Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar
Pay, perks and performance
For those of you who had not picked up your copies earlier from
the Bengali Market halwai, Justice Pandian, chairman, Fifth Pay
Commission, has now officially made his report available to the
nation, courtesy the finance minister, who is, technically, the
first startled recipient of his recommendations. The recommendations
have, as happens every time, brought to the fore the sectarian
rivalries within the largest biradari in the country -- the army
of its civil servants (who, of course, are so called because they
are rarely civil and never servants).
The Pay Commission, however, is not a commission on administrative
reforms and, therefore, has to take the existing system more or
less for granted, the better to concentrate on what can be done
to make the machine purr a little smoother. It would have been
a little too radical for the Pay Commission to have asked itself
whether the time has not come to throw away the machine and give
ourselves an altogether different system of administration.
Yet, the presentation of the Pay Commission Report does furnish an
occasion for reflection on why the citizens of this country are
so disillusioned with that legacy of British imperialism which,
at Independence, was widely regarded as the most enduring asset
of British rule -- the 'steel frame' of administration.
In 1947, the higher echelons of the civil service were objects
of respect amounting to veneration because they were widely perceived
as honest, just, impartial and dedicated to a cause larger than
themselves; and the lower echelons as efficient and purposive,
if not entirely above a spot of palm-greasing.
Mahatma Gandhi
was almost alone in thinking that paternalistic administration
of the ICS kind was passe and needed to be replaced by self-administered
units of local government so autonomous and self-reliant as to
be called 'village republics'. His assassination on
January 30, 1948, conveniently removed the last road-block on
the way to handing over the destiny of our newly-independent nation
to a Frankenstein's monster, the IAS-led bureaucracy which, with
the malign protection and patronage of our home-grown Frankenstein,
the political classes, has brought us to this pitch of despair
in the 50th year of our Independence.
Politcocracy and babucracy
have together undermined much of what has passed for 50 years
as democracy, Greco-Latin for 'rule by the people
(demos).'
Don't get me wrong. Individual members of the civil services,
in their thousands, are honest, efficient, purposive men and women,
whose personal contribution to decency and good governance provides
more than enough material for a hundred contemporary Philip Masons
to compile admiring profiles in post-Independence administration
to rival Mason's panting paeans of praise to The Men Who Ruled
India as the Platonic philosopher-kings of the British Empire.
But it is these very thousands who would be the first to tell
you from the inside that their residual nobility lies in rising
above the system, not working it.
The Fifth Pay Commission has proceeded on the assumption that
our administration has evolved into a humungous, slothful behemoth
that needs to be made a little leaner and a lot more meaner to
deliver more at less cost.
It has attempted to reconcile this
insight with its other principal insight that for civil servants
to function efficiently, they must be adequately remunerated,
and for them to function honestly their remuneration must go beyond
keeping the wolf from the door to inuring at least those with
a modicum of integrity and ethics from the temptations which the
better-heeled clients of the civil service are more than willing
to place on offer.
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