Existing Anti-Corruption Institutional Framework — Lokpal, CVC, CBI, CAG, PCA & Special Courts
This page covers Section 7.9 of Chapter 7 – Probity in Governance from Legacy IAS Academy’s GS4 notes for the UPSC Civil Services Mains Examination. You will learn India’s seven-pillar anti-corruption institutional framework: the Lokpal & Lokayuktas (composition, jurisdiction, powers, and six structural limitations), the Central Vigilance Commission (CVO network, integrity pact, whistleblower protection), the CBI (triple dependency, the “caged parrot” problem, Vineet Narain case), the CAG (three audit functions, Vinod Rai’s tenure, and structural limits), the Prevention of Corruption Act 1988 and its 2018 amendment, and Special Courts. The section concludes with N. Vittal’s Anti-Corruption Calculus — the enforcement formula that explains why institutional design alone does not produce results. PYQs from 2013 to 2019 are mapped throughout.
Existing Anti-Corruption Institutional Framework
India’s anti-corruption architecture rests on a layered system of institutions — some constitutional, some statutory, some executive — each occupying a distinct role in detection, investigation, prosecution, or audit. The architecture is, on paper, comprehensive. What the following sections examine is how these institutions are designed, where they exercise authority, and why the gap between design and performance remains wide.
| Institution | Type | Primary Function | Key Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lokpal | Statutory (2013 Act) | National ombudsman; oversees central public servants | No suo motu powers; prosecution sanction bottleneck |
| Lokayukta | State Statute | State-level ombudsman | Inconsistent design; many lack enforcement teeth |
| CVC | Statutory (2003 Act) | Apex vigilance advisory body; CVO oversight | Advisory-only; no binding prosecution power |
| CBI | Executive (DSPE Act, 1946) | Premier investigation agency; anti-corruption & economic crimes | Dependent on executive for funding, sanction & staffing |
| CAG | Constitutional (Art. 148) | Audit of public expenditure; performance audit | Post-facto; no prosecution power; Parliament dependent |
| PCA, 1988 | Statute (amended 2018) | Criminalise bribery; define public servant offences | Low conviction rate; sanction shield for senior officers |
| Special Courts | Statutory (under PCA) | Fast-track trial of corruption cases | Backlog; no applicability to armed forces; prior sanction required |
1. Lokpal and Lokayuktas
The Lokpal is a multi-member body: one Chairperson and a maximum of eight members. The Chairperson must be a former Chief Justice of India, a former Supreme Court judge, or an eminent person with at least 25 years in anti-corruption work, public administration, vigilance, or law. Of the eight members, at least half must be judicial members; and at least 50% of total members must belong to SC/ST/OBC/Minority categories or be women.
Committee
names
appoints
or age 70
| Covered | Excluded |
|---|---|
| Prime Minister (with carve-outs for national security, international relations, atomic energy) | Statements made in Parliament; votes cast in Parliament |
| Union Ministers; Members of Parliament | State government employees (Lokayuktas have jurisdiction) |
| Groups A, B, C, D officers of Central Government | Judiciary (covered by separate in-house mechanisms) |
| Directors/managers/secretaries of centrally funded/controlled bodies | — |
The Lokpal can superintend and direct the CBI. When it refers a case, the investigating officer cannot be transferred without Lokpal’s approval. Its Inquiry Wing holds the powers of a civil court. The Lokpal can recommend transfer or suspension of a public servant, direct confiscation of assets obtained through corruption, and prevent destruction of records during preliminary inquiry.
complaint
inquiry (60 days)
case found?
CBI / Inquiry Wing
record protection
A sitting IAS officer in a procurement role faces a complaint of awarding a contract at inflated cost. The complainant files a written complaint with the Lokpal. The Inquiry Wing conducts a preliminary inquiry within 60 days. If a prima facie case is established, the Lokpal orders the CBI to investigate and simultaneously freezes the officer’s assets. The structural chokepoint: if this officer holds Joint Secretary rank or above, prosecution sanction from the Central Government is still required before any criminal proceedings can be filed — the very government the officer serves must authorise action against him.
