This MCQ module is based on: Bureaucracy, UPSC, All-India Services & Exercises
Bureaucracy, UPSC, All-India Services & Exercises
This assessment will be based on: Bureaucracy, UPSC, All-India Services & Exercises
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Chapter 4 · Executive — Part 3: Permanent Executive (Bureaucracy) & Exercises
Behind every minister stands an army of trained officials who keep schools running, trains moving and pensions paid. This is the permanent executive — the bureaucracy. We will examine how India recruits its civil servants through the UPSC, the architecture of the All India, Central and State services, the constitutional norms of neutrality and accountability, the chronic problems of red tape and political interference, and the reforms now under way. The part closes with full model answers to every NCERT exercise plus a Summary and Key Terms.
4.13 Permanent Executive: Why Bureaucracy?
Who actually implements the decisions of ministers? When the government promises to build a hospital, deliver food rations or organise the census, who follows through long after the press conference is over? The answer is the bureaucracy? — a large organisation of trained officials, also called the civil service to distinguish it from the military. The Executive organ of government therefore includes three layers: the Prime Minister, the ministers, and this large bureaucracy.
Trained and skilled officers work as permanent employees of the government and are entrusted with two tasks: assisting ministers in formulating policies, and implementing those policies on the ground. The political executive comes and goes with elections; the permanent executive stays on, providing continuity and institutional memory.
4.14 Bureaucracy in a Democracy — Three Tensions
In a democracy, elected representatives and ministers are in charge of government; administration is under their control and supervision. In a parliamentary system the legislature also exercises control over administration. The result is a layered chain of responsibility:
Three constitutional norms shape this chain. First, administrative officers cannot act in violation of policies adopted by the legislature. Second, ministers retain political control over the administration. Third — and this is the most distinctive feature of the Indian model — the bureaucracy is expected to be politically neutral. Civil servants do not take political positions on policy matters. When a party loses an election and a new government decides to reverse policies, the same civil service must faithfully and efficiently help draft and implement the new policy.
4.15 The UPSC and the Constitution’s Recruitment Design
The Constitution makers were keenly aware of the importance of a non-partisan and professional bureaucracy. They wanted civil servants to be selected impartially, on the basis of merit. The Constitution therefore creates the Union Public Service Commission? (UPSC) to conduct the recruitment of civil servants for the Government of India. Similar Public Service Commissions are provided for the States.
To shield the recruitment body from political pressure:
- Members of the Public Service Commissions are appointed for a fixed term.
- Their removal or suspension is subject to a thorough enquiry made by a judge of the Supreme Court.
4.15.1 Merit Plus Representation
Merit alone is not enough in a deeply unequal society. The Constitution therefore ensures that all sections of society — including the weaker sections — have an opportunity to be part of the public bureaucracy. Reservation in jobs has been provided for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes; subsequent reforms have added reservations for women, Other Backward Classes (OBC) and Economically Weaker Sections (EWS). The aim is twofold: a more representative bureaucracy, and a guarantee that social inequalities will not block the path of qualified candidates.
4.16 Architecture of the Indian Bureaucracy
The Indian bureaucracy today is an enormously complex system. It consists of:
- All-India Services — recruited and trained centrally, but allotted to particular States;
- Central Services — staffing Union government offices in Delhi or elsewhere;
- State Services — recruited and posted within a single State;
- Employees of local governments (panchayats, municipalities);
- Technical and managerial staff running public sector undertakings.
4.16.1 The All India Services — IAS, IPS, IFS
Persons selected by the UPSC for the Indian Administrative Service? (IAS) and the Indian Police Service? (IPS) form the backbone of higher-level bureaucracy in the States. The Indian Forest Service? (IFS) is the third all-India service. Note the distinct paths:
- The collector of a district — the most important officer at the district level — is normally an IAS officer.
- The collector is governed by service conditions laid down by the central government.
- An IAS or IPS officer is assigned to a particular State, where he or she works under the supervision of the State government.
- However, IAS/IPS officers are appointed by the central government; they can return to central service; and only the central government can take disciplinary action against them.
