The State List, designated as List II in the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India, enumerates 61 subjects—originally 66—over which individual state legislatures possess exclusive authority to enact laws, fostering a federal division of powers while allowing parliamentary overrides in cases of national interest or emergencies.[1][2] This framework, established under Article 246, allocates matters of predominantly local significance to states, such as public order, police administration, agriculture, irrigation, public health, and local government, enabling tailored governance responsive to regional needs without central interference in routine affairs.[1][3] Key characteristics include the list's evolution through constitutional amendments, which transferred subjects like education and forests to the Concurrent List to address emerging national priorities, reflecting the dynamic balance between state autonomy and union cohesion in India's quasi-federal system.[2] Notable aspects encompass occasional jurisdictional disputes resolved by the Supreme Court, underscoring the list's role in maintaining legislative harmony amid India's diverse socio-economic landscape.[4]
Constitutional Framework
Seventh Schedule Overview
The Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India, incorporated under Article 246, establishes the framework for allocating legislative powers between the Union Parliament and state legislatures in a federal system. It categorizes subjects into three exhaustive lists: List I (Union List) for matters of national scope such as defense, foreign affairs, and currency; List II (State List) for state-specific domains like public order, police, and agriculture; and List III (Concurrent List) for overlapping areas including criminal law and forests where both levels of government may legislate, with Union laws prevailing in conflicts. This structure, derived from the Government of India Act, 1935, but adapted to India's unitary-federal balance, aims to prevent jurisdictional overlaps while enabling centralized intervention for uniformity or emergencies.[1][5]The State List, as List II, originally enumerated 66 subjects upon the Constitution's commencement on 26 January 1950, granting state legislatures exclusive authority over them unless Parliament exercises overriding powers under Articles 249, 250, or 356. Key domains include local governance (e.g., panchayats and municipalities under entries 5 and 8), public health and sanitation (entry 6), state public services (entry 41), and economic regulation like taxes on agricultural income (entry 46), reflecting a design to empower states in managing regional variations in administration, resource allocation, and welfare. Residuary powers not mentioned in any list vest with Parliament, ensuring the Union's supremacy in undefined legislative spaces.[1][2]Amendments since 1950 have modified the Schedule, transferring items like education (from State to Concurrent via the 42nd Amendment in 1976) and reducing the State List to 59 entries by 2025, often to harmonize national policies amid evolving economic and security needs. For instance, entry 52 on industries was partially shifted to promote uniform industrial regulation. This dynamic adjustment underscores the Schedule's role in accommodating India's quasi-federalism, where state autonomy coexists with mechanisms for Union dominance, such as during national emergencies or by resolution of the Rajya Sabha invoking national interest. Empirical outcomes include states' primary role in implementing schemes like rural development, though fiscal dependencies on Union transfers have occasionally strained this division.[6][5]
Allocation of Legislative Powers
The allocation of legislative powers under the State List, as delineated in List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Indian Constitution, vests exclusive authority in the legislatures of the states to enact laws concerning the 59 subjects enumerated therein, pursuant to Article 246(3).[7] This provision ensures that matters of predominantly local or regional significance, such as public order, police, agriculture, and land revenue, fall under state jurisdiction, reflecting the federal structure's intent to grant states autonomy in governing intra-state affairs.[8] The framers drew from the Government of India Act, 1935, adapting its provincial list to balance central oversight with state self-governance, while emphasizing that state laws must conform to the Constitution's fundamental framework.[5]Notwithstanding this exclusivity, Parliament retains overriding legislative competence over State List subjects in delineated exceptional circumstances, as outlined in Articles 249, 250, 252, and 253. Under Article 249, if the Rajya Sabha passes a resolution by a two-thirds majority declaring a national interest, Parliament may legislate on any State List matter for up to one year, extendable annually. Article 250 empowers Parliament to make laws on State List subjects during a Proclamation of Emergency, with such laws remaining effective for six months post-emergency. Similarly, Article 252 allows Parliament to enact uniform laws if two or more state legislatures pass resolutions ceding their authority on a specific State List subject, as exemplified by laws on adoptive leaves or consumer protection.[9] Article 253 further enables Parliament to legislate for implementing international treaties or agreements, even if they impinge on State List domains, as seen in environmental laws aligned with global conventions.In cases of President's Rule under Article 356, Parliament assumes the state legislature's powers, including over State List subjects, until normalcy is restored, a mechanism invoked over 130 times since 1950, often criticized for potential misuse despite Supreme Court safeguards like the S.R. Bommai judgment in 1994 requiring floor tests for dissolution.[10] Residuary legislative powers, not enumerated in any list, accrue exclusively to Parliament under Article 248, preventing states from claiming authority over unlisted matters.[11] These provisions underscore a quasi-federal tilt toward the Union, ensuring national unity while permitting state initiative on localized issues, with judicial resolution of conflicts via doctrines like pith and substance, where a law's dominant subject determines its validity.[5]
Historical Origins
Roots in Colonial Legislation