The Anna Hazare-led movement of 2011 was not simply a protest — it was a public articulation of the gap between institutional design and institutional performance. The Jan Lokpal demand emerged from the recognition that existing CVC and CBI structures were insufficiently independent. The Lok Sabha passed the Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act in 2013, but the first Lokpal (Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose) was not appointed until 2019. This six-year gap itself illustrates the principle that institutions without political will behind them remain dormant irrespective of their statutory power.
“What is meant by ‘probity’ in public life? What are the difficulties in practicing it in the present times? How can these difficulties be overcome?”
The question uses ‘difficulties’ to probe structural obstacles — not individual moral failure. A sharp answer would link the selection committee design (Lokpal), the prosecution sanction requirement (PCA/Lokpal), and the CBI’s administrative dependence as systemic barriers to probity, not accidental failures.
2. Central Vigilance Commission (CVC)
The Central Vigilance Commission is India’s apex advisory body for vigilance administration in the Central Government. It was recommended by the Santhanam Committee on Prevention of Corruption (1964) — the first systematic examination of administrative corruption in independent India. For nearly four decades after its creation, the CVC operated only as an executive body. It was the Supreme Court’s direction in Vineet Narain v. Union of India (1997) that compelled Parliament to enact the CVC Act, 2003, conferring statutory status.
The CVC does not conduct investigations itself. Instead, it operates through a network of Chief Vigilance Officers (CVOs) embedded within every ministry, department, PSU, and autonomous body. The CVO is simultaneously the CVC’s distant arm and the department’s internal conscience-keeper. When a corruption complaint arrives, the CVC can route it to the concerned CVO for preliminary inquiry, or directly to the CBI for investigation. The CVC can also recommend the course of action — but cannot compel the departmental authority to follow that recommendation.
received
routes to CVO
inquiry
action
decides (advisory)
A government employee wishing to expose corruption can send a sealed complaint marked “Complaint under Public Interest Disclosure” directly to the CVC, including their name and address. The CVC will protect the informant’s identity while ordering an inquiry. Anonymous complaints are not entertained — a deliberate design choice to prevent frivolous or malicious complaints while still shielding genuine whistleblowers.
The CVC introduced the Integrity Pact for public procurement: a pre-bid agreement between the government buyer and all bidders committing that no bribes will be paid or accepted through the entire procurement process. An Independent External Monitor (IEM) — typically a retired senior official — oversees compliance. This mechanism attacks the nexus between procurement officers and contractors, which is among the most persistent sites of public sector corruption. In 2013, DoPT extended CVC oversight to multi-state cooperative societies — IFFCO, NAFED, KRIBHCO — by mandating CVOs in each, closing a gap where cooperative bodies receiving Central funding had escaped vigilance scrutiny.
The CVC’s advisory-only role is its central constraint. Recommendations on punishment can be rejected by the department with no formal accountability. The CVC can observe, record, and advise — but it cannot compel.
The CVC covers only Union Government employees. State government employees fall under State Vigilance Commissions, which vary enormously in capacity, independence, and resourcing — many function as extensions of the executive they are supposed to check.
3. Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI)
The CBI is India’s premier investigative agency for anti-corruption and complex criminal matters. It draws its legal authority from the Delhi Special Police Establishment (DSPE) Act, 1946 — a colonial-era statute — and operates administratively under the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT). This dual placement — under DoPT for administration, under CVC for anti-corruption supervision, and potentially under Lokpal when directed — creates structural tensions that have repeatedly compromised its functioning.
What triggered the case: The Hawala scandal involved payments to politicians and senior officials. The CBI, it was alleged, was going slow on investigation because its targets were politically powerful. Petitioners argued the CBI was not free to follow evidence wherever it led.
What the Supreme Court directed: The CBI must not be subjected to political interference. The CBI Director must have a fixed tenure of two years. Investigation must be allowed to proceed wherever evidence leads — including to Cabinet Ministers and senior bureaucrats. This judgment also directed the CVC to be given statutory status — achieved through the CVC Act, 2003.
The examiner’s interest: This case is both a landmark on institutional independence and a demonstration of judicial activism expanding horizontal accountability. Use it to answer questions on probity, institutional integrity, and the limits of executive control over investigative agencies.
