SSC CGL Tier-II Paper-III 2026 — Finance & Economics Syllabus, Pattern, Strategy
Paper-III is the new Tier-II paper introduced in CGL 2026 exclusively for candidates who opt for Assistant Audit Officer or Assistant Accounts Officer posts. It covers Finance & Accounts and Economics & Governance across 100 questions, 200 marks, and 120 minutes — with 0.5 negative marking.
Paper-III pattern
Total Questions
100
Total Marks
200
Duration
120 minutes
Negative Marking
0.5 per wrong answer
Part A: Finance & Accounts
40 questions · 80 marks
- Financial Accounting — concepts, conventions, and principles
- Accounting of Sole Proprietorships, Partnerships, Companies
- Company law basics — share capital, debentures, final accounts
- Rectification of errors, trial balance, depreciation, provisions
- Budgetary control and internal audit concepts
Part B: Economics & Governance
60 questions · 120 marks
- Comptroller and Auditor General of India — constitutional provisions, functions
- Finance Commission — composition, role, terms of reference
- Theory of demand and supply, price elasticity, consumer behaviour
- Indian economy — GDP, inflation, monetary and fiscal policy
- Economic planning — NITI Aayog, five-year plans, SDGs
- Budget — Union budget process, capital vs. revenue expenditure
- Capital market — SEBI, stock exchanges, corporate bonds
Preparation strategy
- 1Part B (Economics) carries 60 marks vs. Part A (40 marks) — allocate prep time proportionally: 60% on Economics.
- 2C&AG and Finance Commission questions are almost certain — these are high-yield topics for guaranteed marks.
- 3Part A accounting questions are mechanical — if you're a B.Com student, Part A should be near-full marks with revision only.
- 4Sectional timer applies: Paper-III is one single timed block (120 min for 100 Qs) — no intra-paper timer per part.
- 5Negative marking is 0.5 per wrong answer — attempt all questions you know; avoid guessing on economics calculations.
Recommended books
NCERT Class 11 & 12 Accountancy (Parts 1 & 2)
Covers Part A fundamentals — double entry, final accounts, partnership, company accounts.
NCERT Class 11 & 12 Economics (Parts 1 & 2)
Covers Part B micro and macro economics from first principles.
Indian Economy — Ramesh Singh (McGraw Hill)
Comprehensive coverage of Indian economy topics: GDP, inflation, monetary policy, banking, fiscal policy, and recent developments. Widely used for UPSC CSE Prelims — same topics tested in Paper-III.
Indian Polity — M. Laxmikanth
C&AG's constitutional provisions, Finance Commission, and audit-related governance questions are covered in Laxmikanth. Especially chapters on constitutional bodies.
Sample questions
Authored sample stubs — representative of the style and level expected in Paper-III.
Which of the following accounting concepts requires that a business should be assumed to be continuing its operations indefinitely?
- A.Matching Concept
- B.Going Concern Concept✓ Correct
- C.Accrual Concept
- D.Prudence Concept
Explanation
The Going Concern Concept assumes the business will continue operations for the foreseeable future, justifying carrying assets at historical cost rather than liquidation value.
In a partnership firm, the interest on partners' capitals is charged to — in the absence of a partnership deed.
- A.Profit & Loss Account at 6% p.a.
- B.Profit & Loss Account at 12% p.a.
- C.No interest is allowed in the absence of a partnership deed✓ Correct
- D.Partners' Capital Account at the bank rate
Explanation
Under the Indian Partnership Act 1932, in the absence of a partnership deed, no interest is allowed on capital. The Act provides a default framework that denies interest on capital unless expressly agreed.
Under the Written-Down Value (WDV) method, depreciation in later years compared to earlier years is —
- A.Higher
- B.Lower✓ Correct
- C.Equal
- D.Zero, as assets are fully depreciated
Explanation
Under WDV, depreciation is charged as a fixed % of the opening book value each year. Since book value decreases each year, the absolute amount of depreciation also decreases — so later years have lower depreciation than earlier years.
The Comptroller and Auditor General of India is appointed by —
- A.The Parliament of India by a resolution
- B.The President of India✓ Correct
- C.The Council of Ministers on the recommendation of the Prime Minister
- D.The Supreme Court of India
Explanation
Article 148 of the Constitution provides that C&AG is appointed by the President of India. Removal requires an address by each House of Parliament — the same procedure as for a Supreme Court judge, ensuring independence.
Which of the following is NOT a quantitative instrument of monetary policy used by the Reserve Bank of India?
- A.Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR)
- B.Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR)
- C.Moral Suasion✓ Correct
- D.Repo Rate
Explanation
Moral Suasion is a qualitative (selective) credit control instrument — the RBI persuades or advises banks without a formal directive. CRR, SLR, and Repo Rate are quantitative tools that directly affect the volume of credit.