The legislative framework dividing powers between central and provincial authorities in British India, which laid the groundwork for the State List, emerged from incremental colonial reforms transitioning from unitary control to limited federalism. Prior to 1919, governance under acts such as the Indian Councils Act 1861 and the Indian Councils Act 1909 centralized legislative authority in the Governor-General's Council, with provinces lacking independent law-making powers beyond subordinate regulations.[12]The Government of India Act 1919, implementing the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms, introduced dyarchy in provinces to foster responsible government while retaining British oversight. Provincial subjects were classified into "reserved" categories—administered by the Governor and his executive councilors, encompassing finance, police, and irrigation—and "transferred" categories—handed to Indian ministers accountable to enlarged provincial legislative councils, including education, public health, sanitation, and agriculture. This bifurcation, affecting eight major provinces from 1921, represented the initial devolution of 20-25 transferred subjects per province, though governors retained veto powers and could override decisions, limiting true autonomy.[13][14]These reforms proved inadequate, prompting further evolution under the Government of India Act 1935, which abolished dyarchy and granted full provincial autonomy effective from April 1, 1937, across 11 provinces. The Act delineated legislative competence through three schedules: the Provincial Legislative List with 54 entries (e.g., police, prisons, local government, public health, agriculture, fisheries, and land revenue), the Federal List with 59 entries for central matters, and a Concurrent List with 36 shared subjects. Provinces gained exclusive authority over their list, subject to federal override in emergencies, mirroring a quasi-federal structure influenced by demands from the Round Table Conferences (1930-1932) and the White Paper of 1933.[15][16]The Provincial List of 1935 directly informed the State List in India's 1950 Constitution, with approximately 66 of the original 97 State List entries deriving from or adapting its provisions, such as Entries 1-3 on public order and police, Entries 5-6 on local government, and Entries 14-15 on agriculture and animal husbandry. This inheritance preserved colonial categorizations suited to regional variations in administration, though adapted to eliminate paramountcy over princely states and enhance democratic oversight.[17][18]
Integration into the Indian Constitution
The State List formed List II of the Seventh Schedule in the Indian Constitution, adapted from the Provincial Legislative List under the Government of India Act, 1935, which enumerated 54 provincial subjects for legislative competence.[5] This colonial framework, intended to limit provincial autonomy under British oversight, was restructured by the Constituent Assembly to support a quasi-federal system with enhanced Union authority, including vesting residuary legislative powers in Parliament under Article 248, unlike the 1935 Act's allocation to the Governor-General.[5] The Drafting Committee, chaired by B.R. Ambedkar, expanded the list to 66 entries in the Draft Constitution of February 1948 (under draft Article 217), incorporating subjects like public order, police, local government, agriculture, and public health to devolve routine administrative matters to states while reserving national concerns for the Union List.[19]Debates in the Constituent Assembly on the Seventh Schedule, including the State List, spanned 29–31 August 1949, 1–3 and 9 September 1949, and 13 and 17 October 1949, with members scrutinizing entries for overlaps and federal balance.[19] Key contentions included state control over education (retained in the State List initially but later shifted to Concurrent via amendment), prohibition of cow slaughter (amended to exclude a blanket ban on stock protection), and taxation powers (e.g., addition of Entry 88-A for taxes on newspapers).[19] Proponents like Ambedkar argued for precise enumeration to prevent jurisdictional conflicts, while critics such as K. Santhanam highlighted risks of over-centralization, reflecting tensions from integrating over 500 princely states and partition-induced security needs.[5] Accepted amendments refined phrasing for clarity, such as delimiting state authority on forests and fisheries, ensuring the list prioritized local governance without undermining national unity.The integrated Seventh Schedule was adopted by the Constituent Assembly on 26 November 1949 as part of the full Constitution text, effective from 26 January 1950.[19] This incorporation under Article 246 delineated exclusive state legislative powers over listed subjects, subject to Union override during emergencies (Article 356) or via concurrent legislation, establishing a framework that, despite its 1935 roots, accommodated India's unitary tilt amid socialist economic planning and territorial consolidation.[5] Subsequent amendments, beginning with the Constitution (Third Amendment) Act, 1954, have since modified entries, reducing the State List to 61 subjects by transfers like education to the Concurrent List in 1976.[5]
Original Composition
Initial Enumeration of Subjects
The original State List (List II) of the Seventh Schedule, as incorporated into the Constitution of India upon its adoption on 26 November 1949 and commencement on 26 January 1950, enumerated 66 subjects over which state legislatures held exclusive authority to make laws, excluding matters reserved for the Union or requiring national uniformity.[19] This allocation reflected the framers' intent to devolve powers on regional matters like law enforcement, land management, and local taxation, while incorporating cross-references to Union and Concurrent Lists to prevent conflicts.[19] The list emerged from extensive Constituent Assembly debates spanning August to October 1949, where amendments addressed overlaps, such as limiting education to state control subject to Union oversight on universities.[19]The subjects were precisely delineated as follows:
Public order (but not including the use of naval, military or air forces or any other armed forces of the Union in aid of the civil power).
Police, including railway and village police.
Administration of justice; constitution and organisation of courts, except the Supreme Court and the High Court; officers and servants of the High Court; procedure in rent and revenue courts; fees taken in all courts except the Supreme Court.
Prisons, reformatories, Borstal institutions and other institutions of a like nature, and persons detained therein; arrangements with other States for the use of prisons and other institutions.
Local government, that is to say, the constitution and powers of municipal corporations, improvement trusts, district boards, mining settlement authorities and other local authorities for the purpose of local self-government or village administration.
Public health and sanitation; hospitals and dispensaries.
Pilgrimages, other than pilgrimages to places outside India.
Intoxicating liquors, that is to say, the production, manufacture, possession, transport, purchase and sale of intoxicating liquors.
Relief of the disabled and unemployable.
Burials and burial grounds; cremations and cremation grounds.
Education including universities, subject to the provisions of entries 63, 64, 65 and 66 of List I and entry 25 of List III.
Libraries, museums and other similar institutions controlled or financed by the State; ancient and historical monuments and records other than those declared by Parliament by law to be of national importance.
Communications, that is to say, roads, bridges, ferries, and other means of communication not specified in List I; municipal tramways; ropeways; inland waterways and traffic thereon subject to the provisions of List I and List III with regard to such waterways; vehicles other than mechanically propelled vehicles.
Agriculture, including agricultural education and research, protection against pests and prevention of plant diseases.
