who would have thought that the economist, while arguing that india's
biggest problem is its bureaucracy, would write a paean to the
overworked babu?

-rishab


India's civil service

Battling the babu raj
Mar 6th 2008 | DELHI, JALAUN AND KOCHI
>From The Economist print edition


India has some of the hardest-working bureaucrats in the world, but its
administration has an abysmal record of serving the public

RIGZIN SAMPHEL, a 33-year-old civil servant, wakes to the screeching of
peacocks outside his bedroom window. Stepping into the gentle sunshine
of a north Indian spring morning, he hears the lowing of three brown
cows tasked with providing his milk. A scuffling attends him, as armed
guards, peons, gardeners and orderlies—tasked with catering to Mr
Samphel's other needs—hop to attention. 

A four-year veteran of the elite Indian Administrative Service (IAS), Mr
Samphel is the district magistrate of Jalaun, in Uttar Pradesh (UP)
province. More often called the collector, or district officer, the
district magistrate is the senior official of India's key administrative
unit, the district. In Jalaun, an expanse of arid plain between the
Ganges and Yamuna rivers, Mr Samphel is in charge of 564 villages and
1.4m people. 

After a hearty breakfast, he leaves his residence—requisitioned from a
local maharajah around 1840—and gets into his car: a white Ambassador,
curvaceous clone of the 1948 Morris Oxford, complete with siren and
flashing blue light, which has symbolised officialdom in India for six
decades. Mr Samphel takes the back seat; a policeman rides machinegun in
the front; and in two minutes they arrive at Mr Samphel's main office,
the “collectorate”. 

There for the next four hours, beneath a portrait of a beaming Mohandas
Gandhi, Mr Samphel receives a stream of poor people. A turbaned flunkey
regulates the flow, letting in a dozen at a time. Many are old and
ragged, or blind. Paraplegics slither to the collector's feet on broken
limbs. Most bring a written plea, for the resumption of a widow's
pension that has mysteriously dried up; for money for an operation; for
a tube-well or a blanket. Many bear complaints against corrupt
officials. One supplicant wants permission to erect a statue of a dead
politician: a former champion of the Hindu outcastes who comprise nearly
half of Jalaun's population. 

Mr Samphel listens, asks questions and, in red ink, scrawls on the
petitions his response. For desperate cases, he orders an immediate
payment of alms, typically 2,000 rupees ($50), from the district Red
Cross society, of which he is president. More often, he writes a note to
the official to whom the petition should have been directed in the first
place—or, wretchedly often, to whom it has already been directed: “Act
upon this according to the law.”

Mr Samphel reckons he spends 60% of his time dealing with individual
supplicants—also outside the collectorate. As the Ambassador turns back
on to the road, it is waylaid by a tractor bringing a cartload of
petitioners in from a distant village. Then one of Mr Samphel's three
mobile phones bleeps. Someone wants firewood; Mr Samphel calls a
forestry official to relay the request. It is a hugely impressive
performance. Mr Samphel works 16 hours a day, seven days a week, and
reckons he has had two days off since 2003. But this is hardly an
efficient way to minister to a needy population almost half the size of
New Zealand's. 

Indeed, all India's administration is inefficient. According to the
Congress-led government's own estimate, most development spending fails
to reach its intended recipients. Instead it is sponged up, or siphoned
off, by a vast, tumorous bureaucracy. That is why, despite India's
commitment to universal health care, water and education, only five
countries have a lower portion of health spending in the public sector;
over half of urban children are educated privately; and nearly all
investment in irrigation is private. Under stress of tube-wells and a
four-year drought, the water table in Jalaun has fallen by up to 15
metres. Despite the proximity of two great rivers, only 40% of the
district is irrigated; no canal has been dug since colonial times. As
the harvest approaches, over half of Jalaun's peasant inhabitants are
growing nothing. 

