WELCOME TO FRENDZ4M
Sat, Feb 22, 2025, 12:48:24 PM

Current System Time:

Get updatesShare this pageSearch
Telegram | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram Share on Facebook | Tweet Us | WhatsApp | Telegram
 

Forum Main>>General Talk>>News>>

Two top economists talk to NDTV on why India needs '1 nation, 1 survey'

Page: 1   
Mr.Love ™User is offline now
PM [1]
Rank : Helper
Status : Super Owner

#1

Finance Commission Chairman Arvind Panagariya in an affirmation to the idea of 'One Nation, One Election' explained that frequent elections do not give enough opportunities to the government to carry out reforms.


NK Singh, the former Chairman of the Finance Commission, also supported 'One Nation, One Election' as a key area of economic reforms, citing wasteful expenditure and distractions due to "elections being held every second day".


Both economists spoke to News Agency Editor-in-Chief Sanjay Pugalia in an exclusive interview.


Mr Panagariya, who served as the first Vice Chairman of the government think tank NITI Aayog from January 2015 to August 2017, told News Agency, "One Nation, One Election constitutes a very, very far reaching important reform, far beyond the political matrix, which has huge implications for economic growth and development."


"If I may add, on this important issue that Mr Singh has mentioned, One Nation, One Election. When elections happen repeatedly, it also impacts the government's ability to introduce reforms," Mr Panagariya said.


"The current situation actually provides a good example. In May 2024 we had the parliamentary elections and since then we have been having one or another election every six months," he told News Agency.


"That obviously denies the government the ability to bring major reforms because they become the bone of contention during elections," Mr Panagariya added.


A Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) reviewing the One Nation, One Election bill has 27 members from Lok Sabha and 12 from Rajya Sabha.


The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill was introduced in the winter session of the Lok Sabha. The bill would pave the way for simultaneous elections to the Lok Sabha, state assemblies, and local bodies with minimum gap.


But its implementation will need a series of amendments to the Constitution that can only be done with two-thirds majority in parliament. Some provisions may have to be ratified by governments in states and Union Territories.


The Opposition has voiced objections, with most parties contending that the bill would subvert the Constitution - an allegation the government has repeatedly refuted. The Opposition parties have claimed the Centre is robbing the states of the right to self-determination, besides violating the Constitution.

Reply
You are not logged in, please

Login

Page: 1   

Jump To Page:

Keywords:economists, nation, survey, finance, commission, chairman, arvind, panagariya, affirmation, election, explained, frequent, elections, enough, opportunities,
Related threads:

Explained: What Majorana 1 of Microsoft means for quantum computing


"I can't take our country": Trudeau hits Trump while Canada hits us in hockey


"Delayed": Elon Musk vs Astronaut about "Lie" about Sunita Williams


"He wants to be fair": Trump promises to impose reciprocal tariffs on India


Bureaucrat, his family found dead in Kerala's house, the suicide suspected police officers


"I'm not a curator": Rohit's sharp response in the place in front of India vs Pak shock


Professional of the Secretary Company, Results of the Executive Exam to leave on this date


"Creation of Anti-Delhi Narrative": The Minister of Education is returned to MK Stalin


"Increase interference concerns in internal matters": India in USAID


"There is no matter of imposing language but ...": Minister of Education in Hindi Row


TERMS & CONDITIONS | DMCA POLICY | PRIVACY POLICY
Home | Top | Official Blog | Tools | Contact | Sitemap | Feed
Page generated in 0.21 microseconds
FRENDZ4M © 2025