Member and 1 Expert Member

Five Zonal Benches: Principal (New Delhi), Central (Bhopal), Western (Pune), Southern (Chennai), Eastern (Kolkata)

Jurisdiction: Substantial questions relating to environment under: Water (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act 1974, Air Act 1981, Environment Protection Act 1986, Forest (Conservation) Act 1980, Biological Diversity Act 2002.

Key distinctions:

  • NGT cannot review its own orders — appeals go directly to Supreme Court (not High Courts)
  • NGT cannot award punitive/exemplary damages — only compensation and restitution
  • High Courts retain jurisdiction for environment matters outside NGT's listed laws

2024-25 landmark orders:

  • Yamuna floodplain: no construction regardless of developmental purpose (April 2025)
  • Yamuna desilting: directed Delhi authorities to desilt 24 drains before monsoon 2025 (February 2025)
  • CRZ 2019 challenge: Western Bench constituted a larger bench (October 2024) to hear challenge to CRZ Notification 2019

NHRC — National Human Rights Commission

Feature Detail
Statutory basis Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993
Established 12 October 1993
Current Chairperson Justice V. Ramasubramanian (retired SC judge; appointed 23 December 2024)
Headquarters New Delhi

Composition (post-PHR Amendment Act, 2019):

  • Chairperson: retired CJI or retired SC judge (2019 amendment expanded eligibility from only retired CJI)
  • 5 full-time Members: 1 retired SC judge; 1 retired HC Chief Justice; 3 with knowledge of human rights (at least 1 woman)
  • 7 ex-officio deemed members: Chairpersons of NCSC, NCST, NCW, NCM, NCBC, NCPCR + Chief Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities

Powers and limitations:

  • Can summon, inspect institutions, recommend compensation
  • Recommendations are NOT binding — government must respond within 1 month but may reject
  • Cannot investigate complaints more than 1 year old
  • Cannot investigate matters pending before State Human Rights Commissions

Annual Report 2023-24:

  • Complaints received: 76,891
  • Cases disposed: 73,958
  • Compensation recommended: ₹1,820.47 lakh+
  • Suo motu cases: 106; Spot inquiries: 30

CVC — Central Vigilance Commission

Feature Detail
Basis Central Vigilance Commission Act, 2003 (earlier by executive resolution, 1964)
Composition Central Vigilance Commissioner (Chairman) + not more than 2 Vigilance Commissioners
Appointment President, on recommendation of: PM (Chair) + Home Minister + Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha
Current CVC Praveen Kumar Srivastava (as of February 2026)

Role in anti-corruption ecosystem:

  • Superintendence over CBI for cases under Prevention of Corruption Act
  • CBI requires CVC's consent to investigate officers of Joint Secretary rank and above
  • Lokpal can refer cases to CVC; CVC reports back — they work alongside, not hierarchically
  • Advisory in nature — CVC cannot punish directly; can only advise departments on penalty

Annual Report 2023 data:

  • Corruption complaints received: 74,203
  • Resolved: 66,373 | Pending: 7,830
  • Top sectors: Railways (10,447 complaints), Delhi Local Bodies (7,665)
  • Conviction rate: 71.47% (down from 74.59% in 2022)
  • CBI: 198 bribery traps; 6,900+ corruption cases pending trial; 361 pending for over 20 years

CAG — Comptroller and Auditor General of India

Constitutional basis: Articles 148–151

Article Provision
148 Establishment; appointed by President; removal only by SC-equivalent process (address by both Houses)
149 Duties and powers (prescribed by Parliament)
150 Accounts of Union and States to be kept as CAG prescribes
151 Audit reports to be laid before Parliament/State Legislature

Current CAG: K. Sanjay Murthy — 15th CAG; sworn in 21 November 2024 by President Droupadi Murmu.

Key 2024-25 audit findings:

  • PMKVY (PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana): Of 56 lakh certified (2016-2024), only 41% (23 lakh) were placed; 20% state funds unutilised; 36% candidates yet to receive ₹500 DBT payout
  • PMAY-G: 41% of allocated funds not utilised as of 2024-25 revised estimates
  • J&K: ₹12,000 crore in pending utilisation certificates till March 2024

UPSC — Union Public Service Commission

Constitutional basis: Articles 315–323

Article Provision
315 UPSC and State PSCs
316 Appointment by President; eligibility: 10 years in Central/State government or SC/HC
317 Removal: Presidential reference to SC; SC inquiry
320 Functions: recruitment, promotions, transfers, disciplinary matters
323 Annual report to President, laid before Parliament

Current Chairperson: Smt. Preeti Sudan (as of April 2026)

CSE 2024 data:

  • Vacancies notified: 1,129
  • Candidates finally recommended: 1,009 (725 men, 284 women)
  • AIR 1: Shakti Dubey (Prayagraj; PG in Biochemistry, BHU) — 3 of top 5 were women
  • Prelims date: 16 June 2024

CSE 2026: Notification released 4 February 2026; 933 vacancies; Prelims scheduled 24 May 2026


Election Commission of India

Constitutional basis: Article 324 — superintendence, direction and control of elections to Parliament, State Legislatures, President, Vice-President.

