Regulatory bodies in India have grown dramatically in industries such as telecom, power, banking, the environment, and competition. Their rise reflects the larger shift from command-and-control to a governance paradigm centered on oversight, facilitation, and rule-based management.
Why Regulatory Bodies Reflect a Shift to Governance
- The transition from direct governmental authority to independent scrutiny ensures professional, nonpartisan decision-making.
- They ensure a stable environment for markets, investment, and consumer protection.
- Establish openness and predictability through standardization, licensing, adjudication, and monitoring.
- Reduce ministerial discretion, which will restrict political meddling in technical domains.
Key Contributions
- The TRAI improved telecom competition and digital penetration.
- The SEBI improved market integrity, investor confidence, and corporate governance.
- CCI ensures competitive markets and prohibits monopolistic practices.
- The NGT increased environmental adjudication and compliance.
Challenges
- Issues of accountability arise when regulators are unelected but powerful.
- Overlap between ministries causes turf wars.
- Staffing, expertise, and enforcement mechanisms all have capacity shortages.
- True independence is called into question as a result of government-appointed leadership.
Conclusion
Regulatory bodies represent modern government, in which the state becomes an enabler rather than a controller. Strengthening autonomy, competency, and accountability will improve their effectiveness as cornerstones of India’s governance system.
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| Topic | |
| Public Administration Syllabus | Public Administration Foundation 2025-26 |
| Public Administration Free Resources | Public Administration Crash Cum Enrichment Course 2025-26 |
| About the Author: Jyoti Verma |