On coming to power in 2004, Manmohan Singh, the prime minister, said
that administrative reform—“at every level”—was his priority. Some
economists see India's malfunctioning public sector as its biggest
obstacle to growth. Lant Pritchett, of the Kennedy School of Government
at Harvard, calls it “one of the world's top ten biggest problems—of the
order of AIDS and climate change”. Yet it is hard to find progress on Mr
Singh's watch. Perhaps the best that can be said is that a policy of the
previous government, a hiring freeze on two-thirds of vacant civil
service posts, continues: since 2001 around 750,000 jobs have been left
vacant. A right-to-information law, passed in 2005, also contains at
least a promise of official accountability. But a more seismic reform, a
16-year campaign to decentralise power from the states to local elected
bodies known as panchayats, cutting out much of the bureaucratic cancer
altogether, has hardly moved. 


Armies of clerks
Including railway workers, who comprise one of the world's biggest
payrolls, India's central government employs around 3m civil servants
and the states another 7m. They include vast armies of paper-shuffling
peons. The number of senior “Category One” bureaucrats—broadly speaking,
“decision-makers”, according to Satyananda Mishra, boss of the
Department of Personnel and Training (DPT), which runs the civil service
—is only 80,000. And the elite IAS, which mostly runs India, numbers a
mere 5,600. 

Its ranks include almost all the collectors of India's 604 districts,
and over 60% of senior officials and managers working in government
ministries and publicly owned corporations. (The rest are mostly police
and railway officers.) As the successor to the colonial Indian Civil
Service—the “steel frame” of British rule, according to one prime
minister, Lloyd George—the IAS was designed to perform the same unifying
function. It is a national and permanent service, theoretically
apolitical, and recruited and trained at the centre. Yet its members
serve mostly in the states—the main exception being 600 of the most
senior babus who, in Whitehall fashion, advise ministers and draft
policy in Delhi.

Across India, the IAS commands both reverence and contempt. Male
recruits are among India's most marriageable: more suitable, it is said,
than the elite geeks of the country's booming computer-services
industry. Indeed, India's recent run of 8% economic growth has if
anything increased their prestige, by creating more senior positions for
which IAS officers are required. This year 140 people will be recruited
into the IAS from around 200,000 applicants, one of the biggest intakes
ever. 

Yet the steel frame has now become a serious bind on badly needed
reforms. As the author of a typical recent IAS history and former
mandarin, Sanjoy Bagchi, puts it: “Overwhelmed by the constant feed of
adulatory ambrosia, the maturing entrant tends to lose his head and
balance. The diffident youngster of early idealistic years, in course of
time, is transformed into an arrogant senior fond of throwing his weight
around; he becomes a conceited prig.”

Part of the problem, such critics say, is that the quality of IAS
recruits is falling. They identify a number of reasons for this: falling
education standards; growing competition for talent from the private
sector; increasing political interference; and, above all, caste-based
reservations, which now retain half of all IAS posts for outcaste and
low-caste Hindus and members of tribal communities. Former mandarins
also point to chronic and worsening standards of probity across the
public service. And yet, compared with the hirelings of almost any other
Indian institution, IAS recruits remain excellent. 

Overload may be a better explanation for the service's failings. In
Jalaun, Mr Samphel is theoretically the boss of 65 government
departments. Around one in five of these, he estimates, is run by a
competent deputy. He laments: “If I don't put pressure on my juniors,
everything gets largely corrupted.” For general administration, Mr
Samphel, whose collectorate contains not one computer, has an annual
budget of $22.5m.


Compared with his British forebears', Mr Samphel's list of duties has
grown crazily. Like them, he is primarily responsible for maintaining
order and collecting land revenues in his district. In the first case,
he mostly defers to the local police chief, Jalaun's only other
first-rate official. But in the district that was once home to a
notorious, now murdered, female bandit, Phoolan Devi, Mr Samphel is also
regularly called on to authorise arbitrary police actions: for example,
to extend summary detentions under the “Gangster Act”. 

