This MCQ module is based on: Implementation, 3Fs, Case Studies & Exercises
Implementation, 3Fs, Case Studies & Exercises
This assessment will be based on: Implementation, 3Fs, Case Studies & Exercises
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Chapter 8 · Local Governments — Part 3: Implementation, Critique, Case Studies & Exercises
Constitutional words alone do not democratise a village. The 73rd and 74th Amendments built the architecture — but does it work in real Indian villages and towns? In Part 3 we look at the practice of local government three decades after constitutional status: the 3Fs problem (Funds, Functions, Functionaries), gender empowerment in panchayats, dalit empowerment, the criticism that local bodies have become “agencies of implementation”, and case studies from Kerala's People's Plan Campaign, Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka. We close with the chapter's nine NCERT exercises — each with a complete model answer — followed by a Summary and a Key Terms glossary.
8.13 Implementation — Three Decades of Panchayati Raj
All States have now passed legislation to implement the provisions of the 73rd and 74th Amendments. During the first ten years (1994–2004) most States held at least two rounds of elections to local bodies. States like Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and a few others had in fact held three elections in that period. Three decades after the Amendments came into force, India today has more than 600 Zilla Panchayats, about 6,000 block or intermediary Panchayats, 2,40,000 Gram Panchayats, over 100 city Corporations, 1,400 town Municipalities and over 2,000 Nagar Panchayats.
More than 32 lakh members are elected to these bodies every five years — of these, at least 13 lakh are women. Compare this with all the State Assemblies and Parliament put together — fewer than 5,000 elected representatives. With local bodies, the number of elected representatives in Indian democracy has multiplied many-fold.
8.14 The 3Fs Problem — Funds, Functions, Functionaries
The standard verdict on local government in India can be put in three words: the 3Fs? problem. The Amendments built the bodies; the implementation must transfer to them three things — Funds, Functions, and Functionaries. On all three, devolution has been partial and uneven.
8.15 Empowerment — Women, Dalits, Adivasis
8.15.1 Women in Panchayats — Reservation in Numbers
The provision for reservation of women at the Panchayats and Nagarpalikas has ensured the presence of a significant number of women in local bodies. Because this reservation also applies to the positions of Sarpanch and Adhyaksha, a large number of women elected representatives have come to occupy these positions. Today there are at least 200 women Adhyakshas in Zilla Panchayats, another 2,000 women Presidents of block or taluka panchayats, and more than 80,000 women Sarpanchas in Gram Panchayats. In urban India there are more than 30 women Mayors of Municipal Corporations, over 500 women Adhyakshas of Town Municipalities, and nearly 650 Nagar Panchayats headed by women.
Women have gained more power and confidence by asserting control over resources. Their presence has given many women a greater understanding of the working of politics. In many cases they have brought a new perspective and a greater sensitivity to discussions at local bodies. The story of Geeta Rathore from Sehore, MP — first elected from a reserved seat in 1995, then re-elected in 2000 from a non-reserved seat — is a typical example. From a homemaker she grew into a leader who renovated water tanks, built a school building, fought against domestic violence, and pushed afforestation in her village.
8.15.2 SC, ST, and OBC Empowerment
While reservations for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes are mandated by the constitutional amendment, most States have additionally provided reservation for Backward Castes. India has roughly 16.2 per cent Scheduled Castes and 8.2 per cent Scheduled Tribes. About 6.6 lakh elected members in urban and rural local bodies belong to these two communities. This has significantly altered the social profile of local bodies. They have become more representative of the social reality they actually operate within.
Sometimes this leads to tensions. The dominant social groups which controlled the village earlier do not always wish to give up their power. There is intensification of struggle for power. But tension and struggle are not always bad: whenever there is an attempt to make democracy more meaningful and give power to those who did not enjoy it earlier, some conflict is inevitable. The textbook reminds us that this is the price of democratic deepening.
8.16 Criticism — What Three Decades Have Revealed
The textbook lists, soberly, the criticisms that the 73rd and 74th Amendments have attracted. Each is real, each is partly answerable.
| Criticism | What it says | How real is it? |
|---|---|---|
| Limited autonomy | Local bodies enjoy limited autonomy to perform the functions assigned to them; many States have not transferred most of the 29 subjects. | Real — the 3Fs problem makes this the deepest difficulty. |
| Symbolic elections | Electing 32 lakh representatives becomes “somewhat symbolic” if those representatives have no real powers of choosing welfare programmes or allocation of resources. | Partly real — ceremony has expanded faster than substance. |
| State interference | State governments dissolve panchayats, delay elections, run them through bureaucrats, and refuse to give them genuine powers. | Reduced post-1992 (six-month rule) but not eliminated. |
| Parallel bodies | Self-Help Groups, NGOs and special-purpose State agencies often duplicate panchayat work and weaken its authority. | Real — especially in flagship Centre/State schemes. |
| Capacity constraints | Many elected representatives, especially in remote areas, lack training, basic literacy or familiarity with budget and administration. | Real but improving with each election cycle. |
| Urban–rural disparity | Urban local bodies in big metros are much better resourced than rural panchayats; small-town Nagar Panchayats are the weakest of all. | Real — calls for stronger State Finance Commission action. |
8.17 Three Indian Case Studies — Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka
Statistics tell only part of the story. Three Indian States have produced especially instructive experiences with the 73rd Amendment.