This means the key administrative officers of the States are under the supervision and control of the central government. Apart from the IAS and IPS, the administration of a State is also looked after by officers appointed through the State Public Service Commissions. As the chapter on federalism shows, this layered design strengthens the Union’s control over State administration.
| Service | Recruited by | Place of work | Disciplinary authority |
|---|---|---|---|
| All-India Services (IAS, IPS, IFS) | UPSC | Allotted to a particular State; can also be deputed to centre | Central government |
| Central Services (incl. Indian Foreign Service, Revenue, Audit) | UPSC | Central govt offices at the national capital or elsewhere; missions abroad for IFS | Central government |
| State Civil Services | State Public Service Commission | Within the State of recruitment | State government |
4.17 Issues with Bureaucracy
The bureaucracy is the instrument through which the welfare policies of government must reach the people. But often it is so powerful that ordinary people are afraid of approaching a government officer. Citizens routinely complain that the bureaucracy is insensitive to their demands and expectations. Three structural problems deserve attention.
Only when the democratically elected government effectively controls the bureaucracy can these problems be tackled. But too much political interference turns the bureaucracy into an instrument in the hands of politicians. Although the Constitution has created independent machinery for recruitment, many feel there are no real protections for civil servants from political interference in the performance of their duties, and not enough provisions to ensure accountability of the bureaucracy to the citizen.
4.18 Conclusion — The Modern Executive
The modern executive is a very powerful institution of government. It enjoys greater powers compared to the other organs of government — legislature and judiciary. This concentration of power is precisely what generates the need for democratic control over the executive. The makers of our Constitution thought, with foresight, that the executive must be put firmly under regular supervision and control. Thus, a parliamentary executive was chosen. Periodic elections, constitutional limits on the exercise of powers, and an active democratic politics together have ensured that the executive organ cannot become unresponsive.
Read each news item and identify the most likely ministry — and whether it is Central or State.
- An official release said that in 2004–05 the Tamil Nadu Textbooks Corporation would release new versions for standards VII, X and XI.
- A new railway loop line bypassing the crowded Tiruvallur–Chennai section to help iron-ore exporters; the new line, likely about 80 km long, will branch off at Puttur and reach Athipattu near the port.
- The three-member sub-divisional committee formed to verify suicides by farmers in Ramayampet mandal has found that the two farmers had economic problems due to crop failure.
Re-read Article 74(1):
“There shall be a Council of Ministers with the Prime Minister at the head to aid and advise the President who shall in the exercise of his functions, act in accordance with such advice.”
- Identify the word that makes the advice binding.
- Why was the second proviso (about reconsideration) added by the 44th Amendment?
- What would happen if “shall” were replaced by “may”?
4.19 NCERT Exercises — Full Model Answers
Amit: Looking at the constitutional provisions, it seems that the President is only a rubber stamp.
Shama: The President appoints the Prime Minister. So, he must have the powers to remove the Prime Minister as well.
Rajesh: We don’t need a President. After the election, the Parliament can meet and elect a leader to be the Prime Minister.
| Description | Service |
|---|---|
| (i) Works within the particular State in which recruited | (a) Indian Foreign Service |
| (ii) Works in any central government office located either at the national capital or elsewhere in the country | (b) State Civil Services |
| (iii) Works in a particular State to which allotted; can also be sent on deputation to the centre | (c) All India Services |
| (iv) Works in Indian missions abroad | (d) Central Services |
(i) → (b) State Civil Services — recruited and posted within one State.
(ii) → (d) Central Services — staff Union government offices in Delhi or other cities.
(iii) → (c) All India Services — IAS/IPS/IFS officers are allotted to a State but appointed by the centre and can be deputed to the Union government.
(iv) → (a) Indian Foreign Service — works in Indian missions, embassies and high commissions abroad.
- An official release said that in 2004–05 the Tamil Nadu Textbooks Corporation would release new versions for standards VII, X and XI.
- A new railway loop line bypassing the crowded Tiruvallur–Chennai section to help iron-ore exporters. The new line, likely about 80 km long, will branch off at Puttur and reach Athipattu near the port.
- The three-member sub-divisional committee formed to verify suicide by farmers in Ramayampet mandal has found that the two farmers who committed suicide this month have had economic problems due to failure of crops.
(a) Most likely the Tamil Nadu Department of School Education. This is a State ministry — school education and the Tamil Nadu Textbooks Corporation are State subjects, and the news refers specifically to a Tamil Nadu body.
(b) The Ministry of Railways, Government of India — a Central ministry. Railways is a Union list subject, so even when the line is built in a State, the Central government plans, builds and operates it.
(c) Likely the Department of Revenue / Agriculture of the State government (Ramayampet is now in Telangana). Verifying farmer suicides involves the local revenue administration and State agricultural welfare schemes; agriculture and land are largely State subjects, with Union support.
Alok: Prime Minister is like a king, he decides everything in our country.
Shekhar: Prime Minister is only “first among equals”, he does not have any special powers. All ministers and the PM have similar powers.