The Supreme Court’s phrase — the CBI as a “caged parrot speaking in its master’s voice” — captures the structural contradiction precisely. An agency that depends on the executive for funding, staffing (IPS officers on deputation), and prosecution sanction will inevitably face pressure to protect powerful members of that executive. The Coalgate case (2012–2013) illustrated this acutely: the CBI was simultaneously investigating coal block allocations and reporting its investigation status to the government through its law officer — a structural conflict of interest the Court sharply criticised.
| Dependency | Nature of Control | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Administrative | DoPT controls staffing, funding, infrastructure | Executive can reward cooperative officers and transfer uncooperative ones |
| Supervisory | CVC supervises anti-corruption operations | Coordination friction; CBI must balance two oversight bodies |
| Prosecutorial | Prosecution sanction from Central/State Govt for senior officials | Investigation complete; case buried by withholding sanction |
The CBI requires state government consent before investigating cases within a state, except for Central Government employees. Several states — Kerala, West Bengal, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Mizoram, Maharashtra, and Punjab at various points — have withdrawn general consent, effectively blocking CBI from entering their territory for investigation. This has created jurisdictional voids that accused persons exploit to evade central-level scrutiny.
Situation: A CBI Superintendent of Investigation receives an order from the Director to submit an interim status report on a high-profile case to the DoPT Joint Secretary handling CBI administration — before the investigation is complete. He understands that sharing investigative details risks alerting the accused, who has connections in the ministry.
The right answer is the second — but the officer risks retaliatory transfer. This is precisely why fixed tenure protection for the CBI Director matters.
“What does ‘accountability’ mean in the context of public service? What measures can be adopted to ensure individual and collective accountability of public servants?”
The question is testing whether the candidate understands horizontal accountability through institutions (CAG, CVC, CBI, Lokpal) as distinct from vertical accountability (elections). The CBI’s structural dependency on the executive is the clearest example of how horizontal accountability mechanisms can be captured by the very actors they are supposed to check.
4. Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG)
The CAG is established by Article 148 of the Constitution and represents horizontal accountability at its purest — a constitutional institution checking whether the executive has used public money as Parliament authorised. The CAG audits all expenditure from the Consolidated Fund of India and equivalent state funds, then reports findings to Parliament through the Public Accounts Committee (PAC).
Vinod Rai’s tenure demonstrated that statutory authority is insufficient without the moral courage to exercise it. Two audits transformed the public understanding of the CAG’s institutional role:
| Audit | Finding | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| 2G Spectrum Allocation (2010) | Spectrum allotted at 2001 prices despite massive value increase; notional loss estimated at ~₹1.76 lakh crore | Supreme Court cancelled 122 licences (2012); sparked national debate on natural resource allocation |
| Coalgate (2012) | Coal blocks allocated via non-competitive screening committee; notional gain to allottees at public expense | CBI investigation; Supreme Court monitored probe; triggered competitive auction system |
Rai’s self-description — “The CAG is the watchdog of public finance. A watchdog that doesn’t bark is useless” — encodes a theory of institutional behaviour: constitutional bodies derive authority from both their statute and their willingness to act on it. His further observation that the CAG is “accountable not to teachers or family but to yourself” locates the deepest source of integrity in internalised values.
Post-facto audit: The CAG cannot prevent expenditure in real time. By the time it flags an irregularity, contracts have been signed, money spent, and assets dissipated. The Coalgate irregularities occurred between 2005 and 2009; the audit report came in 2012.
Parliamentary dependence: Audit reports go to the PAC. PAC proceedings are slow, not legally binding, and dependent on Parliament’s political will to act.
No prosecution power: The CAG flags irregularities. Action depends on CBI, CVC, or courts — bodies with their own delays and political pressures.
Methodological contestation: The “notional loss” methodology in 2G was heavily disputed — a recognition that performance audit conclusions involve estimation uncertainty, which opponents use to discredit findings.
“Discuss the role of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India in containing financial irregularities and corruption at the highest levels of financial administration.”
This question tests whether you understand the CAG as both a technical audit body and an institutional actor in horizontal accountability. A high-scoring answer should cover: constitutional basis, three audit types, performance audit as the most powerful tool, Vinod Rai’s tenure as a case study of institutional courage, and the structural limitations (post-facto, no prosecution, PAC dependence).