The textbook ends with a three-voice conversation. Read the views of Alok, Neha and Jayesh and decide which one you find most persuasive — and why.
- Alok: The Constitution guarantees equality. Reservations in local bodies for women ensure their equal share in power.
- Neha: Being in positions of power is not enough. The budget of local bodies must have a separate provision for women.
- Jayesh: I don’t like this reservations business. A local body must take care of all people and that automatically takes care of women.
8.18 Conclusion — The True Test of Democracy
The laws about local government are an important step in the direction of democratisation. But the true test of democracy is not merely in the legal provisions but in the practice of those provisions. The 73rd and 74th Amendments have created uniformity in the structures of Panchayati Raj and Nagarpalika institutions across the country. The presence of these local institutions is by itself a significant achievement and creates an atmosphere and platform for people's participation in government. Yet local governments continue to be agencies that implement the welfare and development schemes of the central and State governments — rather than original locations of policy choice. Giving more power to local government means being prepared for real decentralisation of power. Democracy ultimately means that power should be shared by the people: people in villages and urban localities must have the power to decide what policies and programmes they want to adopt.
8.19 NCERT Exercises — Full Model Answers
The chapter ends with nine textbook exercises. Each is reproduced in full and followed by a model answer. Read the question first, attempt your own answer, then click to compare.
(a) A Gram Sabha resolution insists that village people must be consulted before a steel plant is set up.
(b) The government decides that 20% of all expenditure will be done through panchayats.
(c) The government turns down a panchayat's request for school-building funds because the money is allocated to other schemes.
(d) The government divides Dungarpur village and merges parts into Jamuna and Sohana.
(e) A panchayat mobilises village youth to revive old ponds and wells.
(b) Strengthens. Routing 20 % of expenditure through panchayats addresses the ‘Funds’ pillar of the 3Fs problem. With predictable money the panchayat can actually execute the 29 subjects of the Eleventh Schedule.
(c) Weakens. When the State refuses to fund a basic need identified by the panchayat (a school) and insists on its own scheme priorities, the panchayat is reduced to an ‘agency of implementation’ — the very criticism the textbook makes in its conclusion.
(d) Weakens. The administrative redrawing of village boundaries without local consent — making Dungarpur disappear from government records — is an extreme form of State interference. It denies the basic identity on which the panchayat's existence depends.
(e) Strengthens. A panchayat mobilising village youth for water-body revival shows local knowledge in action: the panchayat takes initiative, identifies a real local problem (depleting water sources), and solves it through participation. This is exactly Mahatma Gandhi's idea of Gram Swaraj realised in practice.
2. Authority to plan and approve all village-level development works. Any State-funded work to be located in the village (school, road, drinking-water source) should require the formal approval of the Gram Sabha. This guarantees that local knowledge shapes local investment.
3. Control over the local Primary Health Centre and primary school. The teachers and health workers should be administratively answerable to the panchayat for attendance, performance and grievances — transferring the ‘Functionaries’ pillar of the 3Fs.
4. Power to levy local taxes and user-fees. The panchayat should be empowered to collect property tax, market fees and water charges. This builds local fiscal accountability — people pay, people demand, people audit.
5. Mandatory consent of Gram Sabha before land acquisition for industries. No private or government project that displaces villagers or uses common land should proceed without the Gram Sabha's consent — a logical extension of the Vengaivasal principle and of PESA, 1996.
Change in leadership profile. India today has more than 80,000 women Sarpanchas in Gram Panchayats, around 200 women Adhyakshas in Zilla Panchayats, and over 30 women Mayors of Municipal Corporations. About 6.6 lakh members of local bodies come from SC/ST communities. The profile of village leadership has shifted away from the dominant landowning castes towards a far more representative cross-section of rural society. Tensions occasionally flare because traditionally dominant groups resent the change — but, as the textbook notes, conflict is the price of making democracy meaningful for those who never enjoyed power before.
1. Constitutional status. Before 1992, local government was only an Article 40 Directive Principle — non-justiciable. After 1992, it is in Part IX (Articles 243–243-O) of the Constitution — a justiciable, protected part of the constitutional structure.
2. Uniform structure. Earlier, States had wildly different structures (Maharashtra had panchayats, others had bureaucratic rule). After 1992, there is a uniform three-tier structure across all States.