Appointment (post-CEC Act, 2023): President on recommendation of a Selection Committee: PM (Chair) + a Cabinet Minister nominated by PM + Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha. The 2023 Act excluded the CJI from the committee (previously directed by Supreme Court's Anoop Baranwal judgment, March 2023), which is separately challenged.

Current composition (April 2026):

  • CEC: Gyanesh Kumar (1988-batch IAS, Kerala cadre) — 26th CEC; appointed 19 February 2025; term till 26 January 2029
  • EC: Sukhbir Singh Sandhu (Uttarakhand cadre IAS; appointed March 2024)
  • EC: Vivek Joshi (1989-batch Haryana cadre IAS; former Census Commissioner)

Notable (April 2026): Both Houses of Parliament rejected an impeachment motion against CEC Gyanesh Kumar on 6 April 2026 — the first-ever impeachment attempt against a serving CEC.

One Nation One Election: Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 introduced in Lok Sabha 17 December 2024; referred to JPC 19 December 2024; JPC tenure extended to Monsoon Session 2026. Requires 2/3rd majority in both Houses + ratification by half the State Assemblies.


Comparative Framework — Key Exam Distinctions

Binding vs Advisory:

Body Orders/Recommendations
SEBI, CCI, NGT, ECI Binding — enforceable orders, appeals to tribunals/courts
TRAI (tariffs) Binding
TRAI (spectrum/licensing) Advisory to government
NHRC Advisory — government must respond within 1 month but may reject
CVC Advisory — cannot punish; only advises departments
CAG Advisory — reports to Parliament; no direct recovery/punishment power
UPSC Advisory by convention (President not constitutionally bound, but in practice binding)

Appeal hierarchy:

Body First Appeal Second Appeal
SEBI Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) Supreme Court
CCI NCLAT Supreme Court
NGT Supreme Court directly
TRAI TDSAT Supreme Court
Others (NHRC, CVC, CAG, UPSC, ECI) High Court (writ) / Supreme Court

Chairperson eligibility — key distinctions:

Body Chairperson Must Be
NGT Retired SC judge (Section 5, NGT Act)
NHRC Retired CJI or retired SC judge (post-2019 amendment)
TDSAT Retired SC judge or retired HC Chief Justice
CAG No judicial requirement — presidential appointee
UPSC 10 years in Central/State service

Exam Strategy

High-frequency Prelims data:

  • SEBI: 1992 Act; Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey (March 2025)
  • TRAI: 1997 Act; 20 February 1997; TDSAT hears TRAI appeals → SC
  • CCI: Competition Act 2002; operational May 2009; Competition Amendment Act 2023 (deal value threshold ₹2,000 crore; global turnover penalties; 150-day merger timeline)
  • NGT: 18 October 2010; 3rd country with specialised environmental court; appeals → SC directly (not HC)
  • NHRC: 1993 Act; 12 October 1993; post-2019 amendment — retired CJI or SC judge
  • CAG: Art 148-151; K. Sanjay Murthy (15th CAG, Nov 2024)
  • UPSC: Art 315-323; CSE 2024 — 1,009 selected; AIR 1 Shakti Dubey
  • ECI: Art 324; CEC Gyanesh Kumar (Feb 2025); CEC Act 2023 (no CJI in selection panel)

Mains angles:

  • "Regulatory bodies in India have powers but lack teeth" — use CVC (advisory only), NHRC (non-binding), contrast with SEBI and CCI (binding orders)
  • Competition Amendment Act 2023: deal-value threshold targets Big Tech kill-zone acquisitions — connect to digital market regulation globally
  • ECI appointment controversy: Supreme Court (Anoop Baranwal) vs Parliament's CEC Act 2023 — judicial independence vs parliamentary supremacy

Cross-link: For latest appointments, regulatory orders, and body-specific current affairs, see Ujiyari.com.