Anti-Dumping Measures: Policy, Law and Practice in India (original) (raw)

Indian Constitution describes the Federal Government with certain powers and distribution of powers to the provincial government and the concurrent powers for both in Union, State and Concurrent List. India’s Federal Government has more powers compared to the Provincial Government because India is considered a Union of States and the States have not been given more provincial autonomy as it could lead to secession of territory, armed conflict and Pursuance of undemocratic activities by Separatists and secessionists. The Federal Government in India has shown many times acts of Political Interference in the administrative, legislative, social, economic decisions which are fundamentally opposed to the principles of federalism, sovereign equality and constitutional morality because provincial governments expect less political interference into the democratic institutions and public interests decisions initiated by the provincial government. The Administrative and Political Acts of the Federal Government has Constitutional implications on the political equality and administrative freedom of the provincial government as it doesn’t fit in the doctrine of reasonability and violates the basic structure of the constitution which is the most integral part of the constitution. Indian Federalism has been a complex structure of government administrative through new political ideas as the evolution of political democracy believes in political equality among all political entities and federalism shouldn’t be a authoritarian clampdown on democratic political leadership and principles of basic structure of the constitution should be abided by every federal government to ensure good centre state relations and deterioration of democratic relationship between federal government and provincial government is political error which is irrevocable.