Page:White Paper on Indian States (1950).pdf/78

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PART VIII

Consolidation

162. The benefits that the people of the States will derive from the administrative integration of States either in the form of their merger into larger units or their consolidation into sizeable units, are manifold. The slenderness of the resources of small units, most of them hardly larger than estates but enjoying varying degrees of sovereignty, and their general aversion to neighbourly co-operation, put it beyond the power of their Rulers to give their subjects the advantages of good and progressive government. Existence of a large number of small units led to unnecessary multiplication of governing agencies which necessitated the maintenance of numerous ornamental and dignified institutions. Most of these States could never provide efficient services or maintain anything like modern standards of administration; continuance of separate governmental institutions in such States led only to the dissipation of national wealth. The integration of these units will enable them to pool their resources for the provision of adequate administrative services over reasonable groups or tracts for the general benefit of the people. It will also make it possible to provide adequate social services and modern amenities to the people of these States, which were beyond their resources as separate small units.

163. Because of the inadequacy of resources and the jurisdictional changes, communications in most of the small States have been in a very primitive condition. Internal trade was rendered difficult by the export, import and other duties which the various States levied. The administration of justice and maintenance of law and order were greatly handicapped because of the administrative and political fragmentation resulting from the existence of a large number of small States. Each of these States had its own laws and taxation structure, and the bewildering multiplicity of their revenue and other systems ruled out any kind of constitutional and administrative uniformity. These conditions encouraged extensive smuggling, black-marketing, crime and other anti-social activities. In such a set-up any kind of co-ordinated development, opening up of economic potentialities or any form of real progress was hardly possible. The administrative integration of States has solved all these perplexing political and administrative problems. In the new set-up there should be no room for special privileges of classes, immunities from taxation, judicial and quasi-judicial privileges, trade monopolies, and other feudal practices.

164. Thus from the point of view of good government, popular welfare and national economy, the administrative integration of States provides,

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