Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar
The only way to place integrity above the threshold of temptation
is to pay higher remuneration
The British achieved these twin aims by having a small cadre of
civil servants with the best comparable service conditions in
any alternative employment of similar status and responsibility.
B K Nehru, now ell into his eighties, was telling me the other
day that as an ICS under-secretary, with less than a decade of
service under his belt, he lived in a mansion on Thyagaraja Marg.
Just getting past the gate up and the driveway would have deterred
the most persistent bribe-giver. And who but the really desperate
could have bribed a secretary to the British Government of India
whose take-home pay of Rs 4,000 in 1946 gave him a purchasing
power in white money which, at today's rates of inflation and
taxes, would require a gross pay-packet before taxes of around
Rs 400,000 per month?
The Pay Commission proposes to pay him
Rs 26,000. That is what the rawest recruit could pick up in his
first month of work at the neighbourhood multinational. Yet, the
Pandian gift is 250 per cent higher then the present secretary's
median pay of Rs 8,000. The British could afford it because there
were no more than eight secretaries to the Government of India
at Independence. Today, there are 92! We, therefore, pay peanuts
-- and get monkeys.
The Pay Commission knows this, but can suggest little more than
lubricating the machine because it is obliged to take as given
the paternalistic administration of the ICS model -- even though,
through modular expansion, we now have an administrative cadre
some one hundred times larger than the one the British left us.
The answer does not lie in restraining or even reversing the exponential
rate of modular expansion, desirable as this would be in itself.
The root answer lies in changing the module.
To change the module, we need first to make the IAS a secretariat
service and exclude IAS officers from not only district and sub-district
administrative posts but also non-administrative assignments in
public sector management as well as sinecures and shift
to contract employment for most specialisations. This will enable
us to sharply reduce recruitment to the IAS and thus enable a
hiking of basic IAS salaries to levels comparable with what similarly
placed executives get in the private sector.
We should combine
this with a decisive step towards computerised paperless record-keeping
and file-processing to prune the size of the supporting staff.
Larger employment goes with lower remuneration; the only way to
place integrity above the threshold of temptation (at least for
the normally honest person) is to pay higher per-capita remuneration.
This, of course, we can afford to do only if the size of the cadre
is sliced to the bare minimum. This module would then need to
be replicated in the equivalent generalist state civil services.
A well-paid IAS/PCS officer would, of course, be a more difficult
bull's eye for pecuniary targeting -- but s/he remains helplessly
vulnerable to the worst threat in the politician's armoury, the
threat of transfer. The transformation of the IAS into a secretariat
service has the inestimable advantage of protecting the officer
from the threat of disruption to his children's education and
family life which, more than illegitimate financial bonuses, has
emerged as the instrument of coercion in the politician-bureaucrat
relationship.
T N Seshan, in his memoirs, tells the instructive
tale of how three decades ago the only punishment his chief minister
could inflict on him for not carrying out improper orders was
his transfer from industry to agriculture. This involved no more
disruption of his personal life than pressing a different button
when he got into the lift in the morning.
And thus a messiah was
born -- who might have been stillborn if, as in contemporary UP
of Bihar or, indeed, contemporary Tamil Nadu, he found himself
shuttled for his probity from Vellore to Tirunelveli, out to Bondinayakanallur
and then to Vedaranyam -- all in a mere 12 months. We could institutionalise
such protection from arbitrary transfer by making secretariat
services of the central and state civil services.
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