Preservation, protection and improvement of stock and prevention of animal diseases; veterinary training and practice.
Pounds and the prevention of cattle trespass.
Water, that is to say, water supplies, irrigation and canals, drainage and embankments, water storage and water power subject to the provisions of entry 56 of List I.
Land, that is to say, rights in or over land, land tenures including the relation of landlord and tenant, and the collection of rents; transfer and alienation of agricultural land; land improvement and agricultural loans; colonization.
Forests.
Protection of wild animals and birds.
Fisheries.
Courts of wards subject to the provisions of entry 34 of List I; encumbered and attached estates.
Regulation of mines and mineral development subject to the provisions of List I with respect to regulation and development under the control of the Union.
Industries subject to the provisions of entry 52 of List I.
Gas and gas-works.
Trade and commerce within the State subject to the provisions of entry 33 of List III.
Production, supply and distribution of goods subject to the provisions of entry 33 of List III.
Markets and fairs.
Weights and measures except establishment of standards.
Money-lending and money-lenders; relief of agricultural indebtedness.
Inns and inn-keepers.
Incorporation, regulation and winding up of corporations, other than those specified in List I, and universities; unincorporated trading, literary, scientific, religious and other societies and associations; co-operative societies.
Theatres and dramatic performances; cinemas subject to provisions of entry 60 of List I; sports, entertainments and amusements.
Betting and gambling.
Works, lands and buildings vested in or in the possession of the State.
Acquisition or requisitioning of property, except for the purposes of the Union, subject to the provisions of entry 42 of List III.
Elections to the Legislature of the State subject to the provisions of any law made by Parliament.
Salaries and allowances of members of the Legislature of the State, of the Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the Legislative Assembly and, if there is a Legislative Council, of the Chairman and Deputy Chairman thereof.
Powers, privileges and immunities of the Legislative Assembly and of the members and the committees thereof, and, if there is a Legislative Council, of that Council and of the members and the committees thereof; enforcement of attendance of persons for giving evidence or producing documents before committees of the Legislature of the State.
Salaries and allowances of Ministers for the State.
State public services; State Public Service Commission.
State pensions, that is to say, pensions payable by the State or out of the Consolidated Fund of the State.
Public debt of the State.
Treasure trove.
Land revenue, including the assessment and collection of revenue, the maintenance of land records, survey for revenue purposes and records of rights, and alienation of revenues.
Taxes on agricultural income.
Duties in respect of succession to agricultural land.
Estate duty in respect of agricultural land.
Taxes on lands and buildings.
Taxes on mineral rights subject to any limitations imposed by Parliament by law relating to mineral development.
Duties of excise on the following goods manufactured or produced in the State and countervailing duties at the same or lower rates on similar goods manufactured or produced elsewhere in India: (a) alcoholic liquors for human consumption; (b) opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic drugs and narcotics; but not including medicinal and toilet preparations containing alcohol or any substance included in sub-paragraph (b) of this entry.
Taxes on the entry of goods into a local area for consumption, use or sale therein.
Taxes on the consumption or sale of electricity.
Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods other than newspapers.
Taxes on advertisements other than advertisements published in the newspapers.
Taxes on goods and passengers carried by road or on inland waterways.
Taxes on vehicles, whether mechanically propelled or not, suitable for use on roads, including tramcars subject to the provisions of entry 35 of List III.
Taxes on animals and boats.
Tolls.
Taxes on professions, trades, callings and employments.
Capitation taxes.
Taxes on luxuries, including taxes on entertainments, amusements, betting and gambling.
Rates of stamp duty in respect of documents other than those specified in the provisions of List I with regard to rates of stamp duty.
Offences against laws with respect to any of the matters in this List.
Jurisdiction and powers of all courts, except the Supreme Court, with respect to any of the matters in this List.
Fees in respect of any of the matters in this List, but not including fees taken in any court.
All entries included qualifiers to harmonize with Union powers, such as exclusions for national security or interstate matters, ensuring federal coherence without preempting state initiative.[19] This structure underscored the quasi-federal design, prioritizing empirical delineation of competencies based on administrative practicality rather than rigid ideological divides.[5]
Rationale for State-Specific Domains
The State List, comprising subjects under List II of the Seventh Schedule, assigns exclusive legislative authority to state legislatures on matters deemed primarily local or regional in nature, such as public order, police, agriculture, irrigation, and local government. This allocation reflects the constitutional design to decentralize power, enabling states to tailor policies to their unique geographic, cultural, and economic conditions, where national uniformity might prove inefficient or insensitive to diversity. By reserving these domains for states, the framework promotes administrative responsiveness and fiscal autonomy, allowing legislatures to address issues like land revenue and public health without central interference under normal circumstances.[19][20]The rationale emerged from the Constituent Assembly's deliberations between August and October 1949, where members sought to balance a strong Union—necessitated by post-Partition unity concerns—with provincial autonomy inherited from the Government of India Act, 1935, which first introduced a tripartite list system. Framers, including those debating Draft Article 217 (later Article 246), argued that over-centralization risked alienating regional identities, advocating instead for state control over subjects like education and cattle preservation to foster "unity in diversity." For instance, taxation entries were contested to preserve state revenues for local needs, while agriculture was retained in the State List due to varying soil and climatic factors across regions, ensuring practical governance over abstract nationalization. This intent minimized intergovernmental disputes by exhaustively enumerating powers, though the Centre retains override authority during emergencies under Article 250.[19][5]Specific domains underscore causal linkages to state-level efficacy: police and prisons (Entry 2) suit localized enforcement given demographic variances, while fisheries and markets (Entries 21-26) align with state-specific resource management, preventing one-size-fits-all policies that could exacerbate inequalities. This state-centric approach, as articulated in assembly discussions, counters potential Union accretion by embedding residuary safeguards, though amendments like the 42nd (1976) have shifted items such as education to the Concurrent List, highlighting ongoing tensions in federal equilibrium. Empirical outcomes include states enacting divergent land reform laws post-1950, demonstrating the list's role in accommodating causal realities of regional disparity over ideological uniformity.[19][20]
