The Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Bill which was earlier reported as a financial bill, is now categorised as a normal bill by the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs.
Types of Financial Bill |
||
Money Bill |
Article 110 |
|
Financial Bill I |
Article 117(1) |
|
Finance Bill II |
Article 117(3) |
All money bills are financial bills, but not all financial bills are money bills.
Features |
Money Bill |
Financial Bill |
Constitutional Provision |
Article 110 |
Article 117 |
Introduced by |
Introduced only by a minister |
Introduced either by a minister or by a private member |
Approval of President |
Requires prior recommendation before introduction Exemption- Amendments related to reduction or abolition of any tax |
No prior recommendation of the President is required |
Introduction |
Only in Lok Sabha |
Finance I bills are introduced in Lok Sabha while Finance II bills can be introduced in any of the two houses |
Rajya Sabha |
Rajya Sabha cannot amend or reject, it should return the bill with or without recommendations which may be accepted or rejected by the Lok Sabha |
Rajya Sabha can amend it |
Time period for Rajya Sabha |
Can be detained by the Rajya Sabha for a maximum period of 14 days only. |
Can be detained by the for a maximum period of 6 months. |
Speaker’s endorsement |
Requires the certification of Speaker |
Doesn’t require Speaker’s certification |
Joint sitting |
No provision for joint sitting |
Has a provision for joint sitting of Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha |
President’s assent |
He/She can either give assent or withhold it but cannot return the bill |
He/She can give assent, return the bill or either withhold the bill |
References