There is no case for scrapping MPLADS funds
Here is the UPSC study note:
MPLADS — Members of Parliament Local Area Development Scheme
Study Note: "There is no case for scrapping MPLADS funds"
1. At a Glance
- MPLADS is a Central Sector Scheme fully funded by the Government of India, enabling MPs to recommend durable community assets (roads, schools, water facilities) in their constituencies. [S1]
- Each MP is entitled to ₹5 crore per annum; with 790 MPs (543 Lok Sabha + 245 Rajya Sabha + 2 nominated), total annual outlay is approximately ₹4,000 crore. [S1][S3]
- The scheme sits at the intersection of parliamentary democracy, grassroots development, and fiscal federalism — making it a recurring UPSC topic across Prelims and Mains (GS-II).
- Controversy over cross-state allocation and misuse allegations (2026) has renewed the debate on whether the scheme should be retained or scrapped.
2. Why in the News
- January–February 2026: The BJP alleged that three Congress MPs from Rajasthan — Brijendra Singh Ola (Jhunjhunu), Rahul Kaswan (Churu), and Sanjana Jatav (Bharatpur) — allocated MPLADS funds (₹25 lakh, ₹50 lakh, and ₹45 lakh respectively) to Kaithal district of Haryana, outside their Rajasthan constituencies. [S5]
- BJP claimed allocations were politically motivated, as Kaithal is the Assembly constituency of Aditya Surjewala, son of Congress leader and Rajya Sabha MP Randeep Singh Surjewala. [S5]
- Congress MPs defended the move citing MPLADS Guidelines 2023, which permit MPs to recommend eligible works up to ₹50 lakh outside their constituency. [S5]
- This triggered a broader editorial debate on the scheme's utility vs. vulnerabilities.
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| December 1993 | MPLADS launched under P.V. Narasimha Rao government |
| 1994 | Rajya Sabha MPs included; allocated ₹1 crore/annum initially |
| 2011–12 | Annual entitlement raised to ₹5 crore per MP (unchanged since) [S1] |
| April 2020 | Cabinet suspends MPLADS for 2020-21 and 2021-22; ₹6,320 crore diverted to Consolidated Fund of India for COVID-19 management [S2][S4] |
| October 2021 | Cabinet restores MPLADS; funds released at ₹2 crore/MP for remaining FY 2021-22, then ₹5 crore/annum up to FY 2025-26 [S2] |
| April 2023 | Revised MPLADS Guidelines 2023 issued by MoSPI; e-SAKSHI portal launched; annual fund authorized in single instalment (replacing two instalments of ₹2.5 crore) [S1][S3] |
| 2023 onwards | Cross-constituency (up to ₹50 lakh) and cross-state provisions formalised in guidelines [S5] |
4. Core Static Facts
- Full name: Members of Parliament Local Area Development Scheme
- Launch date: December 1993
- Type: Central Sector Scheme (100% GoI funded; no state share)
- Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI)
- District-level nodal authority: District Collector / District Authority (sanctions and implements works)
- Entitlement: ₹5 crore per MP per annum [S1]
- Fund flow (post-2023): Single instalment via e-SAKSHI portal at start of financial year [S1]
- Total annual outlay: ~₹4,000 crore [S1]
- Eligible works: Durable community assets — roads, school/college buildings, drinking water facilities, public health infrastructure, etc.
- Cross-constituency provision: MPs can recommend works up to ₹50 lakh outside their constituency (within limits set by Guidelines 2023) [S5]
- Lok Sabha MPs: Recommend works in their parliamentary constituency
- Rajya Sabha MPs: Recommend works anywhere in the state from which they are elected
- Nominated MPs: Recommend works anywhere in India
- Funds lapse: Unspent funds lapse at end of financial year (non-lapsable provisions apply in specific conditions)
- Audit: District-level inspection; periodic review mandated under Guidelines 2023 [S1]
- COVID diversion: ₹6,320 crore (2020-21 + 2021-22) transferred to Ministry of Finance [S2][S4]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Generates local employment through small infrastructure projects; acts as a demand stimulus at the micro-level.
- ₹4,000 crore annual outlay is modest relative to Union Budget (~₹50 lakh crore) but has high last-mile multiplier effect when well-spent.
- Suspension in 2020-22 released ₹6,320 crore for COVID management — demonstrating the scheme's flexibility as a fiscal buffer. [S2][S4]
Social
- Creates community assets (schools, anganwadis, crematoriums, community halls) that disproportionately benefit rural and semi-urban populations.
- Scheme guidelines prioritise works for SC/ST populations and areas with special development needs.
- Cross-state allocations (up to ₹50 lakh) can serve migrant communities or constituencies with historical ties beyond state boundaries.
Legal / Constitutional
- MPLADS has no statutory basis — it is an executive scheme (not backed by a specific Act of Parliament); implemented through Ministry guidelines.
- Supreme Court upheld the scheme in Bhim Singh v. Union of India (2010), rejecting the argument that it violates separation of powers or parliamentary norms.
- District Collector acts as the sanctioning and implementing authority — MPs only recommend, not execute; this insulates scheme from direct executive power by legislators.
Ethical / Governance
- Core criticism: MPs are legislators, not executives; MPLADS blurs the line between legislation and administration.
- Counter: District authority retains execution; MP role is advisory, not controlling.
