Times of India (92)

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Masters of their destiny: How states can engineer far-reaching reforms without central legislative action

Read full article Abstract: In a recent article, i had argued that the new government could reform laws relating to subjects on the Concurrent List of the Constitution by empowering states to amend them. I had suggested that inserting — in each law to be reformed — a clause that empowers states to amend it could do the trick. A potential problem with this approach, however, is that the insertion of such a clause in the central law itself requires legislative action. And in so far as the new government lacks majority in the Rajya Sabha, this amendment becomes an uphill task. Two friends — one a senior policymaker and the other a policy analyst with three decades of experience in regulation — have suggested two alternative solutions to this problem. First, the Constitution empowers the president of India to permit states to amend central laws relating to subjects on the Concurrent List. Armed with such permission, state legislatures can pass amendments and turn them into laws applicable to their respective states. Presidential assent is an executive decision and does not require legislative action. The…

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Towards economic freedom

Read full article Abstract: Arguably, parliamentary polls of 1977 and this year are two of the most important elections in Indian history. The former was a referendum on political freedom and the later on economic freedom. Ironically the Congress party, which laid the foundation of political freedom through a democratic Constitution in 1950 and of economic freedom through trade and investment liberalisation in 1991, ended up on the wrong side of the fence in both elections.

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UPA hurts India as it exits

Read full article Abstract: Legend has it that 2,500 years ago to the year, when Darius the Great invaded Scythia, retreating Scythians destroyed food supplies and poisoned the wells. Starved and dehydrated, a large number of soldiers in Darius's army died and he eventually conceded defeat. The only plausible interpretation of the actions by Congress in the last several months is that it has adopted this scorched earth strategy as it retreats from government. Its recent actions seem to serve one principal purpose: make the restoration of growth and the task of rebuilding the nation as difficult as possible for the successor government.

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