Nepal’s Cabinet approved four decisions at its meeting on Wednesday, the most significant being the Nepal Government Functions Allocation Regulations 2083, a foundational administrative instrument that formally defines ministerial portfolios and the distribution of government responsibilities across the executive.
Communications and Information Technology Minister Dr Bikram Timalsina announced the decisions following the meeting convened by Prime Minister Balendra Shah. Along with the functions regulations, the Cabinet approved amendments to the Electronic Governance Commission Formation and Operation Order 2079.
The Government Functions Allocation Regulations is among the most consequential routine instruments of executive governance. It determines which ministry handles which function, providing the legal basis for inter-agency coordination and accountability. The approval of an updated version aligned with the 2083 fiscal year is a signal that the RSP government is reconfiguring the administrative framework to reflect its own priorities, including a declared focus on digital governance, anti-corruption, and bureaucratic reform.
The amendment to the Electronic Governance Commission order is separately notable. The commission coordinates the government’s digital governance agenda, and changes to its mandate will shape how the administration pursues its stated ambition of establishing Nepal as a technology-driven state, a pledge prominently featured in the government’s 100-point reform agenda and reiterated in this week’s policy and programme address to Parliament.
New cabinet decisions come as Parliament is in the middle of its budget session. The government has faced criticism from opposition parties for having issued eight ordinances while Parliament was suspended, rather than legislating through the House. The approval of the functions regulations through the Cabinet, a standard administrative process, is unlikely to attract the same criticism, but opposition lawmakers are expected to scrutinise whether the new framework dilutes the powers of Parliament and provincial governments in favour of the executive.