- Misuse risk: Political targeting of allocations (as alleged in Kaithal case, 2026) remains a structural vulnerability. [S5]
- Revised Guidelines 2023 introduced stricter timelines, inspections, documentation, and auditing to improve accountability. [S1]
Administrative
- e-SAKSHI portal (April 2023) digitised fund flow, improving transparency and speed of disbursement. [S1][S3]
- States must provide matching manpower for implementation; under-utilisation is common in remote/conflict-affected constituencies.
- Uneven utilisation across MPs — some fully exhaust ₹5 crore, others leave significant unspent balances — is a persistent criticism but not grounds for abolition per se.
Historical
- Predecessor concept: MP constituency funds existed informally before 1993; MPLADS formalised and centralised the mechanism.
- Similar schemes in state legislatures (MLALAD) follow the MPLADS model, indicating broad acceptance of the concept.
- COVID-19 (2020-22) was the only suspension in the scheme's 30+ year history. [S2][S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- April 2023: Revised MPLADS Guidelines 2023 issued; e-SAKSHI portal made the single nodal platform for fund authorisation and tracking. [S1]
- 2023-24 onwards: Funds disbursed in single annual instalment of ₹5 crore (replacing two instalments of ₹2.5 crore). [S1]
- January 2026: BJP alleges misuse by three Rajasthan Congress MPs (Ola, Kaswan, Jatav) for allocating funds to Kaithal, Haryana. [S5]
- February 4, 2026: The Hindu editorial argues "There is no case for scrapping MPLADS funds" — defending the scheme's utility while acknowledging need for tighter enforcement. [S5]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- MPLADS was launched in December 1993 under the P.V. Narasimha Rao government.
- Implementing ministry: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) — not Ministry of Finance or Rural Development.
- Annual entitlement per MP: ₹5 crore (fixed since 2011-12).
- Total annual scheme outlay: approximately ₹4,000 crore.
- MPLADS is a Central Sector Scheme — 100% centrally funded; no state co-funding.
- District Collector is the sanctioning and implementing authority; MPs only recommend works.
- Cabinet approved non-operation of MPLADS for two years — 2020-21 and 2021-22 — to fund COVID-19 response. [S2]
- COVID diversion quantum: ₹6,320 crore (₹3,950 crore + ₹2,370 crore). [S2]
- MPLADS was restored in October 2021 with ₹2 crore/MP for remaining FY 2021-22. [S2]
- Rajya Sabha MPs can recommend works anywhere in the state from which they are elected; Nominated MPs can recommend works anywhere in India.
- Under Guidelines 2023, an MP can recommend works up to ₹50 lakh outside their constituency. [S5]
- e-SAKSHI portal launched April 2023 for digitised single-instalment fund flow. [S1]
- Supreme Court upheld MPLADS constitutionality in Bhim Singh v. Union of India (2010).
- MPLADS has no dedicated Act of Parliament — it is governed entirely by executive guidelines of MoSPI.
- Eligible works focus on durable community assets — roads, schools, drinking water, public health infrastructure.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice)
Syllabus Headings: - Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors - Parliament and State Legislatures — Structure, Functioning, Powers - Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "MPLADS blurs the constitutional separation between the legislature and the executive. Critically examine." (250 words) 2. "Despite criticism of misuse and inefficiency, MPLADS serves an irreplaceable role in last-mile development. Do you agree? Substantiate with evidence." (250 words) 3. "The suspension of MPLADS during COVID-19 was a necessary fiscal measure, but raised questions about the scheme's resilience and design. Discuss." (150 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| MLALAD (MLA Local Area Development) | State-level analogue; similar design debates |
| Devolution of Funds to PRIs (73rd Amendment) | Competes as a channel for local development; federalism angle |
| Parliamentary Privileges & Separation of Powers | MPLADS controversy on MP-as-executive role |
| Finance Commission (15th FC) | MPLADS continuation tied to FC periods; fiscal federalism |
| CAG Audit of Government Schemes | Accountability and audit frameworks for Central Sector Schemes |
| Bhim Singh v. Union of India (2010) | SC ruling on MPLADS constitutionality |
| Central Sector vs. Centrally Sponsored Schemes | Classification, funding pattern, implementation differences |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong Ministry: Aspirants confuse implementing ministry as Ministry of Rural Development or Ministry of Finance — it is MoSPI (Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation).
- Wrong amount: Some recall ₹2 crore or ₹5 lakh per annum — correct figure is ₹5 crore per annum (since 2011-12).
- Statutory confusion: MPLADS is often assumed to be backed by an Act — it is not; it is a purely executive scheme under Ministry guidelines.
- Rajya Sabha vs. Lok Sabha scope: Lok Sabha MPs are restricted to their constituency; Rajya Sabha MPs can recommend across their entire state — a commonly reversed fact.
- COVID suspension year: The scheme was suspended for 2020-21 and 2021-22 (two years), not just one. Restoration happened mid-FY 2021-22 (October 2021), not 2022-23.
11. Sources
- [S1] Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation — Revised MPLADS Guidelines 2023, PIB Press Release — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2155040®=3&lang=2 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Cabinet approves Restoration and continuation of MPLADS — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1770522®=48&lang=2 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] e-SAKSHI Training Workshop — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetailm.aspx?PRID=2027330 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] Cabinet approves Non-operation of MPLADS for two years (2020-21 and 2021-22) — PIB — https://pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1611674 — (Tier 1)
- [S5] "There is no case for scrapping MPLADS funds" — The Hindu, 4 February 2026 (article excerpt as supplied) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-04/th_international/articleGKPFHKGRL-13366590.ece — (Tier 4)