Constitutional Framework

Local self-government was given constitutional status by the 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendment Acts of 1992. These amendments added Part IX (Panchayats) and Part IX-A (Municipalities) to the Constitution and introduced the 11th Schedule (29 subjects for Panchayats) and 12th Schedule (18 functions for Municipalities).

Both amendments received Presidential assent on 20 April 1993 and came into force on:

  • 73rd Amendment: 24 April 1993
  • 74th Amendment: 1 June 1993

Historical note: Panchayati Raj was first introduced in Nagaur district, Rajasthan on 2 October 1959, followed by Andhra Pradesh. However, it lacked constitutional backing until 1992.


Historical Evolution of Panchayati Raj

Pre-Constitutional Background

Village panchayats existed in ancient India and were endorsed by Gandhi as the backbone of Swaraj. The colonial government made limited provisions. After independence, Article 40 of the DPSP directed states to organise village panchayats, but implementation was left to states with no binding obligation.

Key Committees and Commissions

Committee / ReportYearKey Recommendations
Balwant Rai Mehta Committee1957 (Report: Nov 24, 1957)Coined "democratic decentralisation"; recommended three-tier PRIs — Gram Panchayat (village), Panchayat Samiti (block), Zila Parishad (district); village Panchayat directly elected, upper tiers indirectly elected
Ashok Mehta CommitteeAppointed Dec 1977, Report Aug 1978Recommended replacing three-tier with two-tier system (Mandal Panchayat and Zila Parishad); official participation of political parties in elections; compulsory taxation powers; but not implemented as Janata Govt fell
G.V.K. Rao Committee1985Recommended treating district as the basic unit; district collector should chair Zila Parishad; PRIs described as "grass-roots planning" units
L.M. Singhvi Committee1986First to recommend constitutional status for PRIs; emphasized importance of Gram Sabha as "embodiment of direct democracy"; suggested Nyaya Panchayats for cluster of villages
Rajiv Gandhi Initiative198964th Constitutional Amendment Bill passed Lok Sabha but failed in Rajya Sabha; laid groundwork for eventual 73rd Amendment
P.K. Thungon Committee1988Recommended constitutional recognition for PRIs as third tier

First Panchayati Raj

Rajasthan was the first state to establish Panchayati Raj on October 2, 1959 (Gandhi Jayanti) at Nagaur. Andhra Pradesh followed two weeks later.


73rd Amendment — Panchayati Raj (Articles 243–243O)

Key Constitutional Provisions

ArticleSubject
243Definitions (Gram Sabha, Intermediate Level, Panchayat area, etc.)
243AGram Sabha — body of persons registered in the electoral rolls of a village
243BConstitution of Panchayats — three-tier system
243CComposition of Panchayats
243DReservation of seats (SC/ST/Women)
243EDuration of Panchayats — 5 years
243FDisqualifications for membership
243GPowers, authority, and responsibilities (Article references 11th Schedule)
243HPowers to impose taxes
243IState Finance Commission
243JAudit of accounts
243KState Election Commission for superintendence of elections
243LApplication to Union Territories
243MExemptions — does not apply to Nagaland, Meghalaya, Mizoram, certain areas in Schedule V and VI
243NContinuance of existing laws
243OBar to interference by courts in electoral matters

Three-Tier System

TierBodyLevel
Bottom tierGram Panchayat (Village Panchayat)Village
Middle tierPanchayat Samiti (Block/Taluk Panchayat)Intermediate/Block
Top tierZilla Parishad (District Panchayat)District
  • States with population below 20 lakh may not have the intermediate tier (Article 243B(1))
  • States may use different names (e.g., "Block Panchayat" in Kerala, "Taluka Panchayat" in Gujarat)

Gram Sabha (Article 243A)

