Hindi, asked by ramadixit68, 1 month ago

what do you mean by federalism?how it is differ from Unitary form of government​

Answers

Answered by logavignesh18
0

Answer:

Answer

In a federal form of government, the central government shares its powers with the various constituent units of the country. For example, in India, power is divided between the government at the Centre and the various State governments.

In a unitary form of government, all the power is exercised by only one government. For example, in Sri Lanka, the national government has all the powe

Answered by shivam49tw
0

Answer:

Federalism is a mixed or compound mode of government that combines a general government (the central or "federal" government) with regional governments (provincial, state, cantonal, territorial or other sub-unit governments) in a single political system

Explanation:

Unitary government has only one level of government whereas a federal government has two or more levels of government. (ii) In unitary government, the sub-units are subordinate to the centre, whereas in a federation, central government cannot encroach on the rights of state governments.

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