Amendments and Modifications
Major Constitutional Amendments Affecting the List
The Constitution (Forty-second Amendment) Act, 1976, enacted on December 18, 1976, and effective from January 3, 1977, represented the most substantial modification to the State List by transferring five subjects to the Concurrent List under the Seventh Schedule.[21] These included education (previously Entry 11), forests (leading to new Concurrent Entry 17A), weights and measures excluding establishment of standards (Entry 29), protection of wild animals and birds (Entry 20), and population control and family planning (Entry 20A). This transfer allowed the Union Parliament to enact laws on these subjects alongside state legislatures, with Union laws prevailing in case of conflict under Article 254, thereby diminishing exclusive state legislative autonomy in areas historically under state purview.[1] The changes were part of broader centralizing measures during the 1975-1977 national emergency, which critics, including subsequent judicial reviews, have argued eroded federal balance by prioritizing national uniformity over state discretion.[22]Earlier, the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956, effective November 1, 1956, adjusted the State List in tandem with state reorganization under the States Reorganisation Act, 1956; it substituted Entry 24 to clarify state powers over industries subject to Union declaration under Entry 52 of the Union List, while omitting Entry 36 (fee on road vehicles not specified in Union List) to align with integrated administrative boundaries.[23] Similarly, the Constitution (Sixth Amendment) Act, 1956, effective from that year, refined taxation entries across lists, amending State List Entry 54 (duties of excise on goods manufactured in the state except alcohol) and others to facilitate sales tax uniformity and inter-state trade regulation via Union oversight under amended Articles 269 and 286.More recently, the Constitution (One Hundred and First Amendment) Act, 2016, effective July 1, 2017, profoundly impacted the State List's fiscal domains by implementing the Goods and Services Tax (GST) framework; it deleted Entries 52 (taxes on sale or purchase of goods), 54 (duties of excise on certain goods), 55 (taxes on advertisements except newspapers), and 92C (taxes on entry of goods into local areas), while inserting Article 246A to grant concurrent GST powers to Union and states, subsuming multiple state taxes into a shared regime administered by the GST Council. This restructuring reduced state exclusive taxation authority from 19 entries to fewer, with compensatory mechanisms via the GST Compensation Cess, though states have contested revenue shortfalls in subsequent disputes. These amendments collectively illustrate a pattern of progressive central intervention in state domains, often justified by national economic or administrative integration needs, but raising ongoing federalism concerns.
Specific Transfers and Deletions
The Constitution (Forty-second Amendment) Act, 1976, transferred five subjects from the State List to the Concurrent List to enhance central coordination on matters deemed of national importance. These included education (originally Entry 11), forests (Entry 19), weights and measures in the establishment of standards (Entry 29, partially), protection of wild animals and birds (Entry 20B), and population control and family planning (newly added Entry).[24][25] The amendment, effective from January 3, 1977, reduced the State List from 66 to 61 entries by reallocating these domains, allowing both Union and state legislatures to legislate concurrently, with Union laws prevailing in case of conflict under Article 254.[26]Subsequent modifications addressed fiscal powers amid economic reforms. The Constitution (One Hundred and First Amendment) Act, 2016, facilitated the Goods and Services Tax (GST) by omitting Entry 52 of the State List, which empowered states to impose taxes on the entry of goods into local areas for consumption, use, or sale.[27] Entry 54 was substituted to restrict state levies on the sale or purchase of goods to those not subsumed under GST, such as petroleum products and alcohol for human consumption, effective from July 1, 2017.[27] These changes, part of inserting Article 246A for concurrent GST powers, effectively curtailed state taxing autonomy on inter-state trade and certain intra-state transactions previously under exclusive state domain, subsuming 11 state taxes into GST.[28]No outright deletions beyond taxation-related entries have occurred since, though amendments like the Sixth (1956) adjusted sales tax distributions without removing subjects. The net effect has been a contraction of exclusive state legislative fields from 66 original entries to 59, reflecting progressive centralization in shared governance areas.[5]
Current Composition
Enumeration of Existing Subjects
The State List (List II of the Seventh Schedule) delineates 61 subjects—reduced from an original 66 through amendments—upon which state legislatures hold exclusive authority to enact laws, except where overridden by Unionlegislation under specific constitutional provisions or in national emergencies. This allocation underscores the federal division of powers, confining states primarily to intra-territorial governance, local administration, and resource management, while deferring to the Union on inter-state or national security matters. Key exclusions and qualifications, such as those referencing entries in the Union or Concurrent Lists, prevent state overreach into federal domains, with five entries (11, 19, 20, 29, and 36) formally omitted via the 42nd Amendment Act of 1976 and the 7th Amendment Act of 1956.[1]The extant subjects are enumerated as follows:
Public order (but not including the use of any naval, military or air force or any other armed force of the Union or of any other force subject to the control of the Union or of any contingent or unit thereof in aid of the civil power).[1]
Police (including railway and village police) subject to the provisions of entry 2A of List I.[1]
Officers and servants of the High Court; procedure in rent and revenue courts; fees taken in all courts except the Supreme Court.[1]
Prisons, reformatories, Borstal institutions and other institutions of a like nature, and persons detained therein; arrangements with other States for the use of prisons and other institutions.[1]
Local government, that is to say, the constitution and powers of municipal corporations, improvement trusts, districts boards, mining settlement authorities and other local authorities for the purpose of local self-government or village administration.[1]