FeatureDetail
DefinitionA body consisting of persons registered in the electoral rolls relating to a village comprised within the area of a Panchayat at the village level
RoleFoundation of the Panchayati Raj system — exercises powers and performs functions determined by State Legislature
FunctionsApprove plans, programmes, and projects for social and economic development; identify beneficiaries of poverty alleviation programmes; social audit of Panchayat accounts
SignificanceEmbodies direct democracy at the grassroots level — L.M. Singhvi called it the "embodiment of direct democracy"

Composition and Election

FeatureDetail
ElectionAll members at all levels elected by direct election (except Chairpersons of intermediate and district level — State Legislature may provide for indirect election)
Chairperson of Gram PanchayatElected in the manner prescribed by State Legislature
Chairperson of intermediate/districtState Legislature may provide for election by elected members from among themselves
Representation of MPs/MLAsState Legislature may provide for representation of MPs, MLAs, and MLCs in Panchayats above the village level — with or without voting rights

Reservation (Article 243D)

CategoryReservation
Scheduled Castes (SC)Seats reserved in proportion to their population in the Panchayat area
Scheduled Tribes (ST)Seats reserved in proportion to their population in the Panchayat area
WomenNot less than 1/3rd of total seats (including seats reserved for SC/ST women); 1/3rd of Chairperson offices reserved for women
Backward ClassesState Legislature may provide reservation for backward classes
RotationReserved seats are allotted by rotation to different constituencies in a Panchayat

Many states have independently increased women's reservation to 50% (Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, and others).

Compulsory vs Voluntary Provisions

Compulsory (Binding on States):

  • Three-tier Panchayats
  • Elections every 5 years
  • Reservation for SCs, STs and women
  • State Election Commission
  • State Finance Commission

Voluntary (Discretionary for States):

  • Devolution of 29 subjects to Panchayats
  • Granting financial powers (taxation)

Duration and Elections (Article 243E)

  • Term: 5 years from the date of first meeting
  • Can be dissolved earlier by the State Government
  • Elections must be held before the expiry of the 5-year term
  • If dissolved, elections must be held within 6 months of dissolution
  • The reconstituted Panchayat serves only the remainder of the full 5-year term

State Finance Commission (Article 243I)

FeatureDetail
ConstitutionGovernor must constitute a Finance Commission within one year of the commencement of the 73rd Amendment, and thereafter at the expiry of every 5th year
FunctionsReview the financial position of Panchayats and recommend: (a) distribution of taxes between State and Panchayats, (b) grants-in-aid from the Consolidated Fund of the State, (c) measures to improve the financial position of Panchayats
ReportSubmitted to the Governor; the State Legislature must cause it to be laid before the House along with an action-taken report

11th Schedule — 29 Subjects (Article 243G)

The 11th Schedule lists 29 subjects for which Panchayats may be given powers and responsibilities for the preparation of plans for economic development and social justice:

No.Subject
1Agriculture, including agricultural extension
2Land improvement, implementation of land reforms, land consolidation, and soil conservation
3Minor irrigation, water management, and watershed development
4Animal husbandry, dairying, and poultry
5Fisheries
6Social forestry and farm forestry
7Minor forest produce
8Small-scale industries, including food processing industries
9Khadi, village, and cottage industries
10Rural housing
11Drinking water
12Fuel and fodder
13Roads, culverts, bridges, ferries, waterways, and other means of communication
14Rural electrification, including distribution of electricity
15Non-conventional energy sources
16Poverty alleviation programme
17Education, including primary and secondary schools
18Technical training and vocational education
19Adult and non-formal education
20Libraries
21Cultural activities
22Markets and fairs
23Health and sanitation, including hospitals, primary health centres, and dispensaries
24Family welfare
25Women and child development
26Social welfare, including welfare of the handicapped and mentally retarded
27Welfare of the weaker sections, and in particular, of the SC and ST
28Public distribution system
29Maintenance of community assets