3. Direct election. Earlier many tiers used indirect elections. After 1992, all three tiers are directly elected by the people.
4. Predictable elections. Earlier, State governments routinely dissolved panchayats and postponed elections for years. After 1992, the six-month rule binds the State to fresh elections.
5. Reservation. Earlier reservation was either absent or token. After 1992, 1/3 women + SC/ST proportional + optional OBC, with cross-reservation.
6. Funds and functions. Earlier funds and powers were given at the State's discretion. After 1992, the Eleventh Schedule (29 subjects), the State Finance Commission, and an autonomous State Election Commission give predictable rules — even though devolution remains incomplete.
All three voices in the conversation capture a part of the truth. Alok is right to emphasise that reservation gives women an equal share in political power — without such reservation, dominant groups historically excluded women from elected office. The 80,000-plus women Sarpanchas in India today are evidence that presence matters: it has produced new leaders like Geeta Rathore and exposed thousands of women to budgets, public meetings and confrontations with State officials.
But Alok's view alone is insufficient. Neha is right that “presence” without “resources” can decay into tokenism. Many Sarpanches discover, on entering office, that their panchayat has neither funds (Funds), nor real subjects to decide on (Functions), nor staff who report to them (Functionaries). Gender-responsive budgeting at panchayat level — making sure budget lines actually meet women's needs — is therefore the next logical step.
Jayesh's argument that an “all-friendly” panchayat will automatically take care of women is contradicted by Indian experience: pre-1992 panchayats, with no reservation, regularly ignored women's needs. The argument is theoretically attractive but empirically false.
My opinion: continue the reservation, raise it to 50 % everywhere, and pair it with gender-responsive budgeting. (Approx. 200 words.)
(a) Fear of replacement makes representatives accountable.
(b) Dominant castes and feudal landlords dominate local bodies.
(c) Rural illiteracy is high; illiterate people cannot decide development.
(d) Effective panchayats need resources and powers to plan.
(b) Addressed. Cross-reservation (1/3 women + SC/ST proportional + optional OBC) directly attacks the historical dominance of upper castes and landowning classes. The provisions extend to Sarpanch and Adhyaksha posts, not merely ordinary members.
(c) NOT addressed. The Constitution does not require literacy as a qualification for contesting or voting in panchayat elections. (The textbook's larger point is that literacy is not the issue; the issue is whether the system is responsive to local knowledge, which is independent of literacy.)
(d) Partly addressed. The Eleventh Schedule lists 29 subjects, the State Finance Commission examines the State–local revenue split, and Article 243G empowers the State to give panchayats real authority. But actual transfer is left to State legislation, so the resources-and-powers concern is only partly resolved — this is the 3Fs problem.
(a) Lower project cost through community involvement.
(b) Greater acceptability of plans made by local people.
(c) People know their needs and should take collective decisions.
(d) Common people find it hard to contact State or national legislators.
1st — (c). The strongest rationale is intrinsic-democratic: people know their area, needs, problems and priorities, and through collective participation they should take decisions about their lives. This is the textbook's own definition of why democracy needs local government.
2nd — (b). Greater acceptability is a logical consequence of (c). Plans made by the affected community face less resistance and are easier to implement.
3rd — (d). The proximity argument matters because it makes accountability real — you meet your Sarpanch on the village street; you may never meet your MP.
4th — (a). Cost-saving is a useful but instrumental argument. Local government should not be valued only because it is cheap.
The Vengaivasal decision. The Gram Panchayat's refusal to endorse the State's land allotment rests primarily on rationale (c) and partly on (b). The Panchayat insisted that a decision affecting the village's land had to be made by the village (intrinsic-democratic argument), and that any decision imposed without local agreement would lack acceptability. Their writ petition, eventually upheld by the Madras High Court Division Bench, defended exactly this principle of constitutional autonomy.
(a) Holding Gram Panchayat elections.
(b) Decisions by villagers themselves about which policies suit their village.
(c) Power to call a meeting of the Gram Sabha.
(d) A Gram Panchayat receiving a Block Development Officer's report on a State scheme.
(b) embodies decentralisation in its strongest form: villagers decide for themselves which policies and programmes are useful. Power has actually shifted to the local level — not just procedure, but substance.
(c) represents decentralisation in form: the panchayat itself controls the timing of its highest deliberative body, the Gram Sabha, rather than waiting for an officer's permission.
Insufficient: (a) and (d).
(a) Holding elections is necessary but not sufficient. As the textbook argues, electing 32 lakh representatives becomes “somewhat symbolic” if those representatives have no real powers of choosing welfare programmes or allocation of resources. Elections alone, without the 3Fs, are decentralisation on paper only.
(d) Receiving a BDO's report is the opposite of decentralisation: the panchayat is being informed of decisions made elsewhere about a State scheme. It treats the panchayat as a passive recipient, not an active decision-maker.