Public health and sanitation; hospitals and dispensaries.[1]
Pilgrimages, other than pilgrimages to places outside India.[1]
Intoxicating liquors, that is to say, the production, manufacture, possession, transport, purchase and sale of intoxicating liquors.[1]
Relief of the disabled and unemployable.[1]
Burials and burial grounds; cremations, cremation grounds.[1]
Libraries, museums and other similar institutions controlled or financed by the State; ancient and historical monuments and records other than those declared by or under law made by Parliament to be of national importance.[1]
Communications, that is to say, roads, bridges, ferries, and other means of communication not specified in List I; municipal tramways; ropeways; inland waterways and traffic thereon subject to the provisions of List I and List III with regard to such waterways; vehicles other than mechanically propelled vehicles.[1]
Agriculture, including agricultural education and research, protection against pests and prevention of plant diseases.[1]
Preservation, protection and improvement of stock and prevention of animal diseases; veterinary training and practice.[1]
Pounds and the prevention of cattle trespass.[1]
Water, that is to say, water supplies, irrigation and canals, drainage and embankments, water storage and water power subject to the provisions of entry 56 of List I.[1]
Land, that is to say, rights in or over land, land tenures including the relation of landlord and tenant, and the collection of rents; transfer and alienation of agricultural land; land improvement and agricultural loans; colonization.[1]
Fisheries.[1]
Courts of wards subject to the provisions of entry 34 of List I; encumbered and attached estates.[1]
Regulation of mines and mineral development subject to the provisions of List I with respect to regulation and development under the control of the Union.[1]
Industries subject to the provisions of entries 7 and 52 of List I.[1]
Gas and gas-works.[1]
Trade and commerce within the State subject to the provisions of entry 33 of List III.[1]
Production, supply and distribution of goods subject to the provisions of entry 33 of List III.[1]
Markets and fairs.[1]
Money-lending and money-lenders; relief of agricultural indebtedness.[1]
Inns and inn-keepers.[1]
Incorporation, regulation and winding up of corporations, other than those specified in List I, and universities; unincorporated trading, literary, scientific, religious and other societies and associations; co-operative societies.[1]
Theatres and dramatic performances; cinemas subject to the provisions of entry 60 of List I; sports, entertainments and amusements.[1]
Betting and gambling.[1]
Works, lands and buildings vested in or in the possession of the State.[1]
Elections to the Legislature of the State subject to the provisions of any law made by Parliament.[1]
Salaries and allowances of members of the Legislature of the State, of the Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the Legislative Assembly and, if there is a Legislative Council, of the Chairman and Deputy Chairman thereof.[1]
Powers, privileges and immunities of the Legislative Assembly and of the members and the committees thereof, and, if there is a Legislative Council, of that Council and of the members and the committees thereof; enforcement of attendance of persons for giving evidence or producing documents before committees of the Legislature of the State.[1]
Salaries and allowances of Ministers for the State.[1]
State public services; State Public Service Commission.[1]
State pensions, that is to say, pensions payable by the State or out of the Consolidated Fund of the State.[1]
Public debt of the State.[1]
Treasure trove.[1]
Land revenue, including the assessment and collection of revenue, the maintenance of land records, survey for revenue purposes and records of rights, and alienation of revenues.[1]
Taxes on agricultural income.[1]
Duties in respect of succession to agricultural land.[1]
Estate duty in respect of agricultural land.[1]
Taxes on lands and buildings.[1]
Taxes on mineral rights subject to any limitations imposed by Parliament by law relating to mineral development.[1]
Duties of excise on the following goods manufactured or produced in the State and countervailing duties at the same or lower rates on similar goods manufactured or produced elsewhere in India: (a) alcoholic liquors for human consumption; (b) opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic drugs and narcotics; but not including medicinal and toilet preparations containing alcohol or any substance included in sub-paragraph (b) of this entry.[1]
Taxes on the entry of goods into a local area for consumption, use or sale therein.[1]
Taxes on the consumption or sale of electricity.[1]
Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods other than newspapers, subject to the provisions of entry 92A of List I.[1]
Taxes on advertisements other than advertisements published in the newspapers and advertisements broadcast by radio or television.[1]
Taxes on goods and passengers carried by road or on inland waterways.[1]
Taxes on vehicles, whether mechanically propelled or not, suitable for use on roads, including tramcars subject to the provisions of entry 35 of List III.[1]
Taxes on animals and boats.[1]
Tolls.[1]
Taxes on professions, trades, callings and employments.[1]
Capitation taxes.[1]
Taxes on luxuries, including taxes on entertainments, amusements, betting and gambling.[1]
Rates of stamp duty in respect of documents other than those specified in the provisions of List I with regard to rates of stamp duty.[1]
Offences against laws with respect to any of the matters in this List.[1]
Jurisdiction and powers of all courts, except the Supreme Court, with respect to any of the matters in this List.[1]
Fees in respect of any of the matters in this List, but not including fees taken in any court.[1]
These entries reflect amendments up to the 42nd Constitutional Amendment Act of 1976, with no substantive alterations recorded through 2025, preserving states' autonomy in localized fiscal and administrative spheres while harmonizing with Union supremacy.[1][2]
Thematic Categorization
The subjects in the State List, as delineated in List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of India, encompass 61 entries focused on regional and local governance, reflecting states' authority over intra-state matters not impinging on national uniformity.[1] These can be thematically categorized into governance and security, economic regulation and industries, agriculture and natural resources, infrastructure and utilities, taxation and fiscal powers, and publicwelfare and cultural affairs, with overlaps in judicial enforcement (Entries 64-66 applying to offenses and courts concerning List II matters).[1]Governance and Public Order. This core theme covers maintenance of internal stability and administrative machinery, including public order excluding central forces (Entry 1), police forces (Entry 2), high court staff and local court procedures (Entry 3), and correctional institutions (Entry 4).