Political Financing in India: Rising Costs, Falling Transparency | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
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Political Financing in India: Rising Costs, Falling Transparency

Posted 23 Jun 2025

2 min read

According to the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) report, many parties delayed submitting expenditure statements (by 1 to 232 days), failed to report altogether after General Elections 2024. 

  • Political parties are required to submit election expenditure statements to the ECI within 90 days (General elections) and 75 days (Assembly elections) post-election.
  • Widespread non-compliance has raised serious concerns about transparency and accountability in political financing.

Issue in Political Financing in India

  • Expensive Elections: The 2024 Lok Sabha Election became the most expensive electoral event in the world, with expenditure reaching ₹1.35 lakh crore.
  • Lack of Transparency: Approximately 60% of contributions to the six major political parties in India from 2004-05 to 2022-23 came from undisclosed sources.
  • Disparity in Political Funding: E.g., National parties collected over 93% of total funds, in 2024 general elections raising concerns over unequal financial influence & a level playing field.
  • Electoral Overspending: Despite ECI’s expenditure limits (₹95 lakh for Lok Sabha, ₹40 lakh for Assembly), actual spending exceeds these caps, often with the help of third-party campaigners & loopholes in the Model Code of Conduct.
  • Wealth a key factor in electoral success, limiting opportunities for less affluent contenders.
    • E.g. In Madhya Pradesh, 44% of winning candidates declared assets over ₹5 crore.

Recommendations 

  • Cap on the expenditure to be incurred for an election by political parties (Law Commisison).
  • State funding to reduce disparities in financial resources among political parties (Indrajit Gupta Committee (1998).
  • Expenditure must be limited to transactions via cheque/DD/RTGS so as to reduce use of black money (ADR).
  • Other: Observers should monitor party expenditure, and all donor details must be publicly disclosed.
  • Tags :
  • Political Financing in India
  • Lack of Financial Transparency in Elections
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