States Exempted from Part IX

ExemptionDetail
Article 243M(1)Does not apply to Scheduled Areas (Fifth Schedule) and Tribal Areas (Sixth Schedule)
Article 243M(2)Does not apply to Nagaland, Meghalaya, Mizoram and certain hill areas of Manipur
PESA Act, 1996Provisions of the Panchayats (Extension to the Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 extends Panchayati Raj to Fifth Schedule areas with modifications to protect tribal rights

74th Amendment — Municipalities (Articles 243P–243ZG)

Key Constitutional Provisions

ArticleSubject
243PDefinitions (Metropolitan area, Municipality, etc.)
243QConstitution of Municipalities — three types
243RComposition of Municipalities
243SConstitution and composition of Wards Committees
243TReservation of seats
243UDuration of Municipalities — 5 years
243VDisqualifications
243WPowers, authority, and responsibilities
243XPower to impose taxes
243YFinance Commission (same as Art 243I)
243ZAudit of accounts
243ZAElections to Municipalities — State Election Commission
243ZBApplication to Union Territories
243ZCExemptions — certain hill areas, Scheduled Areas
243ZDCommittee for District Planning
243ZECommittee for Metropolitan Planning
243ZFContinuance of existing laws
243ZGBar to interference by courts in electoral matters

Also called the Nagarpalika Act.

Three Types of Municipalities (Article 243Q)

TypeArea
Nagar PanchayatTransitional area (rural to urban)
Municipal CouncilSmaller urban area
Municipal CorporationLarger urban area

The Governor determines the classification on the basis of population, density, revenue generated, percentage employed in non-agricultural activities, and other factors.

Composition

FeatureDetail
ElectionMembers elected by direct election from territorial wards
ChairpersonState Legislature decides the manner of election of the Chairperson
RepresentationState Legislature may provide for representation of MPs, MLAs, and MLCs; persons with special knowledge or experience in municipal administration
Wards CommitteesMandatory for municipalities with population of 3 lakh or more (Article 243S)

Reservation (Article 243T)

CategoryReservation
SC/STIn proportion to their population in the municipality
WomenNot less than 1/3rd of total seats (including SC/ST women); 1/3rd of Chairperson offices
Backward ClassesState Legislature may provide reservation
RotationReserved seats allotted by rotation to different wards

Duration (Article 243U)

  • Term: 5 years from the date of first meeting
  • If dissolved, elections within 6 months
  • Reconstituted municipality serves only the remainder of the 5-year term

12th Schedule — 18 Functions (Article 243W)

No.Function
1Urban planning, including town planning
2Regulation of land use and construction of buildings
3Planning for economic and social development
4Roads and bridges
5Water supply for domestic, industrial, and commercial purposes
6Public health, sanitation conservancy, and solid waste management
7Fire services
8Urban forestry, protection of the environment, and promotion of ecological aspects
9Safeguarding the interests of weaker sections of society, including the handicapped and mentally retarded
10Slum improvement and upgradation
11Urban poverty alleviation
12Provision of urban amenities and facilities such as parks, gardens, playgrounds
13Promotion of cultural, educational, and aesthetic aspects
14Burials and burial grounds; cremations and cremation grounds; and electric crematoriums
15Cattle pounds; prevention of cruelty to animals
16Vital statistics including registration of births and deaths
17Public amenities including street lighting, parking lots, bus stops, and public conveniences
18Regulation of slaughterhouses and tanneries

State Election Commission (Article 243K / 243ZA)

FeatureDetail
Constitutional basisArticle 243K (Panchayats) and Article 243ZA (Municipalities)
AppointmentState Election Commissioner appointed by the Governor
FunctionSuperintendence, direction, and control of the preparation of electoral rolls and conduct of elections to Panchayats and Municipalities
RemovalCan only be removed in the same manner as a High Court Judge — i.e., by an order of the Governor on a report of the High Court
IndependenceConditions of service shall not be varied to disadvantage after appointment
Key distinctionThe SEC is not under the Election Commission of India — it is a separate constitutional authority for local body elections

District Planning Committee (Article 243ZD)