[1] State legislatures exercise exclusive control here to address localized threats, subject to Union overrides in emergencies under Article 356. Entries 37-42 further delineate state-specific operations like legislative elections (Entry 37), member salaries (Entry 38), assembly privileges (Entry 39), ministerial emoluments (Entry 40), civil services (Entry 41), and pensions (Entry 42).[1]Economic Regulation and Industries. States regulate intra-state commerce and small-scale economic activities, such as intoxicating liquors (Entry 8), fisheries (Entry 21), mines subject to Union oversight (Entry 23), non-central industries (Entry 24), gas works (Entry 25), internal trade (Entry 26), goods distribution (Entry 27), markets (Entry 28), money-lending (Entry 30), inns (Entry 31), corporations and cooperatives (Entry 32), and entertainments including cinemas (Entry 33) and betting (Entry 34).[1] These provisions enable tailored policies for regional economic needs, excluding Union-specified sectors to prevent fragmentation of national markets.Agriculture, Land, and Natural Resources. Predominantly rural-focused, this grouping includes agriculture and pest control (Entry 14), livestock preservation (Entry 15), cattle pounds (Entry 16), land rights and tenures (Entry 18), and land revenue collection (Entry 45).[1] Water management for irrigation and storage (Entry 17), limited by Union hydro-power interests, underscores states' role in sustaining agrarian economies, which form the backbone of most state GDPs as of 2023 data from the Ministry of Statistics.Infrastructure and Utilities. Entries address state-level connectivity and essentials like roads, ferries, and non-mechanized vehicles (Entry 13) and state-owned works (Entry 35), facilitating localized development without encroaching on national highways or railways under List I.[1]Taxation and Fiscal Powers. A substantial portion—over 15 entries—involves revenue generation tailored to state contexts, including agricultural income taxes (Entry 46), land succession duties (Entry 47), estate duties on farmland (Entry 48), property taxes (Entry 49), mineral rights levies (Entry 50), excises on liquors and narcotics (Entry 51), entry taxes (Entry 52), electricity consumption taxes (Entry 53), sales taxes excluding Union exceptions (Entry 54), advertisement taxes (Entry 55), transport taxes (Entry 56), vehicle taxes (Entry 57), animal and boat taxes (Entry 58), tolls (Entry 59), profession taxes (Entry 60), capitation taxes (Entry 61), luxury taxes (Entry 62), and stamp duties (Entry 63).[1] These enable fiscal autonomy, though GST implementation via the 101st Amendment (2016) subsumed several into shared mechanisms, reducing state exclusivity on indirect taxes.Public Welfare and Cultural Affairs. Themes of social services include public healthinfrastructure (Entry 6), disabled relief (Entry 9), burials (Entry 10), pilgrimages (Entry 7), and state-funded cultural institutions (Entry 12).[1] Public debt (Entry 43) and treasure trove (Entry 44) support welfare financing, emphasizing states' proximity to demographic needs over centralized mandates.
Role in Federal Structure
Interplay with Union and Concurrent Lists
The legislative powers assigned to subjects in the State List under Article 246(3) of the Constitution are ordinarily exclusive to state legislatures, but this domain is not impervious to Union intervention, reflecting the Constitution's design for a strong central authority in India's federal framework. Parliament may legislate on State List matters if the Rajya Sabha passes a resolution by a two-thirds majority deeming it necessary in the national interest, as provided under Article 249; such laws prevail over inconsistent state laws, though states retain concurrent power to legislate without restriction from this provision per Article 251.[29] During a proclamation of national emergency under Article 352, Parliament gains exclusive authority over State List subjects via Article 250, extending for six months post-emergency unless revoked earlier, again with state legislatures permitted to enact non-conflicting laws under Article 251.[29]Further exceptions enable Parliament to override State List exclusivity through cooperative mechanisms: under Article 252, if legislatures of two or more states pass resolutions authorizing uniform legislation on a State List subject, Parliament may enact laws applicable to those states, with other states able to adopt them later; this has facilitated national uniformity in areas like adoption and maintenance.[9][29] Article 253 empowers Parliament to legislate on any subject, including State List entries, to implement international treaties, agreements, or conventions, prioritizing global commitments over strict list divisions; for instance, this clause supported environmental laws aligned with international obligations despite state domains like forests.[30]Interplay with the Concurrent List introduces potential overlaps, where both Union and states may legislate, but Article 254 governs repugnancy: if a state law conflicts with a Union law on a Concurrent subject—defined as irreconcilable outcomes when applied to the same facts—the Union law prevails, rendering the state law void to the extent of inconsistency.[31][29] An exception under Article 254(2) allows a state law to override if reserved for the President's consideration and assented to, though subsequent Union amendments can supersede it; this provision has been invoked sparingly, such as in state-specific labor or trade laws.[32] The doctrine of pith and substance resolves incidental encroachments, ascertaining a law's true character by its dominant purpose—if substantially within the enacting body's list, trivial overlaps with another list do not invalidate it, preventing rigid compartmentalization while upholding list primacy.[31][32]With the Union List, direct conflicts are minimized by Parliament's residuary powers under Article 248, but state attempts to legislate on Union subjects are scrutinized via pith and substance to nullify colorable exercises disguised as state matters, ensuring federal hierarchy where Union entries like defense or foreign affairs remain insulated.[29] These mechanisms underscore a deliberate tilt toward Union supremacy in ambiguities, as evidenced in judicial affirmations that prioritize national cohesion over absolute state autonomy.[33]
Residuary Powers and Supremacy Clauses