Mr Samphel's second core responsibility, collecting revenue, is a lesser
burden. Land taxes, which have scarcely risen since British days, are
now principally a means of updating the land registry. Yet the
corruption and incompetence that dog this process—of crucial concern to
peasant India—propel many supplicants to Mr Samphel's door. In addition,
India's collectors manage two other, not inconsiderable, events:
elections and a decennial census. They also organise the government's
response to natural disasters, such as the tsunami which, in 2004,
killed over 7,000 in southern Tamil Nadu.

The collectors' other great burden—overseeing the design and management
of massive welfare and development projects—is one the IAS was never
designed for, and by and large performs abysmally. Mr Samphel, for
example, oversees the spending of another $25m on 30-odd welfare
programmes. Over the past year he has doled out $14m for a charitable
ditch-digging project, the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme
(NREGS), which is to be spread across India this year. As the drought
bites, he has requested another $13m for this project; it has yet to
arrive.


Political entanglements
In even the best of worlds, Mr Samphel's would be an impossible job. In
India's corrupt democracy, the collectors' burden is made much heavier
by interfering politicians. The problem is most grievous in north India,
where civil servants tend to attach themselves to politicians for
enrichment, advancement—or in despair of otherwise getting their jobs
done. The habit is said to have been implanted in the system during
India's 1975 state of emergency, when, with the help of senior
bureaucrats, Indira Gandhi grabbed power for 21 months. One IAS officer
tainted by the hiatus was Navin Chawla, a senior civil servant in Delhi
with strong ties to the Gandhi family, Congress's leaders. A government
inquiry into the emergency ruled that he was “unfit to hold any public
office which demands an attitude of fair play and consideration for
others”. The current government has made him deputy chief of India's
election commission. 

Under India's constitution, politicians cannot sack IAS officers.
Instead they tend to misuse their power to transfer or suspend them. On
January 31st four IAS officers were suspended by UP's chief minister,
Mayawati, a champion of outcaste dalits. Their crime was to have penned
friendly words about Rahul Gandhi, Mrs Gandhi's grandson, a rising force
in the Congress party. Indeed, after any transfer of power in UP, Madhya
Pradesh (MP), Orissa and Bihar, scores of senior civil servants are
routinely shunted—including Mr Samphel's predecessor, who was, not
coincidentally, of the same Hindu caste as the outgoing chief minister.
During a riotous eight-month rule over MP in 2003-04, a politician
called Uma Bharati transferred 240 of the state's 296 IAS officers. 

To mitigate the damage done by such shake-ups, the DPT, of which Mr
Mishra is chief, recently changed the civil-service code, fixing the
minimum job tenure at two years. Alas, only a handful of states have
accepted this—as they are constitutionally obliged to do. And yet other
decent plans and proposals exist. Continued retrenchment is one;
according to Sheila Dikshit, Delhi's chief minister and the widow of an
IAS officer, around half of senior civil service posts could be
scrapped. Another proposal is to lower the upper age limit for IAS
recruits, thereby, it is argued, improving their quality. 

Civil service pay, currently $500 a month for a district collector,
might also be increased. A decennial pay commission, due to report this
month, is expected to recommend this. Logic—though little evidence—
suggests that this might reduce the tendency of senior babus to steal.
It might also fend off growing competition for India's brightest talent
from private companies, though retaining civil servants is not yet
proving difficult; over the past year, fewer than 20 IAS officers have
quit the service to join the private sector. Getting rid of corrupt or
incompetent civil servants is rather trickier. In a 40-year IAS career,
B.K. Chaturvedi, a former head of the civil service, can recall only
three officers having been dismissed. 


A Band-Aid on a corpse
Sensible as these changes may be, however, reforms written by civil
servants are unlikely to provide the necessary transformation in India's
civil service. Nor is technology the instant elixir it is sometimes
considered to be. Inspired by a crusading IAS officer, in the past two
years Karnataka state has built 800 privately managed “telecentres”
where citizens can access land records, birth and death certificates and
driving licences online. Following its lead, the central government is
rolling out 100,000 similar terminals, with additional services in
education and health care. The benefits of skipping a rung or two of
rent-seeking officialdom are manifest. 

