Dr. Ram Prasath Manohar IAS

Aspire

Dr. Ram

Study Materials

General Studies - Polity

Federalism

FEDERALISM

1 Meaning

Federalism is a system where power is shared between a central government and regional units (states/provinces).
In India, power is divided among the Centre, States, and Local Governments, balancing national unity with regional diversity.

2. General Characteristics of Federalism

  1. Division of Powers
    Clear separation of subjects for the Centre and States → prevents overlap.
  2. Supremacy of the Constitution
    A written constitution guarantees powers and checks misuse.
  3. Independent Judiciary
    Courts interpret the Constitution and resolve Centre–State disputes.
  4. Bicameral Legislature
    The Upper House often represents the States (e.g., Rajya Sabha).
  5. Flexibility
    Power-sharing can evolve with changing needs (cooperative federalism)

3. Significance of Indian Federalism

  1. Accommodates Diversity
    Allows states to address linguistic, cultural, and geographic needs.
  2. Ensures Effective Governance
    Distributes workload → better policy implementation.
  3. Deepens Democracy
    Power is decentralised → people participate at multiple levels.
  4. Protects Rights
    States can tailor policies for minorities and vulnerable groups.

4. Federal Provisions in the Constitution

Article

Provision

Art. 1

India is a “Union of States”.

Art. 79

Bicameral Parliament (Rajya Sabha represents states).

Art. 131

SC resolves Centre–State disputes.

Art. 246 + 7th Schedule

Union, State, Concurrent lists (subjects division).

Art. 368

Federal provisions need ratification by half of the states.

5. Unitary Features of the Constitution

  1. States Not Indestructible
  • Art. 3: Parliament can alter state boundaries/names.
  1. Emergency Provisions
  • Art. 352: National Emergency.
  • Art. 356: President’s Rule.
  1. Strong Union Legislature
  • Art. 248: Residuary powers with Parliament.
  • Art. 249: Parliament can legislate on the State List in the national interest.
  • Art. 254: Union laws override State laws (Concurrent List).
  1. Strong Union Executive
  • Art. 256: Centre can direct states.
  1. Single Citizenship
  • Uniform rights irrespective of state.
  1. All-India Services
  • IAS, IPS, IFS → Centre’s administrative influence in States.
  1. Integrated Judiciary
  • SC → apex; ensures uniformity of law.

6.Why is India called “Quasi-Federal”?

Because India displays both federal and unitary features:

  • Federal: Dual government, divided powers, independent judiciary.
  • Unitary: Strong Centre, emergency powers, single constitution.

Ambedkar:
“Our Constitution is federal in normal times but unitary in emergencies.”

Indian federalism is a cooperative, flexible system that balances unity with diversity while giving the Centre enough strength to maintain national integrity.

wpChatIcon
wpChatIcon
Scroll to Top