5. Prevention of Corruption Act (PCA), 1988
The PCA, 1988 is the primary statute criminalising bribery and public servant misconduct. Its 2018 amendment attempted to balance two competing concerns simultaneously: ensuring stringent action against corruption while preventing administrative paralysis driven by fear of arbitrary prosecution. The tension between these two goals is precisely what makes the PCA a rich case study for GS4 ethics questions.
| Offence | Punishment |
|---|---|
| Public servant taking or demanding a bribe for official work | Min. 6 months; Max. 5 years + fine |
| Middlemen demanding bribes on behalf of public servants | Min. 6 months; Max. 5 years + fine |
| Criminal misconduct — disproportionate assets (DA) | Min. 1 year; Max. 7 years + fine |
| Criminal misconduct — misappropriation of entrusted property | Min. 1 year; Max. 7 years + fine |
| Provision | Before 2018 | After 2018 Amendment |
|---|---|---|
| Prior approval for investigation | Not required in most cases | Mandatory before investigating any public servant; exempted only if caught red-handed |
| Criminal misconduct scope | Multiple provisions — some vaguely worded | Narrowed to two: misappropriation of entrusted property + disproportionate assets |
| Bribe-giving | Not criminalised as a primary offence | Criminalised — unless compelled and reported to law enforcement within 7 days |
The prior approval requirement is the most debated provision of the 2018 amendment. Those who support it argue it protects honest officers from harassment prosecutions launched for political or personal reasons. Those who oppose it argue it effectively immunises powerful bureaucrats by placing the sanction decision with the executive that the officer serves. A strong GS4 answer will name this conflict explicitly rather than treating the amendment as straightforwardly protective or straightforwardly obstructive. The right frame: it is a trade-off between two genuine goods — protection of integrity and protection of independence.
“The recent amendments to the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 strike a balance between enforcement overzealousness and the need for stringent action against corrupt public servants. Discuss.”
A direct question on this amendment. The UPSC is testing whether you can argue both sides of a legislative trade-off — not defend one side mechanically. Structure: (1) problem the amendment addressed, (2) changes made, (3) their protective rationale, (4) their risk of providing a shield to the corrupt, (5) reform suggestions to preserve the balance.
Conviction rates under the PCA remain extremely low — approximately 6% of criminal cases in India, with PCA cases performing no better. Cases drag for 10–25 years. The prosecution sanction requirement for Joint Secretaries and above effectively immunises senior bureaucrats, since governments routinely delay or withhold sanction. N. Vittal, the former Chief Vigilance Commissioner, identified the mechanism precisely: without effective enforcement, the law itself becomes a symbol of impunity rather than deterrence.
When all three are low, the equation collapses — corruption persists not despite the law but through its non-enforcement.
6. Special Courts / Judges for Anti-Corruption Cases
The PCA, 1988 empowers both Union and State governments to designate Special Judges to try anti-corruption offences. The designation as “special” confers procedural advantages designed to accelerate proceedings.
| Power | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Summary Trial | Court need not examine every witness and document before deciding guilt — the “taarikh pe taarikh” antidote |
| Approver / Accomplice Immunity | Special Judge can grant leniency to a bribe-giver or accomplice who turns approver and testifies against the main accused — critical where documentary evidence is destroyed |
| Expedited Cognisance | Can take cognisance directly of offences, bypassing committal proceedings that slow ordinary sessions courts |
The armed forces exclusion is a significant gap given documented instances of corruption in defence procurement and supply chains.
A District Magistrate overseeing a welfare scheme notices a sub-inspector demanding bribes from beneficiaries. The sub-inspector is caught in a trap laid with CVC’s assistance. The chargesheet goes to the Special Court. A middleman accomplice turns approver after the Special Judge grants leniency. Prosecution proceeds within a year. This is the designed sequence.
In practice: the Special Court faces 300 pending cases. The approver’s testimony is challenged on procedural grounds. The officer’s lawyer files a revision petition against the sanction order. The case enters the regular courts calendar. The sub-inspector retires with pension before the trial concludes. The governance challenge is not institutional absence — it is the gap between institutional design and institutional capacity.