Bobby: Prime Minister has to consider the expectations of the party members and other supporters of the government. But after all, the Prime Minister has a greater say in policy making and in choosing the ministers.
- Do you think this will make administration more people-friendly?
- Do you think this will make administration more efficient?
- Does democracy mean full control of elected representatives over the administration?
(a) People-friendly? Not necessarily. Autonomous agencies free of political interference may protect officers from arbitrary transfers and bribery pressures. However, autonomy also reduces the accountability of officers to elected representatives who speak for the citizen. Without the minister being answerable in Parliament, an aggrieved citizen has fewer routes for redress. So full autonomy can make the administration less people-friendly unless paired with strong citizen-grievance mechanisms (RTI, ombudsmen, citizens’ charters).
(b) More efficient? Possibly, in technical and regulatory areas (e.g., telecom regulator, RBI, SEBI) where independence from political cycles helps long-term decision-making. But in core administration — policing, district administration, welfare delivery — loss of political direction can leave officers without policy guidance, slowing rather than speeding work.
(c) Does democracy mean full control of elected representatives over administration? Yes, but with two qualifications. (i) Control means political direction, not micro-interference; civil servants must keep professional independence within the law. (ii) Control runs through ministers, who are answerable to Parliament, which is answerable to the people. So democratic control is layered, not direct, and is balanced by constitutional guarantees of merit-based recruitment and protection against arbitrary dismissal.
Elected administrators — collectors, police chiefs, even tax officers — would, on the surface, deepen democracy. Direct elections promise stronger answerability to citizens, easier removal of corrupt officials, and a sharper local mandate. The American practice of electing district attorneys and sheriffs offers a real-world precedent.
Yet the proposal carries large costs. Administration requires technical skill — designing tax systems, supervising forensic policing, drafting welfare schemes — not just popularity. Election cycles distort professional decisions; an officer up for re-election may avoid hard but necessary measures. Parties would inject their identities into every field office, eroding the constitutional norm of political neutrality. India&rsquo>s federal structure is also affected: a State government’s policies could be sabotaged by a hostile, separately elected district administration. The framers, alert to these dangers, deliberately gave us an appointed bureaucracy recruited through the UPSC, with reservations for inclusion and judicial protection against arbitrary removal.
A wiser path is to strengthen democratic accountability of the existing administration — through Right to Information, social audits, citizens’ charters, ombudsmen, panchayat-level scrutiny and a free press — rather than to convert every officer into a politician. The ballot is a powerful instrument; the writ of administration is an instrument of a different kind, and the two must work in harness, not as substitutes.
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.
📚 Chapter 4 — Summary
- Government has three organs — legislature, executive, judiciary — that must coordinate and balance one another.
- The executive implements laws and runs administration. It has a political wing (PM, ministers) and a permanent wing (civil service).
- Three global types: presidential (USA), parliamentary (India, UK, Japan, Germany), semi-presidential (France, Russia, Sri Lanka). Presence of a President alone does not mark a system as presidential.
- India chose the parliamentary form for accountability and to avoid personality cult; experience under the 1919 and 1935 Acts made the model familiar.
- The President (Article 52) is indirectly elected by an Electoral College of MPs and elected MLAs for five years (Article 56). Removal is by impeachment for violation of the Constitution (Article 61) — never used.
- Powers cover executive, legislative, judicial, emergency and discretionary spheres. Article 74(1) makes ministerial advice binding (with one round of reconsideration after the 44th Amendment).
- Discretion arises in three settings: returning advice, the pocket veto, and choosing a PM in a hung house. Coalitional politics since 1989 has expanded discretion.
- The Vice President (Article 63) is elected by both Houses of Parliament, chairs the Rajya Sabha, and may act as President during a vacancy until a new President is elected.
- The Prime Minister is the real executive — the linchpin between Council, President and Parliament. The Council of Ministers cannot exist without the PM.
- The Council is collectively responsible to the Lok Sabha; ministers also bear individual responsibility for their portfolios. The 91st Amendment caps Council size at 15% of Lok Sabha strength.
- The bureaucracy — All India Services, Central Services, State Services — is recruited through the UPSC and parallel SPSCs, with reservations for SC/ST/OBC/Women/EWS.
- IAS, IPS, IFS officers are allotted to States but appointed and disciplined by the centre — a structural strengthener of Union supervision.
- The norms of neutrality and accountability coexist with persistent problems of red tape, corruption and political interference. Right to Information represents the major recent corrective.