Article 248 of the Indian Constitution vests residuary powers of legislation exclusively in Parliament, granting it authority to enact laws on any matter not enumerated in the Union List, State List, or Concurrent List, including taxation not specified in those lists.[11][34] This provision ensures that legislative gaps arising from unlisted subjects fall under central control, reflecting the framers' intent for a strong Union in undefined domains to maintain national unity amid India's diverse federal setup.[35][36]In contrast to federations like the United States, where residuary powers reside with states under the Tenth Amendment, India's allocation to the center underscores a quasi-federal structure with unitary features, prioritizing national coherence over state autonomy in residual areas.[35][36] This centralization has enabled Parliament to address emerging issues, such as cybersecurity or space exploration, without state interference, though it has drawn criticism for potentially expanding Union influence beyond enumerated powers.[30]Supremacy in India's federal framework manifests through Article 254, which resolves repugnancy between Union and state laws on Concurrent List subjects by rendering the state law void to the extent of inconsistency, unless the state law receives presidential assent, in which case Parliament retains override authority.[37][38] This doctrine of repugnancy upholds Union precedence, ensuring uniform application of national policies while allowing limited state flexibility with central approval.[31][39]For State List matters, where states hold exclusive legislative competence under Article 246(3), Union supremacy operates indirectly via enabling provisions like Article 249, permitting Parliament to legislate in the national interest upon a Rajya Sabha resolution supported by two-thirds of members present and voting, or Article 250 during proclaimed emergencies.[35] These mechanisms, combined with residuary powers, embed a principle of federal supremacy that favors the Union in intergovernmental conflicts, as affirmed in judicial doctrines emphasizing the Constitution's overarching authority to prevent fragmentation.[39][40] Such arrangements have sustained India's federal balance since 1950, though they highlight the Constitution's tilt toward central dominance over pure parity.[41]
Controversies and Challenges
Alleged Central Encroachment on State Domains
Critics of India's federal structure have argued that the central government has periodically expanded its legislative and executive influence into domains constitutionally reserved for states under the State List of the Seventh Schedule, thereby diluting state autonomy. Such encroachments are alleged to occur through constitutional amendments shifting subjects to the Concurrent List, misuse of emergency provisions, and central legislation overriding state prerogatives, often justified under national interest but resulting in asymmetric power dynamics. These concerns were prominently highlighted by commissions like the Sarkaria Commission (1983–1988), which recommended safeguards against arbitrary central interventions to preserve cooperative federalism.[42]A key instance of alleged encroachment via amendment is the 42nd Constitutional Amendment Act of 1976, enacted during the national Emergency, which transferred five subjects from the State List to the Concurrent List: education, forests, weights and measures, protection of wild animals and birds, and administration of justice. This shift enabled concurrent central legislation, with Union laws prevailing in conflicts under Article 254, effectively centralizing policy-making in areas traditionally under state control. Opponents, including state governments, have contended that this eroded fiscal and administrative autonomy, as seen in subsequent central dominance over education policy through schemes like the Right to Education Act, 2009.[43][44]Executive overreach through Article 356, which allows imposition of President's Rule when a state's constitutional machinery fails, has been another focal point of allegations, with 132 instances recorded from 1951 to 2023, disproportionately during Congress-led central governments. Indira Gandhi's administration alone invoked it 48 times, including mass dissolutions of opposition-led state assemblies in 1977 and 1980, often without floor tests or adequate evidence of breakdown, leading to accusations of partisan destabilization. The Supreme Court's ruling in S.R. Bommai v. Union of India (1994) imposed judicial review on such proclamations, mandating that they be subject to scrutiny for mala fide intent and limiting duration to ensure federal balance, though isolated post-2000 impositions persist.[45][46]In agriculture, a core State List subject under Entry 14, the central farm laws of 2020—Farmers' Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Act, Essential Commodities (Amendment) Act, and Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance—were criticized as indirect encroachments by regulating trade and contracts, domains of state purview, prompting widespread protests and eventual repeal in 2021. Similarly, central interventions in forests (now Concurrent Entry 17A post-1976) via laws like the Forest Conservation Act amendments have overridden state land-use decisions, as noted in disputes over tribal rights and development projects. The Sarkaria Commission urged restraint in such expansions, advocating prior consultation via the Inter-State Council, but implementation has been uneven, with states alleging fiscal coercion through conditional grants further incentivizes compliance over autonomy.[47][48]
Fiscal and Taxation Disputes
The implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in 2017 through the 101st Constitutional Amendment significantly altered state taxation powers under the State List, subsuming entries such as taxes on sales, advertisements, and entry of goods into local areas (Entries 52, 55, and 62). States relinquished independent rate-setting authority to the GST Council, where the Centre holds a one-third voting share, leading to claims of eroded fiscal autonomy as states can no longer tailor taxes to local needs without central concurrence.[49][50] This shift prompted disputes over revenue predictability, with states arguing that the uniform structure disadvantages manufacturing-heavy or consumption-poor regions.GST compensation disputes intensified after the initial five-year guarantee of 14% annual revenue growth ended in June 2022, amid shortfalls attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic and lower-than-expected collections. States like Punjab and Kerala borrowed via central government bonds to cover gaps exceeding ₹2.7 lakh crore cumulatively by 2023, as direct cess funding proved insufficient, fueling accusations of central fiscal dominance over state borrowing under Article 293.[50] Opposition-ruled southern states, contributing over 30% of central taxes but receiving around 15-18% devolution per the 15th Finance Commission (2021-2026), have contested the formula's reliance on 1971 census population data, arguing it penalizes demographic management and fiscal discipline.[51]A prominent taxation dispute concerns state levies on mineral-bearing lands under Entry 49 (taxes on lands and buildings). The Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 (under Union List Entry 54), imposed royalties and restricted state taxes, leading to industry challenges claiming preclusion of state powers. In a July 25, 2024, ruling by a nine-judge Supreme Court bench (8:1 majority), states were affirmed legislative competence to impose such taxes independently of royalties, validating retrospective levies from April 1, 2005, and resolving over ₹1 lakh crore in pending claims across mineral-rich states like Odisha and Jharkhand.[52][53]These conflicts highlight vertical fiscal imbalances, with states' own tax revenue share declining from 38% of total revenues pre-GST to about 25% post-implementation, exacerbating dependency on central transfers averaging 40-50% of state budgets.[54] While judicial affirmations bolster state domains, ongoing devolution tussles underscore tensions between cooperative federalism and central oversight in revenue assignment.