Key Thinkers for This Section
Kautilya’s observation — that just as it is impossible not to taste honey or poison when it is on the tip of the tongue, so it is impossible for a government servant not to eat up, at least a bit, of the king’s revenue — is neither cynical nor defeatist. It is a structural argument: corruption is not primarily a moral failure of individuals, but an inevitable outcome of placing persons near resources without adequate external checks. Kautilya’s prescription — cross-checking officials through surprise inspections, spy networks, and rotational postings — prefigures modern institutional design theory. For UPSC, Kautilya is best used when answering questions about why institutions are necessary and why individual virtue alone is insufficient to contain corruption.
Vittal’s central argument — that corruption persists because the probability of detection is low, conviction lower still, and actual punishment lowest of all — converts an abstract governance problem into a testable diagnostic. His formula is directly applicable to critiquing the performance gap in institutions like the Lokpal, CVC, and Special Courts: each performs weakly on at least one of the three variables. Vittal also argued that without effective enforcement, the law itself becomes a certificate of impunity rather than deterrence — a phrase worth remembering for answer-writing.
Rai’s significance lies not in what the CAG legally can do — the audit mandate existed before him — but in the choice he made to exercise that mandate fully despite government pressure. His tenure demonstrates that institutional independence is an active, not passive, condition: it must be claimed and defended through individual decisions that carry personal risk. His statement that the CAG is accountable not to teachers or family but to yourself locates the deepest layer of integrity in internalised values rather than external compulsion. This connects directly to GS4’s larger theme: character is the foundation that makes institutions work.
Lokpal operationalisation (PIB, 2019–2023): Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose was appointed India’s first Lokpal in March 2019. As of 2023, the Lokpal has registered and processed several complaints but has not yet completed a full prosecution cycle in a high-profile case — revealing the gap between institutional constitution and institutional effectiveness.
PCA Amendment 2018 — Supreme Court interpretation (2023): In Neeraj Dutta v. State (Govt. of NCT of Delhi) (2023), a Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court clarified the scope of the prior sanction requirement under the amended PCA, holding that sanction is not required when the accused is caught accepting a bribe in a trap case — consistent with the in-flagrante exemption written into the 2018 amendment.
States withdrawing CBI general consent (PIB/PRS, 2018–2023): Multiple states — including Maharashtra, West Bengal, Kerala, Rajasthan, and Jharkhand — withdrew general consent for CBI investigations, citing federalism concerns and alleging misuse of the agency. PRS Legislative Research has documented this as a growing trend with implications for the CBI’s ability to investigate cross-border economic crimes.
“Effective utilization of public funds is crucial to meet development goals. Critically examine the reasons for under-utilization and mis-utilization of public funds and their implications.” (2019)
Deploy CAG’s performance audit function here — it directly monitors whether funds achieved intended outcomes. The gap between regularity audit (rules followed) and performance audit (outcomes achieved) frames why mis-utilisation persists even in technically compliant expenditure.
“Corruption causes misuse of government treasury, administrative inefficiency and obstruction in the path of national development.” Examine Kautilya’s views. (2016)
Two-part demand: first, use Kautilya to argue that corruption is structural (not moral) — then link Arthashastra prescriptions to modern equivalents: CVO as inspector, CBI as spy network, PCA as penal deterrent. Avoid paraphrasing Kautilya; argue through his framework.
- Describing the Lokpal structure without addressing its limitations — UPSC wants critique, not description
- Confusing CVC’s advisory role with a binding enforcement power — the CVC recommends; the department decides
- Treating the 2018 PCA amendment as purely protective — it creates a genuine prosecution shield for senior officers; state the trade-off explicitly
- Using CAG as an audit example without noting its post-facto limitation — flags irregularity after the damage is done
- Listing institutions without connecting them: CVC → CBI → Special Court is a sequence, not a list of separate bodies
Questions on anti-corruption institutions carry three sub-demands the examiner expects but rarely states:
A candidate who offers only (1) writes a descriptive answer. Only (1) + (2) writes an analytical one. (1) + (2) + (3) with a thinker and a specific case writes a GS4 answer that scores in the 13–15 range.


