Article 19(1)(g) of the Indian Constitution gives every citizen the right to practise any profession, or to carry on any occupation, trade or business.
In simple words, it protects the economic freedom of citizens. A person has the constitutional right to choose their work, profession or business, subject to reasonable restrictions imposed by the State.
This right is available only to citizens of India, not to foreigners.
Scope
Article 19(1)(g) covers a wide range of economic activities.
It includes the right to:
• Practise a profession, such as law, medicine, teaching or accountancy
• Carry on a trade, such as buying and selling goods
• Run a business, such as a shop, factory, company or service enterprise
• Engage in an occupation, such as farming, transport, contract work or self-employment
This right is important because livelihood, dignity and economic independence are closely connected.
However, Article 19(1)(g) does not mean that every person can do any business in any manner without regulation. The State can regulate professions, trades and businesses in public interest.
Reasonable Restrictions
Article 19(6) allows the State to impose reasonable restrictions on Article 19(1)(g).
Such restrictions may be imposed in the interest of the general public. The State may also prescribe professional or technical qualifications for certain professions.
For example, a person cannot practise as a doctor without a medical degree and registration. Similarly, a person cannot practise law without being enrolled as an advocate.
The State can regulate:
• Professional qualifications
• Licensing requirements
• Safety standards
• Public health rules
• Labour welfare conditions
• Environmental regulations
• Market and trade regulations
• Consumer protection norms
So, the right under Article 19(1)(g) is not absolute. It is a regulated freedom.
State Monopoly
Article 19(6) also allows the State to create a monopoly in any trade, business, industry or service.
This means the government can reserve certain activities for itself, either fully or partially, if it is justified in public interest.
For example, historically, sectors like railways, defence production, atomic energy, liquor trade or certain natural resources have been heavily controlled or monopolised by the State.
This provision shows that the Constitution protects private economic freedom, but also allows State control where public interest demands it.
Important Judicial Principles
The Supreme Court has clarified that Article 19(1)(g) protects legitimate professions, trades and businesses. It does not protect activities that are inherently harmful, illegal or immoral.
For example, there is no fundamental right to trade in intoxicating liquor as an ordinary business because liquor is treated as a harmful commodity that can be strictly regulated by the State.
The courts generally examine whether a restriction is reasonable by looking at:
• Purpose of the restriction
• Nature of the business
• Impact on the public
• Proportionality of the restriction
• Whether the restriction is excessive
• Whether less restrictive alternatives exist
A regulation is valid if it protects public interest without destroying the core right unnecessarily.
Importance
Article 19(1)(g) is important because it protects economic liberty and livelihood choices.
It supports:
• Freedom of occupation
• Entrepreneurship
• Self-employment
• Professional independence
• Market participation
• Livelihood security
• Economic democracy
It also helps prevent arbitrary State interference in lawful business and professional activity.
Concerns
The main issue is balancing individual economic freedom with public interest.
Too much regulation can hurt entrepreneurship, small businesses and employment. But too little regulation can harm consumers, workers, environment and public health.
Common concerns include:
• Excessive licensing
• Arbitrary business restrictions
• Disproportionate bans
• Harassment of small traders
• Conflict between livelihood and regulation
• Public health and safety concerns
• Environmental compliance burden
This balance is especially visible in cases involving street vendors, liquor trade, professional regulation, online platforms, environmental restrictions and business licensing.
Link with Livelihood
- Article 19(1)(g) is closely linked with the right to livelihood under Article 21.
- Article 19(1)(g) protects the freedom to choose and carry on lawful work. Article 21 protects life and personal liberty, which courts have interpreted to include livelihood and dignity.
- Together, these provisions strengthen the constitutional protection of work, employment and economic freedom.
Conclusion
Article 19(1)(g) protects the citizen’s right to practise any profession or carry on any lawful occupation, trade or business. But this right is subject to reasonable restrictions under Article 19(6), especially in the interest of public health, safety, morality, professional standards and general public welfare.


