Complete Guide to the Panchayati Raj System for SSC, Railway, State PCS & UPSC
Target Audience: SSC (CGL, CHSL), Railway (NTPC, Group D), State PCS, and UPSC Aspirants.
1. Introduction to Panchayati Raj
The Panchayati Raj System is the system of local self-government in rural India. It is based on the principle of Democratic Decentralization, which means transferring power from the central and state governments directly to the local people.
The main aim of Panchayati Raj is to ensure local participation in village development and administration. The concept was heavily supported by Mahatma Gandhi, who believed in “Gram Swaraj” (village self-rule).
- Constitutional Basis: Before it was made a law, it was mentioned in Article 40 of the Constitution under the Directive Principles of State Policy (DPSP), which directed the state to organize village panchayats.
2. Evolution of Panchayati Raj: Important Committees
The system we see today is the result of recommendations by various committees set up by the Government of India. You must remember these names and their main recommendations for exams.
A. Balwant Rai Mehta Committee (1957)
- Key Recommendation: Suggested a Three-Tier Panchayati Raj System.
- Gram Panchayat at the Village level.
- Panchayat Samiti at the Block/Tehsil level.
- Zila Parishad at the District level.
- Exam Fact: This committee is known as the “Architect of Panchayati Raj in India.”
B. Ashok Mehta Committee (1977)
- Key Recommendation: Suggested replacing the three-tier system with a Two-Tier system (Zila Parishad at the district level and Mandal Panchayat for a group of villages).
- Note: These recommendations were not implemented due to the collapse of the Janata Government.
C. G.V.K. Rao Committee (1985)
- Recommended that the Zila Parishad should be the most important body in the scheme of democratic decentralization.
D. L.M. Singhvi Committee (1986)
- Key Recommendation: Recommended giving Constitutional Status to the Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs).
3. The 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992
This is the most important section for your exams. Based on the L.M. Singhvi committee’s recommendation, the Parliament passed the 73rd Amendment to give PRIs constitutional backing.
- Enforcement Date: It came into force on 24th April 1993. (This day is celebrated as National Panchayati Raj Day).
- New Part Added: Part IX was added to the Constitution, titled “The Panchayats”.
- Articles Added: Article 243 to Article 243O.
- New Schedule Added: The 11th Schedule was added, which contains 29 functional items (subjects like agriculture, roads, drinking water) that panchayats can work on.
Key Features of the 73rd Amendment
- Gram Sabha (Article 243A): It is the foundation of the Panchayati Raj. It consists of all persons registered in the electoral rolls of a village. It is a village assembly.
- Three-Tier System (Article 243B): Village, Intermediate (Block), and District levels. (Note: States with a population of less than 20 lakhs can skip the intermediate level).
- Elections: All members of the Gram Panchayat, Panchayat Samiti, and Zila Parishad are elected directly by the people. The Chairpersons of the Intermediate and District levels are elected indirectly.
- Reservation of Seats (Article 243D): * SC/ST: Reserved in proportion to their population.
- Women: Not less than 1/3rd (33%) of the total seats are reserved for women. (Many states like Bihar, MP, and Kerala have increased this to 50%).
- Duration (Article 243E): The term is 5 years. If a Panchayat is dissolved early, fresh elections must be held within 6 months.
- Minimum Age (Article 243F): A person must be at least 21 years old to contest Panchayat elections.
- State Election Commission (Article 243K): Created to conduct free and fair elections to the Panchayats.
- State Finance Commission (Article 243I): Appointed by the Governor every 5 years to review the financial position of the Panchayats.
4. Important Facts for Quick Revision ⚡
- First State: Rajasthan was the first state to establish Panchayati Raj. It was inaugurated by PM Jawaharlal Nehru on October 2, 1959, in the Nagaur district.
- Second State: Andhra Pradesh adopted it in 1959, shortly after Rajasthan.
- Exempted Areas: The 73rd Amendment does not apply to states like Nagaland, Meghalaya, Mizoram, and certain tribal areas.
- PESA Act, 1996: The Panchayats (Extension to the Scheduled Areas) Act was passed to extend the provisions of Part IX to tribal areas (Scheduled Areas) with certain modifications.
5. Exam Relevance (How Questions are Asked)
- SSC/Railways: Mostly ask direct factual questions like “Who was the father of local self-government?” (Lord Ripon), “Which committee recommended the 3-tier system?”, or “Which schedule was added by the 73rd Amendment?”.
- State PCS: Ask about specific Articles (e.g., Match the following Articles 243D, 243K, 243I with their provisions). They also ask about the dates of implementation and state-specific exceptions.
- UPSC: Focuses on concept-based questions, like the powers of the Gram Sabha, the differences between direct and indirect elections in PRIs, or the significance of the PESA Act.
6. Common Exam Traps & Confusing Points 🚩
- Trap 1: Voting Age vs. Contesting Age. * Reality: The minimum age to vote in a Panchayat election is 18 years, but the minimum age to contest (become a Sarpanch/member) is 21 years (not 25 years like Lok Sabha/Vidhan Sabha).
- Trap 2: Direct vs. Indirect Elections. * Reality: Members at ALL three levels are elected directly. However, the Chairperson at the Block and District levels is elected indirectly from amongst the elected members. The election of the Village Chairperson (Sarpanch) is decided by the State Legislature (usually direct).
- Trap 3: Which Schedule? * Reality: 11th Schedule = Panchayats (29 subjects). 12th Schedule = Municipalities (18 subjects). Do not mix them up!
7. Mock MCQs for Practice
Q1. Which of the following committees recommended a two-tier Panchayati Raj system?
A) Balwant Rai Mehta Committee
B) Ashok Mehta Committee
C) L.M. Singhvi Committee
D) G.V.K. Rao Committee
Answer: B
Explanation: The Ashok Mehta Committee (1977) recommended a two-tier system consisting of a Zila Parishad at the district level and a Mandal Panchayat below it.
Q2. The 11th Schedule of the Indian Constitution contains how many functional items for the Panchayats?
A) 18
B) 22
C) 29
D) 32
Answer: C
Explanation: The 11th Schedule contains 29 subjects over which Panchayats have jurisdiction. The 12th Schedule has 18 subjects for Municipalities.
Q3. What is the minimum age prescribed to contest in Panchayat elections?
A) 18 years
B) 21 years
C) 25 years
D) 30 years
Answer: B
Explanation: According to Article 243F, the minimum age to contest in a Panchayat election is 21 years.
Q4. Who constitutes the State Finance Commission to review the financial position of the Panchayats?
A) Chief Minister
B) President of India
C) Governor of the State
D) Finance Minister of the State
Answer: C
Explanation: Under Article 243I, the Governor of a state constitutes a State Finance Commission every five years.
Q5. The Panchayati Raj system was first adopted by which state?
A) Andhra Pradesh
B) Bihar
C) Gujarat
D) Rajasthan
Answer: D
Explanation: Rajasthan was the first state to adopt the system. It was inaugurated in Nagaur district on October 2, 1959.
8. Short Revision Summary 📝
- Concept: Democratic Decentralization.
- DPSP Article: Article 40.
- First State: Rajasthan (Nagaur, 1959).
- Main Committee: Balwant Rai Mehta (3-tier system).
- Amendment: 73rd CAA, 1992 (Effective: April 24, 1993).
- Additions: Part IX, Articles 243 to 243O, 11th Schedule (29 Subjects).
- Key Rules: 5-year term, 21 years min. age, 33% women’s reservation, State Election Commission conducts polls.