Parliamentary Committees Notes


Parliamentary Committees help in detailed scrutiny of bills, budgets, policies, and administration. They are essential for legislative efficiency and accountability.


What Are Parliamentary Committees?

  • Committees appointed/elected by Parliament.
  • Present reports to Parliament.
  • Function under Speaker (Lok Sabha) or Chairperson (Rajya Sabha).
  • Drawn from both Houses (except a few).
  • Not executive bodies – they aid and advise Parliament.



Classification of Committees

Type Sub-type Examples
Standing Committees (Permanent) Financial Committees Departmental Standing Committees Others PAC, Estimates Committee, DRSCs
Ad Hoc Committees (Temporary) Inquiry Committees Advisory Committees JPCs, Select/Joint Committees on Bills



Standing Committees – Details


A. Financial Committees
Committee Headed By Key Role
Public Accounts Committee (PAC) Lok Sabha MP (Opposition) Examines CAG reports, audits government expenditure
Estimates Committee Lok Sabha MP Suggests economy in public expenditure, examines estimates
Committee on Public Undertakings (COPU) Lok Sabha MP Examines CAG reports on PSUs



B. Departmentally Related Standing Committees (DRSCs)
Feature Description
Number 24 Committees
Composition 31 members (21 LS + 10 RS)
Tenure 1 year
Purpose Examine demands for grants, bills, and annual reports of ministries



C. Other Standing Committees
Committee Function
Committee on Petitions Examines petitions from the public
Committee on Subordinate Legislation Scrutinizes rules/regulations framed under Acts
Committee on Government Assurances Checks if assurances by ministers in Parliament are fulfilled
Committee on Welfare of SC/STs Monitors implementation of constitutional safeguards
Committee on Papers Laid on Table Ensures proper presentation of papers/documents



Ad Hoc Committees

Committee Purpose
Select Committee (LS) / Select Committee (RS) Detailed scrutiny of a particular bill
Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) Formed for major national issues, includes members from both Houses



Significance of Committees

Benefit Explanation
Efficient Workload Sharing Parliament can’t discuss every detail—committees divide the work
Expertise-Based Scrutiny Members spend time in deep analysis
Accountability Mechanism Brings ministries under check
Bipartisan Nature Reduces party politics during scrutiny



Comparison Table – PAC vs Estimates vs COPU

Feature PAC Estimates COPU
Function Examines accounts post-expenditure Suggests improvements before expenditure Focuses on PSU performance
Headed by Opposition LS MP Ruling party LS MP LS MP
CAG Reports Yes No Yes (for PSUs)
Rajya Sabha members Yes (7) No Yes (7)



Committees vs Legislature

Feature Parliament Committee
Size Large Small (15–45 members)
Functioning Open, public, political Closed, detailed, technical
Debate Style Party-dominated Usually bipartisan
Scrutiny Level General In-depth



How Committees Work

  • Chairperson appointed by Speaker/Chairman.
  • Meet in private – discussions confidential.
  • Submit reports – not binding but influential.
  • Ministries respond with Action Taken Reports (ATR).



Key UPSC Points

Topic Note
PAC is the most important Examines CAG Reports
Estimates Committee is the oldest Formed in 1950
DRSCs = Department-focused Created in 1993
JPC = Formed by Parliamentary motion Specific, temporary issues
Speaker plays major role Appoints members, chairpersons (Lok Sabha)



Quick Revision Table

Committee Type Permanent? Includes RS? Role
PAC Yes Yes Audit government expenditure
Estimates Yes No Suggest economic reforms
COPU Yes Yes Examine PSU reports
DRSC Yes Yes Departmental scrutiny
JPC No Yes Major issue-specific inquiry



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