Arrange the administrative hierarchy from lowest office to highest constitutional authority. (i) Collector (ii) Governor (iii) Chief Secretary (iv) President (v) Clerk

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: (v), (i), (iii), (ii), (iv)

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Administrative and constitutional roles can be ordered by authority level.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Clerk is an entry-level post.
  • Collector is a senior district officer.
  • Chief Secretary is the top state civil servant.
  • Governor is the constitutional head of state (state level).
  • President is the head of state (union level).


Concept / Approach:
Rank offices by span of authority from departmental → district → state executive → state constitutional head → union constitutional head.


Step-by-Step Solution:
1) (v) Clerk.2) (i) Collector.3) (iii) Chief Secretary.4) (ii) Governor.5) (iv) President.


Verification / Alternative check:
Governor must precede President in any ascending order.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Orders placing President before Governor or civil servants after constitutional heads mix levels.


Common Pitfalls:
Confusing elected/appointed roles with administrative ranks.


Final Answer:
(v), (i), (iii), (ii), (iv)

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