Jan Vishwas Bill Withdrawn for Amendments Based on Committee Input

The Union Minister for Commerce and Industry has withdrawn The Jan Vishwas Bill, 2025, from the Lok Sabha to incorporate recommendations from a Select Committee. The bill was designed to decriminalize and rationalize offences across various laws to foster trust-based governance. Its core objectives include reducing the compliance burden on businesses and citizens while alleviating the load on the judiciary. This move is part of ongoing regulatory reforms aimed at achieving 'Minimum Government, Maximum Governance'.

Key Points: Jan Vishwas Bill Withdrawn in Lok Sabha for Revisions

  • Bill withdrawn for amendments
  • Aims to decriminalize minor offences
  • Promotes ease of living and doing business
  • Reduces compliance and judicial burden
2 min read

Jan Vishwas Bill withdrawn from Lok Sabha to incorporate select committee recommendations

The Jan Vishwas Bill, 2025, aimed at decriminalizing minor offences to ease business and living, has been withdrawn from Lok Sabha to incorporate select committee recommendations.

"The endeavour is not only to make lives and businesses easier but also to reduce judicial burden. - Statement of Objects and Reasons"

New Delhi, March 17

Union Minister for Commerce and Industry on Tuesday withdrew The Jan Vishwas Bill, 2025, in the Lok Sabha, to further make certain amendments as were recommended by a Select committee.

The Bill was initially introduced to amend certain enactments for decriminalising and rationalising offences to further enhance trust-based governance for ease of living and doing business, as reported by the Select Committee.

Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal had introduced the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2025 in the lower house of Parliament during the monsoon session of Parliament in 2025.

"The endeavour is not only to make lives and businesses easier but also to reduce judicial burden. Settlement of a large number of issues, by compounding method, adjudication and administrative mechanism, without involving courts, will enable persons to remedy minor contraventions and defaults, sometimes committed unknowingly by them, and save time, energy and resources," the Statement of Objects and Reasons of the Bill had read.

"The cornerstone of democratic governance lies in the Government trusting its own people and institutions. A web of outdated rules and regulations causes trust deficit. It has been the endeavour of the Government to achieve the principle of 'Minimum Government Maximum Governance', redefining the regulatory landscape of the country under the Ease of Living and Ease of Doing Business reforms," the Statement of Objects and Reasons of the Bill further read.

The Jan Vishwas (Amendments of Provisions) Bill, 2025 is a continuation of the regulatory reforms started under the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2023.

The 2025 Bill, which has now been withdrawn, aimed to decriminalise minor offences across various laws to reduce the compliance burden on businesses, promote ease of doing business and ease of living for citizens by rationalising processes by issuing warnings at the first instance of contraventions and imposing penalties for subsequent contraventions. The amendments proposed under this Bill cover a wide range of laws affecting different sectors including agricultural and industrial regulations.

"The goal of Jan Vishwas is to create a more business-friendly environment and promote ease of living by eliminating unnecessary legal hurdles and simplifying regulatory landscape. The initiative underscores India's commitment to creating a predictable, transparent and fair regulatory environment," it further read.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Trust-based governance sounds great on paper, but will it work on the ground? Our system is so used to red tape. Reducing judicial burden is crucial though. Our courts are overburdened with petty cases. Let's see the final amendments.
A
Arjun K
'Minimum Government, Maximum Governance' is the need of the hour. So many small entrepreneurs get harassed for minor paperwork errors. Decriminalisation will encourage more people to start businesses without fear of minor mistakes landing them in legal trouble.
S
Sarah B
While I appreciate the intent for ease of doing business, I hope the amendments don't dilute necessary protections, especially in agricultural regulations. There has to be a balance. Withdrawal for reconsideration shows a responsible legislative process.
V
Vikram M
As someone who runs a small manufacturing unit, this is very welcome news. The compliance burden is unreal. Spending more time with lawyers and CA than on actual production. Issuing warnings first is a sensible, humane approach. Hope it gets passed soon!
K
Karthik V
Continuation from the 2023 Act is good. Shows a long-term vision for regulatory reform. But the real test is implementation. Will the 'administrative mechanism' be fair and quick, or just become another layer of bureaucracy? Time will tell.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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