FeatureDetail
MandateEvery State shall constitute at the district level a District Planning Committee (DPC)
FunctionConsolidate the plans prepared by Panchayats and Municipalities in the district and prepare a draft development plan for the district as a whole
CompositionAt least 4/5th of members elected by and from among the elected members of Panchayats and Municipalities in the district — in proportion to rural and urban population
ChairpersonDetermined by State Legislature
ConsiderationsMust have regard to: (a) matters of common interest between Panchayats and Municipalities (spatial planning, water sharing, infrastructure), (b) extent of available resources
ForwardingDraft plan forwarded to the State Government

Metropolitan Planning Committee (Article 243ZE)

FeatureDetail
DefinitionA Metropolitan area is an area having a population of 10 lakh or more in one or more districts
MandateEvery Metropolitan area shall have a Metropolitan Planning Committee (MPC)
FunctionPrepare a draft development plan for the Metropolitan area as a whole
CompositionAt least 2/3rd of members elected by and from among the elected members of Municipalities and Chairpersons of Panchayats in the area
Other membersMay include representatives of Central Government, State Government, and expert organisations
ConsiderationsMust have regard to: plans of Municipalities and Panchayats, matters of common interest, overall objectives and priorities of the region, investment pattern, and land-use

PESA Act, 1996

The Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 extends Part IX of the Constitution to Fifth Schedule (Scheduled / Tribal) areas — with certain modifications to protect tribal rights.

FeaturePESA Provision
CoverageFifth Schedule areas in 10 states (Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Rajasthan)
Gram Sabha powersMandatory consultation before land acquisition; management of natural resources
Forest rightsOwnership of minor forest produce
Customary lawTraditions and customs of tribal communities recognised
Money-lendingRegulation of money lending to tribals
EndowmentsControl over institutions and functionaries

Finances of Local Bodies

Revenue Sources

SourceDetails
Own taxesProperty tax, profession tax, advertisement tax, water charges
Shared taxesState share of State taxes as per SFC recommendations
GrantsCentral Finance Commission grants (Article 243I & 280), State grants
LoansFrom state government, HUDCO, bond market

Central Finance Commission and Local Bodies

Finance CommissionKey Recommendation for Local Bodies
11th FC (2000-05)First to recommend grants for local bodies
13th FC (2010-15)Rs 87,519 crore for local bodies
14th FC (2015-20)Rs 2,87,436 crore for local bodies (large increase after raising states' tax share to 42%)
15th FC (2021-26)Rs 4,36,361 crore for local bodies — basic grants (90%) and performance-linked grants (10%) for gram panchayats
16th FC (2026-31)Rs 4.4 lakh crore for rural local bodies + Rs 3.6 lakh crore for urban local bodies; divided into basic grants (80%) and performance-based grants (20%); states' share of central taxes retained at 41%

Challenges Facing Local Bodies

ChallengeDetails
Functions not transferredMany states have not devolved all 29/18 subjects; "3Fs" (Functions, Functionaries, Funds) remain incomplete
Finance gapsOwn revenue very limited; heavy dependence on state grants
Parallel bodiesMP/MLA Local Area Development funds, District Rural Development Agencies (DRDAs), watershed committees bypass PRIs
Capacity deficitElected representatives lack technical and administrative capacity
Political interferenceDistrict Collector and state bureaucracy overshadow elected bodies
Gram Sabha dormancyLow attendance; meetings not held regularly
Urban infrastructure gapIndian cities have among the lowest per capita urban spend in Asia

Digital Governance Initiatives for Local Bodies

InitiativePurpose
e-Gram SwarajUnified digital platform for Panchayats — decentralized planning, work-based accounting
GeM for PanchayatsGovernment e-Marketplace procurement by Gram Panchayats
SVAMITVA SchemeSurvey of villages with drones; property rights cards (ownership rights) to rural households
Meri Panchayat AppCitizen interface for monitoring Panchayat works
Audit OnlineDigital audit of Panchayat accounts

Common Mistake: Aspirants confuse the Schedules — 11th Schedule has 29 subjects for Panchayats, 12th Schedule has 18 functions for Municipalities. Remember: 11th came first (Panchayats, rural, more subjects) and 12th came second (Municipalities, urban, fewer functions). Also note: 11th says "subjects" while 12th says "functions" — this difference in terminology is intentional.

