A. Not accountable to the central or state governments
B. Accountable to the central or state governments within the limits prescribed by the statute
C. Fully accountable to the central or state governments
D. Accountable only to the local representatives
State of Local Govt
State of Local Govt
A. By formulating their budgets
B. Through their power to approve or reject the bye laws, schemes and resolutions of local bodies
C. Recruiting all the official of the local bodies
D. Through none of the above methods
A. Through provision of advice in technical and specialized fields
B. Through inspections
C. Enactment of budgets of local bodies
D. Through grants in aid
A. Ensuring that they are discharging their obligations within the limits of the statute
B. Prevention of undue interference by the executive in the working of local bodies
C. Ensuring non-intervention by political parties in local affairs
D. None of the above
A. Can raise loans on their own
B. Cannot raise loans
C. Can raise loans only with the prior sanction of the state
D. None of the above
A. Increasingly independent of the state government
B. Increasingly dependent on the state government
C. Completely sovereign
D. None of the above
A. Improved means of transport and communication
B. Growing tendency towards provision of uniform administration
C. Tendency on the part of state government, like any other government, to increase its powers
D. All the above factors
A. Devolution of governmental duties
B. Decentralisation of administration
C. Administrative deconcentration
D. Diversification of governmental organs
A. Lord Canning
B. Raja Rammohan Roy
C. Lord Rippon
D. Lord Mountbatten
A. The lowest units of local government
B. The highest units of local government
C. Not units of local government
D. None of These