Context:
Parliament has passed the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026, aiming to reduce criminalization of minor business offences and promote a trust-based regulatory ecosystem.
Key Highlights:
- Government Initiative / Policy Details
- The Bill amends 79 Central Acts and decriminalizes 717 provisions out of 784.
- Focuses on removing criminal penalties for minor, technical, or procedural violations.
- Introduces a shift from criminal liability to civil/regulatory penalties.
- Enforcement Mechanism
- Establishes graded enforcement framework:
- Warnings for minor violations
- Reduced penalties for first-time/default cases
- Penalties to be imposed by executive/regulatory authorities instead of courts.
- Data & Evolution
- Builds on Jan Vishwas Act, 2023, which decriminalized offences across 42 Acts.
- Addresses industry concerns like retrospective application of reforms.
- Stakeholders Involved
- Businesses, especially MSMEs
- Regulatory bodies
- Judiciary (indirectly, via reduced burden)
- Significance
- Promotes ease of doing business
- Reduces court congestion
- Encourages voluntary compliance
- Enhances regulatory predictability and investor confidence
- Concerns / Challenges
- Risk of weak enforcement if penalties are not deterrent enough
- Need for uniform implementation across states/agencies
- Requirement of clear guidelines to avoid arbitrariness
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Decriminalization: Removal of criminal penalties for certain acts, replacing them with civil penalties.
- Regulatory Penalties: Monetary fines imposed by administrative authorities.
- Trust-based Governance: Regulatory philosophy assuming good faith compliance rather than punitive oversight.
- Covers 79 Central Acts and 717 decriminalized provisions.
- Retains strict penalties for offences involving public safety, environment, and national interest.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Governance Reforms:
- Reflects shift from “Inspector Raj” to “Facilitator State”
- Aligns with minimum government, maximum governance principle
- Economic Impact:
- Reduces compliance burden for MSMEs, boosting entrepreneurship
- Enhances investment climate and business sentiment
- Judicial Impact:
- Reduces backlog of minor economic offences in courts
- Allows judiciary to focus on serious criminal cases
- Administrative Efficiency:
- Empowers regulators but requires capacity building
- Risks of over-centralization of discretionary powers
- Balancing Act:
- Ensures serious offences remain criminalized
- Maintains balance between ease of doing business and regulatory discipline
- Way Forward
- Develop clear SOPs and guidelines for regulators
- Ensure digital transparency in penalty imposition
- Strengthen grievance redressal mechanisms
- Periodic review of impact on compliance behavior
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 2: Governance reforms, regulatory frameworks
• GS 3: Business environment, economic reforms