Exam Tip: The real challenge of decentralisation is the 3Fs problem — Funds, Functions, and Functionaries. The 73rd/74th Amendments transferred functions on paper, but most states have not genuinely devolved funds or functionaries to local bodies. This is the core analytical point for any Mains question on Panchayati Raj effectiveness.

Comparison: 73rd Amendment vs 74th Amendment

Feature73rd Amendment (Panchayats)74th Amendment (Municipalities)
Part of ConstitutionPart IX (Articles 243-243O)Part IX-A (Articles 243P-243ZG)
Schedule11th Schedule — 29 subjects12th Schedule — 18 functions
Tier systemThree-tier (Village, Intermediate, District)Three types (Nagar Panchayat, Municipal Council, Municipal Corporation)
Gram Sabha equivalentGram Sabha (Art. 243A)Wards Committee (Art. 243S — for 3 lakh+ population)
SC/ST reservationIn proportion to populationIn proportion to population
Women reservationNot less than 1/3rdNot less than 1/3rd
Duration5 years5 years
Elections conducted byState Election CommissionState Election Commission
Finance CommissionState Finance Commission (Art. 243I)Same State Finance Commission (Art. 243Y)
In forceApril 24, 1993June 1, 1993
Planning bodyDPC (Art. 243ZD) and MPC (Art. 243ZE)

Important for UPSC

Prelims Focus

  • 73rd Amendment: Part IX, Articles 243-243O, 11th Schedule (29 subjects), came into force 24 April 1993
  • 74th Amendment: Part IX-A, Articles 243P-243ZG, 12th Schedule (18 functions), came into force 1 June 1993
  • Reservation: SC/ST in proportion to population + 1/3rd for women at all levels
  • State Finance Commission: Article 243I — constituted every 5 years
  • State Election Commission: Article 243K — appointed by Governor, removed like a High Court Judge
  • DPC (Art. 243ZD): 4/5th members elected; MPC (Art. 243ZE): 2/3rd members elected, for metro areas of 10 lakh+ population
  • PESA Act, 1996: Extends Panchayati Raj to Fifth Schedule areas (NOT Sixth Schedule — which has Autonomous District Councils)
  • States below 20 lakh population may not have intermediate tier
  • Wards Committees mandatory for municipalities with 3 lakh+ population
  • First Panchayati Raj state: Rajasthan (October 2, 1959)
  • Compulsory provisions: three-tier structure, 5-year elections, SC/ST/women reservation, SEC, SFC
  • Voluntary provisions: devolution of 29 subjects, financial powers

Mains Dimensions

  • 3Fs — Funds, Functions, Functionaries: The real challenge of decentralisation — actual devolution vs constitutional mandate
  • Gram Sabha as instrument of direct democracy: Potential and limitations
  • Urban governance challenges: 74th Amendment implementation gaps, smart cities and municipal reforms
  • 16th Finance Commission: Impact of new grants formula on local body finances
  • PESA and tribal self-governance: Conflicts between Panchayati Raj and tribal autonomy; connect to Forest Rights Act 2006
  • Women's representation: Impact of 1/3rd reservation at the grassroots — some states have increased to 50%

Interview Angles

  • Should reservation for women in Panchayats be increased to 50% across all states?
  • Why has urban decentralisation lagged behind rural decentralisation?
  • How can District Planning Committees be made more effective?
  • Should the State Election Commission be merged with the Election Commission of India?

