The present Lok Sabha witnessed a "general decline" in the number of sitting days, but spent 32 percent of its time on legislative business, which was higher than the average of previous Houses, a think tank said on Wednesday.
NSE
During the 16th Lok Sabha, 180 bills were passed and 45 ordinances promulgated.
Some of the major issues discussed in Parliament were the agrarian crisis in the country, inflation and various natural calamities.
The 16th Lok Sabha worked for a total of 1,615 hours, 20 per cent more than the 15th Lok Sabha when the UPA was in power. However, this was 40 percent lower than the average of all full term Lok Sabhas, which is 2,689 hours.
According to data complied by PRS Legislative Research, the present Lok Sabha during its various sessions between June, 2014 and February this year sat for 331 days. On average, past full term Lok Sabhas sat for 468 days.
Issues like the Andhra Pradesh reorganisation law, Rafale jet deal, alleged misuse of investigative agencies, economic offenders, Cauvery water dispute were raised by the opposition in both the Houses, causing disruptions.
Wednesday was the last day of the Budget session, the last session of the NDA government ahead of Lok Sabha elections due this summer.
This Lok Sabha lost 16 percent of its scheduled time to disruptions, better than the 15th Lok Sabha which lost 37 percent of its time. But it fared badly to the 14th Lok Sabha which lost only 13% of its time to disruptions, the think tank said.
According to Parliamentary Affairs Minister Narendra Singh Tomar, the present Lok Sabha passed 205 bills and the productivity was 85 percent.
For Rajya Sabha, number of sittings were 329, and it passed 154 bills. The productivity was 68 per cent, Tomar said.
The productivity of Lok Sabha was 89 percent and 8 percent for Rajya Sabha in Budget session which ended Wednesday. The January 31 to February 13 session had 10 sittings.
According to PRS, Rajya Sabha lost 36 per cent of its scheduled time during the tenure of the 16th Lok Sabha. In the 15th and 14th Lok Sabhas, it lost 32 per cent and 14 per cent of its scheduled time, respectively.
Compared to the first Lok Sabha, later ones spent less proportion of time on legislative business.
This Lok Sabha spent 32 percent of its time on legislative business, higher than the average of other Lok Sabhas, which was 25 percent.
The 16th Lok Sabha spent 13 percent of its time on question hour, 10 percent on short duration discussions, and 0.7 percent on calling attention motions.
In the 16th Lok Sabha, a no-confidence motion was moved against the government and discussed in the Monsoon Session of 2018.
This was the 27th time a no-confidence motion was discussed since the first Lok Sabha. It was discussed for 11 hours 46 minutes and was defeated.
According to the government, 180 bills were passed in the past five years.
The data said, 32 per cent of the bills were discussed for more than three hours in Lok Sabha. This is higher than the previous two Lok Sabhas (22 percent and 14 percent in the 15th and 14th Lok Sabha respectively).
Bills passed within 30 minutes have decreased significantly from 26 percent in the 15th Lok Sabha to 6 percent in the 16th Lok Sabha.
Although more bills have been discussed for longer, this Lok Sabha has referred a significantly lower proportion of bills to standing committees for scrutiny.
In the 16th Lok Sabha, 25 percent of the bills introduced were referred to standing committees, much lower than 71 percent and 60 percent in
the 15th and 14th Lok Sabha respectively, the data said.
First Published:Feb 13, 2019 8:55 PM IST