Electoral Bonds Can Be Sold for 15 Extra Days During State Elections
26-08-2023
12:21 PM
1 min read
What’s in today’s article:
- Electoral Bonds (About, how it works, benefits, criticism, etc.)
Why in news?
- The department of economic affairs amended the electoral bonds scheme to allow their sale for 15 extra days during the year of general elections to the legislative assembly of states and Union territories with legislature.
- So far, it was sold four times a year (in January, April, July and October) for 10 days as notified by the government.
- With the latest change, 15 additional days will be provided in the years that have assembly elections, too.
Electoral Bond (EB)
- An electoral bond is a bearer instrument, like a promissory note, that is payable tothe bearer on demand to donate their contributions to political parties.
- Eligibility:
- Only political parties registered under Section 29A of the Representation of thePeople Act, 1951 and which secured not less than 1% of votes polled in the last general electionto the House of the People or the Legislative Assembly of the State, are eligible to receive electoral bonds.
- The electoral bond scheme was launched by the Union government in 2018.
- According to data available from SBI, as of August 2022, donations to political parties through electoral bonds (EBs) have crossed the Rs 10,000-crore mark.
Working
- A citizen of India or a body incorporated in India is eligible to purchase the bond.
- EBs are issued/purchased for any value, in multiples of Rs 1,000, Rs 10,000, Rs 1,00,000, Rs 10,00,000 and Rs 1,00,00,000 from the specified branches of the State Bank of India (SBI).
- SBI is the only bank authorised to sell these bonds.
- Anonymous cash donations were capped at Rs 2,000.
- EBs have a life of only 15 days during which it can be used for making donation only to the registered political parties.
- The bonds shall be available for purchase for a period of 10 days each in the months of January, April, July and October as may be specified by the Central Government.
- The bond can be encashed by an eligible political party only through a designated bank account with the authorised bank.
- The political parties have to disclose the amount to the Election Commission.
Rationale behind the introduction of EB
- EBs were introduced to ensure that all the donations made to a party would be accounted for in the balance sheets without exposing the donor details to the public.
- The donor's name is not mentioned on the bond.
- Donors who contribute less than Rs 20,000 to political parties through purchase of electoral bonds need not provide their identity details such as PAN, etc.
- The Central government said that electoral bonds would keep a tab on the use of black money for funding elections
- In the absence of electoral bonds, donors would have no option but to donate by cash after siphoning off money from their businesses.
Criticism:
- The central criticism of the electoral bonds scheme is that it does the exact opposite of what it was meant to do: bring transparency to election funding.
- For example, critics argue that the anonymity of electoral bonds is only for the broader public and opposition parties.
- The fact that such bonds are sold via a government-owned bank (SBI) leaves the door open for the government to know exactly who is funding its opponents.
- This, in turn, allows the possibility for the government of the day to either extort money, especially from the big companies, or victimise them for not funding the ruling party.
- Hence, electoral bonds provide an unfair advantage to the party in power.
- No upper limit on funding –
- Before the electoral bonds scheme was announced, there was a cap on how much a company could donate to a political party: 7.5 per cent of the average net profits of a company in the preceding three years.
- However, the government amended the Companies Act 2013 to remove this limit, opening the doors to unlimited funding by corporate India.