Recent Developments (2024–2026)

Smart Cities Mission Completed — 99% Funds Disbursed (March 2025)

The Smart Cities Mission (SCM), launched in June 2015 under the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, was extended to 31 March 2025 (originally 30 June 2024) to complete balance 10% projects. As of 9 May 2025, 94% of 8,067 total projects have been completed. The total Union Budget allocation was ₹47,652 crore; 99.44% of this amount was disbursed to the 100 smart cities by March 2025.

All 100 Smart Cities have operational Integrated Command and Control Centres (ICCCs) that use AI, IoT, and data analytics for urban management. The SCM represents the largest experiment in urban local body capacity-building and technology-led governance in India.

UPSC angle: Prelims — SCM launched June 2015; extended to March 2025; 100 cities; ₹47,652 crore total allocation; 94% projects complete. Mains — critically assess the Smart Cities Mission in the context of urban local body reform; has it strengthened Article 243W's mandate of functional, financial, and administrative devolution to municipalities?

AMRUT 2.0 — Water and Sanitation for All Urban Areas (2021–2026)

AMRUT 2.0 (Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation), with a total outlay of ₹2.99 lakh crore (central share ₹76,760 crore), aims to make all 4,372 ULBs (as of 2025) water-secure by 2026 — providing tap water connections to all households and sewage connections to 2.68 crore households. AMRUT 2.0 represents a significant step toward fulfilling the constitutional mandate of Urban Local Bodies (12th Schedule, Article 243W) for water supply and sanitation management.

UPSC angle: Prelims — AMRUT 2.0; ₹2.99 lakh crore total outlay; 4,372 ULBs; tap water connections target. Mains — evaluate AMRUT 2.0 as an instrument for empowering ULBs in water and sanitation; connect to Article 243W (12th Schedule) and the 3Fs problem.

Women's Reservation in Panchayats — Implementation Progress (2024–2025)

As of 2024, several states including Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttarakhand, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, and Madhya Pradesh have implemented 50% reservation for women in panchayat elections (going beyond the constitutional minimum of 1/3). Bihar has maintained 50% women's reservation since 2006. The 106th Amendment (2023) extends this logic to Vidhan Sabhas and Lok Sabha (one-third reservation, post-census and delimitation).

The success of women's reservation in panchayats (over 14 lakh women elected representatives) is often cited as evidence for the transformative potential of the 106th Amendment at the national level.

UPSC angle: Prelims — Article 243D: minimum 1/3 reservation for women in panchayats; states can go higher; Bihar has 50% since 2006; 14+ lakh women elected representatives. Mains — critically evaluate the impact of women's reservation in panchayats on political participation and governance quality; connect to the 106th Amendment debate.

One Nation One Election — Implications for Local Bodies (2024–2025)

The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 (ONOE Bill) proposes to synchronise Lok Sabha and State Assembly elections. Within 100 days of general elections, municipal and panchayat elections must also be held (as per the Kovind Committee's recommendations). This would require coordination with State Election Commissions (SECs) under Article 243K and effectively bring local body elections into a national electoral cycle.

This has significant implications for the autonomy of SECs and state legislative control over municipal election schedules under Articles 243K and 243ZA.

UPSC angle: Prelims — 129th Amendment Bill, 2024; ONOE; local body elections within 100 days; Article 243K (SEC). Mains — how does ONOE affect the constitutional autonomy of local self-governance? Examine whether synchronised elections would strengthen or weaken Article 243's objective of genuine decentralisation.


