IBPS CLERK MAINS 2021|ENGLISH| Reading Comprehension
Direction
(1-5): Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions given.
At first sight, it
looks as though panchayati raj, the lower layer of federalism in our polity, is
as firmly entrenched in our system as is the older and higher layer comprising
the Union Government and the States. Like the democratic institutions at the
higher level, those at the panchayati level, the panchayati raj institutions
(PRIs), are written into and protected by the Constitution. All the essential
features, which distinguish a unitary system from a federal one, are as much
enshrined at the lower as at the upper level of our federal system. But look
closely and you will discover a fatal flaw. The letter of the Constitution as
well as the spirit of the present polity has exposed the intra-State level of
our federal system to a dilemma of which the inter-State and Union-State layers
are free. The flaw has many causes. But all of them are rooted in an historical
anomaly, that while the dynamics of federalism and democracy have given added
strength to the rights given to the States in the Constitution, they have
worked against the rights of Panchayats.
At both levels of
our federal system there is the same tussle between those who have certain
rights and those who try to encroach upon them if they believe they can. Thus
the Union Government was able to encroach upon certain rights given to the
States by the Constitution. It got away with that because the single dominant
party system, which characterised Centre-State relations for close upon two
decades, gave the party in power at the Union level many extra-constitutional
political levers. Second, the Supreme Court had not yet begun to extend the
limits of its power. But all that has changed in recent times. The spurt given
to a multi-party democracy by the overthrow of the Emergency in 1977 became a
long term trend later on because of the ways in which a vigorously democratic
multi-party system works in a political society which is as assertively
pluralistic as Indian society is. It gives political clout to all the various
segments which constitute that society. Secondly, because of the linguistic
reorganisation of States in the 1950s, many of the most assertive segments have
found their most assertive expression as States. Thirdly, with single-party
dominance becoming a thing of the past at the Union level, governments can be
formed at that level only by multi-party coalitions in which State-level
parties are major players. This has made it impossible for the Union Government
to do much about anything unless it also carries a sufficient number of
State-level parties with it. Indian federalism is now more real than it used to
be, but an unfortunate side-effect is that India's panchayati raj system,
inaugurated with such fanfare in the early 1980s, and has become less real.
By the time the PRIs
came on the scene, most of the political space in our federal system had been
occupied by the Centre in the first 30 years of Independence, and most of what
was still left after that was occupied by the States in the next 20. PRIs might
have hoped to wrest some space from their immediate neighbour, the States, just
as the States had wrested some from the Centre. But having at last managed to
checkmate the Centre's encroachments on their rights, the States were not about
to allow the PRIs to do some encroaching of their own.
By the 1980s and
early 1990s, the only national party left, the Congress, had gone deeper into a
siege mentality. Finding itself surrounded by State-level parties, it had built
walls against them instead of winning them over. Next, the States retaliated by
blocking Congress proposals for panchayati raj in Parliament, suspecting that
the Centre would try to use Panchayats to bypass State Governments. The
suspicion fed on the fact that the powers proposed by the Congress for
Panchayats were very similar to many of the more lucrative powers of State
Governments. State-level leaders also feared, perhaps, that if Panchayat-level
leaders captured some of the larger PRIs, such as district-level Panchayats,
they would exert pressure on State-level leaders through intra-State
multi-party federalism.
It soon became
obvious to Congress leaders that there was no way the panchayati raj amendments
they wanted to write into the Constitution would pass muster unless State-level
parties were given their pound of flesh. The amendments were allowed only after
it was agreed that the powers of Panchayats could be listed in the
Constitution. Illustratively, they would be defined and endowed on PRIs by the
State Legislature acting at its discretion.
This left the door
wide open for the States to exert the power of the new political fact that
while the Union and State Governments could afford to ignore Panchayats as long
as the MLAs were happy, the Union Government had to be sensitive to the demands
of State-level parties. This has given State level actors strong beachheads on
the shores of both inter-State and intra-State federalism. By using various
administrative devices and non-elected parallel structures, State Governments
have subordinated their PRIs to the State administration and given the upper
hand to State Government officials against the elected heads of PRIs.
Panchayats have become local agencies for implementing schemes drawn up in distant
State capitals. And their own volition has been further circumscribed by a
plethora of “Centrally-sponsored schemes”. These are drawn up by even more
distant Central authorities but at the same time tie up local staff and
resources on pain of the schemes being switched off in the absence of matching
local contribution. The "foreign aid" syndrome can be clearly seen at
work behind this kind of "grass roots development".
1.
The sentence in the last paragraph, “And their own volition has been further circumscribed...”
refers to:
a. The process by
which the prescribed Central schemes are reformulated by local elected
leaders.
b. The increasing
demands made on elected local leaders to match central grants with
local contributions.
c. The empowering of the panchayat system as implementers of schemes from State
capitals.
d. The weakening of the local institutions' ability to plan according to their
needs.
2. The central theme of the
passage can be best summarized as
a. The Union
government and State-level parties are engaged in a struggle for the protection
of their respective rights.
b. Panchayati raj is
firmly entrenched at the lower level of our federal system of governance.
c. A truly federal
polity has not developed since PRIs have not been allowed the necessary
political space.
d. Our grassroots development at the panchayat level is now driven by the
"foreign aid" syndrome.
3.
Which of the following most closely describes the 'fatal flaw' that the passage
refers to?
a. The ways in which
the democratic multiparty system works in an assertively pluralistic society
like India's are flawed.
b. The mechanisms that our federal system uses at the Union government level to
deal with
States are imperfect.
c. The instruments that have ensured federalism at one level, have been used to
achieve the opposite at another.
d. The Indian Constitution and the spirit of the Indian polity are fatally
flawed.
4.
Which of the following best captures the current state of Indian federalism as
described in the passage?
a. The Supreme Court
has not begun to extend the limits of its power.
b. The multi-party system has replaced the single party system.
c. The Union, state and panchayati raj levels have become real.
d. There is real distribution of power between the Union and State level
parties.
5. What is the "dilemma" at the intra-State level mentioned in the first paragraph of the passage?
a. Should the state
governments wrest more space from the Union, before considering the
panchayati system?
b. Should rights similar to those that the States managed to get be extended to
panchayats as well?
c. Should the single party system which has withered away be brought back at
the level of
the States?
d. Should the States get "their pound of flesh" before allowing the
Union government to
pass any more laws?
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