Judicial Interpretations and Reforms
Key Supreme Court Rulings
In S. R. Bommai v. Union of India (1994), a nine-judge bench ruled that federalism forms part of the basic structure of the Constitution, limiting the Union's use of Article 356 to impose President's Rule on states only in cases of clear breakdown of constitutional machinery, thereby safeguarding state legislative autonomy over State List subjects like public order and police (Entry 2, List II).[33][55] The decision emphasized that secularism and democracy underpin state powers, requiring floor tests over subjective gubernatorial reports, and invalidated dismissals in states like Karnataka and Meghalaya where alternatives to rule existed.[33]The Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi v. Union of Territory of Delhi (2023) clarified that the Delhi Legislative Assembly holds legislative powers over all State List entries except public order (Entry 1) and land (Entry 18), rejecting expansive Union control via the Lieutenant Governor despite Delhi's union territory status.[56] A five-judge bench held that Article 239AA grants Delhi "legislative powers...respecting matters in the State List," limiting executive overreach and affirming cooperative federalism even in territories.[56]In Mineral Area Development Authority v. Steel Authority of India Ltd. (2024), an eight-judge majority upheld states' exclusive taxing authority under Entry 50 of List II (taxes on mineral rights subject to limitations by Parliament), ruling that Parliament's regulatory powers over mines and minerals (Entry 54, List I) do not eclipse state taxation absent explicit repugnancy.[57][58] The judgment overruled prior decisions like India Cement Ltd. v. State of Tamil Nadu (1990), interpreting "taxes on lands and buildings" broadly to include sub-soil minerals, reinforcing fiscal federalism by allowing states like Jharkhand and Odisha to levy royalties without Union pre-emption.[57][58]These rulings apply the "pith and substance" doctrine to resolve overlaps, prioritizing State List exclusivity unless Union legislation under List I or III demonstrates irreconcilable conflict, as reiterated in cases interpreting entries like intoxicating liquors (Entry 8, List II), where states retain control over industrial alcohol production and distribution.[59][60]
Proposals for Rebalancing Federal Powers
The Punchhi Commission on Centre-State Relations, constituted in 2007 and submitting its report in 2010, proposed several measures to recalibrate legislative powers, including mandatory consultation with states via the Inter-State Council before enacting laws on Concurrent List subjects that impinge on State List domains such as public health and agriculture.[61] It recommended restricting the Union's treaty-making powers to exclude unilateral agreements on State List matters without state consent, aiming to prevent indirect erosion of state autonomy in areas like water resources and local governance.[62] Additionally, the Commission advocated amending Article 356 to limit its invocation to genuine breakdowns of constitutional machinery, with prior approval from the Inter-State Council, to curb central overreach into state executive functions.[63]A 2015 study commissioned by the 14th Finance Commission, titled "Cleaning Constitutional Cobwebs: Reforming the Seventh Schedule," highlighted overlaps between lists exacerbated by emergency provisions under Article 250, which allow Parliament to legislate on State List subjects during national emergencies, and proposed rationalizing entries to minimize conflicts—such as clarifying boundaries between State List items like land revenue and Concurrent List taxation powers.[64] It suggested periodic reviews of the Seventh Schedule by a dedicated constitutional body to devolve select Concurrent List subjects back to the State List where states demonstrate administrative capacity, reversing partial shifts from the 42nd Amendment of 1976 that moved education and forests to the Concurrent List.[65]In fiscal federalism, recent proposals emphasize enhancing states' revenue autonomy to support State List responsibilities like irrigation and public works; for instance, the end of GST compensation cess in June 2022 prompted calls from southern states for restoring fiscal space through higher tax devolution shares beyond the 41% recommended by the 14th Finance Commission, with the 15th Finance Commission (2021) adjusting to 41% post-Jammu and Kashmir reorganization but facing criticism for insufficient grants.[66] The Union Budget 2025-26 allocated ₹1.5 lakh crore in interest-free loans to states for capital expenditure tied to reforms, yet analysts argue this falls short of rebalancing, advocating untied grants and state-specific borrowing limits aligned with own-tax efforts to reduce dependence on central schemes that encroach on state domains.[67]State-led initiatives have gained momentum, exemplified by Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin's April 2025 announcement of a high-level committee to review central encroachments—such as administrative overrides in education and health—and recommend constitutional safeguards, including greater state veto on bills affecting State List subjects.[68]Tamil Nadu Assembly Speaker M. Appavu stated in September 2025 that recent central actions have "snatched" state powers without amendments, proposing legislative reforms to enforce exclusive state jurisdiction over police and agriculture unless explicitly delegated.[69] These efforts align with broader demands from states like Kerala and Karnataka for synchronizing fiscal responsibility laws with regional needs, as outlined in May 2025 analyses urging flexible deficit targets to bolster state implementation of local subjects.[70]