(a) Suitable day — (i) day specified by BDO/Collector, (ii) day of village haat, (iii) Sunday, (iv) Naag Panchami / Sankranti?
(b) Suitable venue — (i) circular by Collector, (ii) religious place, (iii) Dalit Mohalla, (iv) Upper-caste Tola, (v) village school?
(c) The actual meeting only read out the Collector's circular about a rally and ignored out-of-school children, girls' education, school building and school timing. No women teacher attended because it was on Sunday. What do you think of these proceedings as ‘people's participation’?
(d) Imagine your class as the Gram Sabha. Suggest steps to ensure every child of the village goes to school.
(b) Suitable venue. Best is (v) the village school, a public space, available to all castes and genders, neutral on religion, and symbolically tied to the topic of the meeting (children's education). (i) An outside circular venue ignores local concerns. (ii) A religious place excludes those of other faiths. (iii) Dalit Mohalla — or (iv) Upper-caste Tola — would each privilege one section of the village and discourage the other from attending. Only the school is genuinely neutral.
(c) Quality of participation. The proceedings described are not genuine participation. The meeting only read out an outside circular — the agenda was not set by the people. The real questions (out-of-school children, girls' education, school building, school timings) were never discussed. Choice of Sunday excluded women teachers, the most knowledgeable participants for this topic. Form was observed (a meeting was held), but substance was missing — a textbook example of decentralisation existing only on paper.
(d) Imagine class as Gram Sabha — agenda and steps.
- Conduct a household survey of every child aged 6–14 to identify out-of-school children, listing them by gender and community.
- Identify the specific reasons for non-attendance — child labour, distance, gender, disability, caste discrimination — and prepare a customised plan for each group.
- Adjust school timings (and a separate evening class) so that working children can attend.
- Inspect the school building — toilets for girls, drinking water, classrooms — and demand repair using panchayat funds.
- Form a Village Education Committee under the panchayat with at least three women, one Dalit member and one Adivasi member.
- Hold a half-yearly Gram Sabha review with attendance data presented in public.
- Use State and central scheme funds (mid-day meal, scholarships) and demand additional support through the Eleventh Schedule subject 'Education'.
8.20 Chapter Summary
📚 Chapter at a Glance — Local Governments
- Why local government? Proximity, participation, accountability, local knowledge, and decentralisation make democracy real for ordinary citizens.
- Roots: Village sabhas in ancient India → Lord Ripon's Resolution of 1882 (the Magna Carta of local self-government) → Government of India Acts of 1919 and 1935 → Mahatma Gandhi's vision of Gram Swaraj.
- Constitution-making: Local government placed in Article 40 of the Directive Principles — non-justiciable. Nehru feared localism; Ambedkar feared caste-faction.
- Four key committees: Balwantrai Mehta (1957) — three-tier system; Ashok Mehta (1978); L. M. Singhvi (1986); P. K. Thungon (1989) — recommended constitutional status.
- 73rd Amendment, 1992 (in force 1993): Articles 243–243-O. Three-tier structure: Gram Panchayat · Panchayat Samiti · Zilla Parishad. Mandatory Gram Sabha. Direct elections. Five-year term, six-month rule. 1/3 women + SC/ST proportional. Eleventh Schedule — 29 subjects.
- State Election Commission (autonomous) and State Finance Commission (every 5 years) — the two pillars of local autonomy.
- 74th Amendment, 1992 (in force 1993): Articles 243-P–243-ZG. Three types: Nagar Panchayat (transitional), Municipal Council (smaller towns), Municipal Corporation (large cities). Wards Committees in cities of 3 lakh+. Twelfth Schedule — 18 subjects.
- PESA, 1996: Extension to Scheduled (Adivasi) Areas, with stronger Gram Sabha powers.
- Numbers: 2,40,000 Gram Panchayats · 6,000 block panchayats · 600+ Zilla Parishads · 100+ City Corporations · 1,400 Municipalities · 2,000+ Nagar Panchayats · 32 lakh+ elected representatives, 13 lakh+ women.
- Implementation gap — the 3Fs: Funds (rural local bodies raise just 0.24 % of revenue but spend 4 %), Functions (29 subjects mostly on paper), Functionaries (staff still answerable upwards).
- Empowerment achievement: 80,000+ women Sarpanchas, 6.6 lakh SC/ST elected members; the proxy phenomenon is declining; the social profile of leadership has changed.
- Case studies: Kerala's People's Plan Campaign 1996 (largest decentralisation of plan funds); Madhya Pradesh's three rounds of elections and Education Guarantee Scheme; Karnataka's pioneering 1983 Zilla Parishad Act.
- Verdict: The structures have been built; the substance has not yet caught up. The true test of democracy is in practice, not in legal text.
8.21 Key Terms
Competency-Based Questions — Part 3
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.