Exam Strategy

High-yield for Prelims:

  • Articles: 243A (Gram Sabha), 243D (Reservation), 243K (SEC), 243-I (SFC), 243ZD (DPC), 243ZE (MPC)
  • 11th Schedule has 29 subjects; 12th Schedule has 18 subjects/functions
  • 73rd Amendment: April 24, 1993; 74th Amendment: June 1, 1993
  • Nagar Panchayat = transitional area; Municipal Council = smaller urban; Corporation = larger urban
  • PESA covers Fifth Schedule areas (not Sixth Schedule which has its own ADC system)
  • First Panchayati Raj state: Rajasthan (October 2, 1959)

For Mains (GS2):

  • The "3Fs problem" (Functions, Functionaries, Funds) is the central argument for why decentralisation remains incomplete
  • Contrast constitutional mandate with ground reality — use SFC data, Finance Commission grants
  • Connect PESA to Forest Rights Act 2006 and tribal self-governance
  • Quote L.M. Singhvi's "embodiment of direct democracy" for Gram Sabha
  • e-Gram Swaraj and SVAMITVA as current affairs hooks

Common Mistakes to Avoid:

  • Do NOT confuse State Election Commission (PRIs/ULBs) with Election Commission of India (LS/State Assembly)
  • Do NOT say 73rd Amendment was passed in 1993 — it was passed in 1992, came into force 1993
  • PESA covers Fifth Schedule areas, NOT Sixth Schedule (which has Autonomous District Councils)
  • Do NOT confuse DPC (4/5th elected, Article 243ZD) with MPC (2/3rd elected, Article 243ZE, metro 10 lakh+)

Vocabulary

Panchayat

  • Pronunciation: /pʌnˈtʃɑːjət/
  • Definition: An elected council of local self-government in rural India, operating at the village, block, or district level under the constitutional framework of Part IX.
  • Origin: From Hindi pañcāyat, derived from Sanskrit pañca ("five") + āyatana ("seat, abode"), originally referring to a council of five elders.

Municipality

  • Pronunciation: /mjuːˌnɪsɪˈpælɪti/
  • Definition: An urban local body — such as a Nagar Panchayat, Municipal Council, or Municipal Corporation — constitutionally mandated under Part IX-A to govern a city, town, or transitional area.
  • Origin: From French municipalité, from Latin municipalis, from municipium ("free city, township"), from mūnus ("duty, service") + -ceps ("taker").

Devolution

  • Pronunciation: /ˌdiːvəˈluːʃən/
  • Definition: The transfer of powers, functions, and resources from a central or state government to locally elected bodies such as Panchayats and Municipalities.
  • Origin: From Medieval Latin dēvolūtiō ("a rolling down"), from Latin dēvolvere ("to roll down"), from dē- ("down") + volvere ("to roll").

Key Terms

73rd Amendment

  • Pronunciation: /ˈsɛvənti θɜːd əˈmɛndmənt/
  • Definition: The Constitution (Seventy-third Amendment) Act, 1992, which added Part IX (Articles 243 to 243O) and the Eleventh Schedule (29 subjects) to the Constitution, granting constitutional status to Panchayati Raj institutions with mandatory provisions for a three-tier system (Gram Panchayat at village level, Panchayat Samiti at intermediate/block level, Zilla Parishad at district level), direct elections for all members at all tiers, reservations for SC/ST (in proportion to population) and women (not less than one-third of total seats and chairperson positions), fixed five-year terms with mandatory elections within six months of dissolution, and independent State Election Commissions (Article 243K) and State Finance Commissions (Article 243I).
  • Context: India's Panchayati Raj journey began with the Balwant Rai Mehta Committee (1957), which recommended a three-tier democratic decentralisation structure following the Community Development Programme (1952). Rajasthan became the first state to launch Panchayati Raj (Nagaur district, 2 October 1959). However, without constitutional backing, the system withered in most states. The 73rd Amendment, passed by Parliament in 1992 and receiving Presidential assent on 20 April 1993, came into force on 24 April 1993, implementing the Gandhian DPSP vision of village self-governance under Article 40. The Eleventh Schedule lists 29 subjects devolved to Panchayats. The Provisions of the Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act (PESA), 1996, enacted on 24 December 1996, extended Panchayati Raj to Fifth Schedule tribal areas in 10 states with modifications to protect tribal autonomy — including Gram Sabha's power to approve development plans and control over minor forest produce. States with population below 20 lakh may not have the intermediate tier (Article 243B(1)). The amendment does not apply to Nagaland, Meghalaya, Mizoram, and certain hill areas of Manipur (Article 243M).
  • UPSC Relevance: GS2 Polity — Prelims: Part IX, Articles 243-243O, 11th Schedule (29 subjects), three-tier structure (village-intermediate-district), 1/3rd women reservation at all levels including chairpersons, State Election Commission (Article 243K — appointed by Governor, removed like HC Judge), State Finance Commission (Article 243I — constituted every 5 years), came into force 24 April 1993, PESA 1996 (extends to Fifth Schedule areas), states below 20 lakh population may skip intermediate tier; Mains: the 3Fs problem (Funds, Functions, Functionaries — constitutional devolution vs actual ground-level implementation gap), Gram Sabha as an instrument of direct democracy (potential and limitations), women's political empowerment through one-third reservation (some states like Bihar, Rajasthan have increased to 50%), PESA and tribal autonomy (conflicts between Panchayati Raj and customary tribal governance), comparison with the 74th Amendment for urban local bodies.

