Context:
The Lok Sabha passed the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026, aiming to decriminalise minor offences across multiple laws to enhance ease of doing business and governance efficiency.
Key Highlights:
Legislative Scope
- Amends 79 Central Acts across 23 Ministries.
- Covers:
- 784 provisions
- 717 decriminalised
- 67 amended
Policy Objectives
- Reduce criminal penalties for minor procedural violations.
- Promote:
- Ease of doing business
- Ease of living
- Rationalize over 1,000 offences.
Target Beneficiaries
- MSMEs
- Small businesses
- General citizens facing regulatory burdens
Key Features
- Replaces criminal penalties with:
- Monetary penalties
- Administrative sanctions
- Removes outdated and redundant provisions.
Significance
- Reduces judicial burden by limiting minor criminal cases.
- Encourages business compliance and investment.
- Aligns with India’s goal of improving global business rankings.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Decriminalisation
- Removal of criminal liability, replaced with civil penalties.
- MSMEs
- Key drivers of:
- Employment
- Exports
- Industrial growth
- Key drivers of:
- Ease of Doing Business
- Measures regulatory efficiency in:
- Starting and operating businesses
- Measures regulatory efficiency in:
- Earlier version:
- Jan Vishwas Act, 2023 initiated similar reforms.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Economic Reforms
- Reduces compliance burden → promotes entrepreneurship.
- Encourages formalisation of economy.
- Judicial Efficiency
- Decreases pendency by removing minor criminal cases.
- Allows courts to focus on serious offences.
- Governance & Regulatory Reform
- Shift from punitive to facilitative governance model.
- Enhances trust-based regulation.
- Concerns
- Risk of weak enforcement if penalties are too lenient.
- Need to ensure accountability and deterrence.
Way Forward
- Balance decriminalisation with regulatory oversight.
- Strengthen compliance monitoring systems.
- Periodically review laws for relevance and effectiveness.
- Build institutional capacity for enforcement.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS Paper 2: Governance, Policy Reforms
- GS Paper 3: Economy, Business Environment
- Prelims: Key legislations, economic reforms