But in a mostly unreformed system, rent-seekers have a habit of clawing
back. The title of a draft paper by researchers at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology is apt: “Putting Band-Aid on a corpse:
incentives for nurses in the Indian public health-care system”. To
encourage a batch of Rajasthani nurses to show up for work—which, on any
day, over 60% did not—its authors began monitoring their attendance at
village health centres by computer and sending the results to the state
health ministry. Threatened with fines, half of the absentees returned
to work. Six months later, they began breaking the computers and
reporting “machine problems”. After 16 months, the health centres
featured in the study were no more likely to contain a nurse than any
other.

No doubt Mr Singh is right: to provide poor Indians with halfway decent
public services, the bureaucracy needs, root-and-branch, to be made
accountable. But this will not happen soon. Indeed, one of the more
hopeful changes will be organic. As India's economy grows, inflating
land prices and increasing opportunities for private contractors,
corrupt politicians and bureaucrats may find reliable sources of rent
that do not involve stealing directly from the mouths of the poor. More
managed and substantial reforms, including the right to information and
decentralising power, are also hopeful. Yet they are in their infancy,
partly because of resistance from jealous bureaucrats. 

India's panchayats, or local governments, are in theory responsible for
managing welfare and development schemes in their district or urban
area. But many are powerless. In only two states, Communist-ruled Kerala
and West Bengal, have they been given control over their own budgets—
with patchy success.

Kerala, for example, has put 90% of development spending in the hands of
its panchayats. In addition to central government schemes such as the
NREGS, village panchayats in the southern state have $250,000 a year to
spend as they choose. This has reduced the collector to a regulatory
role: overseeing land records and advising the panchayats. On paper,
this looks terrific. It also helps that Kerala is one of India's least
corrupt states. And yet panchayat leaders, often drawn from feudal or
political elites, can be as self-serving as any babu. S.M. Vijayanand,
chief official of Kerala's Local Self Government Department and a main
architect of the reform, concedes that the new system also misses the
collector's managerial skills. He says: “It's more equitable, more
accountable, more democratic, but there's a cost also in efficiency.”

In Kochi, the state's seaside capital, the district collector, Muhammad
Hanish, enjoys the same trappings of office, and suffers many of the
same burdens, as Mr Samphel. Stepping out of his white Ambassador, Mr
Hanish, who is 38, inspects a suburb of Kochi with relish. (“This is the
end of my town; after this, the Arabian Sea.”) He has just spent four
hours dealing with 200 poor supplicants. He is in charge of 60
departments. Yet, unlike Mr Samphel, he has no control over their
budgets. Nor is he directly responsible for planning and implementing
the public works that they are called on to perform. After
three-and-a-half years in the job, during which time he reckons to have
seen 10,000 project proposals, Mr Hanish says he has forced the local
panchayat to drop “less than ten” of them.

That is as it should be. Elected panchayats, unlike elite civil
servants, can be held to account. But it may take years before poor
Indians enjoy the benefits of this. For now, Mr Hanish says the new
system has made his job more difficult and the delivery of public
services poorer. “Most panchayat leaders are incompetent. Too many are
corrupt.”

Yet elsewhere the picture may be worse. In most states, including UP,
politicians and bureaucrats have denied the panchayats even modest
power. The ditch-digging NREGS is an example. It is hard to know what
UP's panchayats exist for, if not to identify and organise its wretched
beneficiaries. But it is the collectors who mostly control the scheme. 

And so in Kochi, after a hellish long day, Mr Hanish goes home to work
until 2am on the next day's files. Meanwhile in Jalaun, 2,400km to the
north, Mr Samphel sets out to inspect freshly dug ditches, and listen to
the infinite complaints of their ragged diggers, by torchlight.



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