Concept:A Money Bill, defined under Article 110, gives the Lok Sabha (or State Legislative Assembly) the final authority. The upper house (Rajya Sabha or Legislative Council) can only recommend changes, not amend or reject it.
Explanation:The Rajya Sabha receives a Money Bill passed by the Lok Sabha. It has 14 days to give recommendations. It cannot amend or reject the bill.
The Lok Sabha may accept or reject any recommendation. If the Rajya Sabha does nothing within 14 days, the bill is deemed passed in its original form.
In states with a bicameral legislature, the Legislative Council has the same limited role: only recommend changes within 14 days. The Legislative Assembly decides finally.
Option A is wrong because the Rajya Sabha does not have to approve; it can only recommend.
Option B is wrong because the Council cannot amend, only recommend.
Option C is wrong because the upper house does not have equal authority.
Thus, the correct description is that both Rajya Sabha and State Councils may only recommend changes within 14 days.
Answer:Option D: Rajya Sabha and State Councils may only recommend changes within 14 days.