Distinguish between money bill and ordinary bill in brief 4 to 5 points
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Money Bill 1.Any bill that envisages levy of taxes or some expenditure by the government is called Money Bill.2.Money Bill can originate only in the Lok Sabha and that too by the government. 3.The bill has to be passed by the Lok Sabha only with the consent of the government.4.Rajya Sabha has no power to make any change in the bill passed by the Lok Sabha. But it can only delay the bill for 14 days. Final power remains in the hands of Lok Sabha and government.
Ordinary Bill
1.Those bills in which money is not involved in any way are called Ordinary Bills.
2.Ordinary Bills can originate in any house, either the Lok Sabha or the Rajya Sabha.
3.It has to be passed in both the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha4.If both the houses do not agree, then a joint sitting of the two houses is called under the chairmanship of the speaker of the Lok Sabha and then it is passed or rejected by the majority.
Ordinary Bill
1.Those bills in which money is not involved in any way are called Ordinary Bills.
2.Ordinary Bills can originate in any house, either the Lok Sabha or the Rajya Sabha.
3.It has to be passed in both the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha4.If both the houses do not agree, then a joint sitting of the two houses is called under the chairmanship of the speaker of the Lok Sabha and then it is passed or rejected by the majority.
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A bill deemed to be money bill if it contains “only provisions dealing with imposition, abolition, remission, alteration or regulation of any tax”. An Ordinary Bill can be introduced in any of the Houses of Parliament while money bill can only be introduced in the Lok Sabha.
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