74th Amendment

  • Pronunciation: /ˈsɛvənti fɔːθ əˈmɛndmənt/
  • Definition: The Constitution (Seventy-fourth Amendment) Act, 1992, which added Part IX-A (Articles 243P to 243ZG) and the Twelfth Schedule (18 functions) to the Constitution, granting constitutional status to three types of urban local bodies — Nagar Panchayats (transitional areas from rural to urban), Municipal Councils (smaller urban areas), and Municipal Corporations (larger urban areas) — with mandatory provisions for direct elections from territorial wards, reservations for SC/ST (in proportion to population) and women (not less than one-third), five-year terms, Wards Committees for municipalities with 3 lakh or more population (Article 243S), District Planning Committees (Article 243ZD, at least 4/5th elected), and Metropolitan Planning Committees for areas with 10 lakh or more population (Article 243ZE, at least 2/3rd elected).
  • Context: Passed by Parliament in 1992; received Presidential assent on 20 April 1993 and came into force on 1 June 1993 — six weeks after the 73rd Amendment (24 April 1993). While the 73rd Amendment revolutionised rural governance, the 74th Amendment aimed to do the same for urban India — but its implementation has lagged significantly. The Twelfth Schedule lists 18 functional areas devolved to municipalities, including urban planning, water supply, public health, sanitation, slum improvement, and urban poverty alleviation. The Governor determines the classification of urban areas into Nagar Panchayats, Municipal Councils, or Municipal Corporations based on population, density, revenue generated, and percentage employed in non-agricultural activities. The same State Election Commission (Article 243ZA) and State Finance Commission (Article 243Y) serve both Panchayats and Municipalities. The 74th Amendment does not apply to Scheduled Areas and tribal areas, or to the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council in West Bengal.
  • UPSC Relevance: GS2 Polity — Prelims: Part IX-A, Articles 243P-243ZG, 12th Schedule (18 functions — distinguish from 11th Schedule's 29 subjects for Panchayats), three types of municipalities (Nagar Panchayat, Municipal Council, Municipal Corporation), Wards Committee mandatory for 3 lakh+ population (Article 243S), DPC (Article 243ZD — 4/5th elected) vs MPC (Article 243ZE — 2/3rd elected, 10 lakh+ metro), came into force 1 June 1993; Mains: urban governance challenges and the implementation gap of the 74th Amendment (most states have not genuinely devolved the 18 functions, funds, or functionaries to ULBs), Smart Cities Mission and municipal reforms, fiscal autonomy of urban local bodies (own revenue generation vs dependence on state grants), comparison with the 73rd Amendment (rural decentralisation far more advanced than urban), the 3Fs problem in urban context.

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Sources: Constitution of India — legislative.gov.in | National Portal of India — india.gov.in | PRS Legislative Research — prsindia.org | Ministry of Panchayati Raj — panchayat.gov.in | PIB — pib.gov.in