A new
report assesses the functioning of some of our major
institutions and finds important weaknesses that need to
be addressed urgently.
"Governance" is a term to which many people nowadays have
developed an allergy. This is often with good reason,
because it tends to be ill-defined, and becomes a
catch-all phrase for all sorts of different issues and
processes. Also, all too often it is used (especially by
the multilateral economic institutions and others) as a
way of diverting attention from the real political economy
questions which determine government policies and their
effects.
However, a new "Citizen's Report on Governance and
Development”, entitled "Social Watch India, 2003”,
seeks to break out of this pattern by being much more
specific and concrete in terms of what it means by
governance. It focuses on particular institutions and
policies, and assesses how much they actually perform in
terms of promoting social and economic development.
The report was recently released by the Centre for Youth
and Social Development and the National Centre for
Advocacy Studies. It deals with four major areas, three
institutional (Parliament, the Supreme Court and
Panchayati Raj institutions) and one relating to policies.
Overall, the assessment in the Report is a balanced one,
certainly not apologetic for these major institutions but
not completely negative either. But it does reveal
important gaps and flaws in the functioning of some of our
most important institutions, which obviously need to be
dealt with, if there is to be any meaningful progress
towards the stated goals of true democracy and
development.
The section entitled "Parliament Watch” is fascinating,
because it reveals many aspects of Parliamentary
functioning which many of us may have only guessed at or
had very general notions about.
The Lok Sabha is apparently much more representative of
the Indian population today than it was fifty years ago.
In the First Lok Sabha, lawyers made up one third of the
M.P.s, while lawyers, doctors, journalists and writers
together accounted for more than half of the
representatives. All of these categories have declined
substantially in share, and by contrast agriculturalists
account for 49 per cent of the current Lok Sabha.
Similarly, although there is no data on caste composition,
it is evident that there is growing assertiveness of
Dalits and intermediate castes within the Lok Sabha.
However, while Parliament itself may have become more
democratic, it is not very clear that it is doing more for
democracy. A number of purely factual issues give rise to
concern. First, the number of sittings per year has come
down quite sharply, from an average of 138 days in the
first two decades, to only around 80 sittings per year
now. It is 14 years since the number of sittings crossed
100 per year. If the disruptions and forced adjournments
are taken into account, the actual time spent is even
less. Obviously, this means less time devoted to
discussing and debating matters of public concern.
Even these more limited sittings suffer from an
embarrassing lack of attendance on the part of members.
The problem is now so severe that Presiding Officers of
both of our houses of Parliament do not take suo moto
cognisance of a lack of quorum. In 2002, while there was
typically poor attendance for debates relating to matters
of pressing public concern, such as the Annual Budget, the
Gujarat riots, etc., attendance was very high on 27
November - not for any discussion, but for taking the
group photograph of MPs.
The problem is now severe that Parliament has even
constituted a Committee on Absence of Members from the
House. This Committee had only one sitting in 2002, at
which, ironically, two-thirds of the members of the
Committee were absent!
There is generally poor attendance at the various
Parliamentary Committees, with the committees that deal
with the social sector and developmental issues reporting
the lowest percentage of attendance by members.
When they are in the House, our representatives appear to
spend much less time discussing issues of national
importance than before. For example, between 1952 and
1979, the Lok Sabha typically devoted 23 per cent of its
time to discussing the Annual Budget of the Central
Government, but this has now declined to only 10 per cent.
A lot of the questions that were asked in Question Hour
were repetitive, asked for information that was already
published, or allowed the government to get away with
shoddy replies.
While the report suggests that some business was indeed
transacted "conscientiously” in Parliament, it makes it
equally clear that a lot more needs to be done to make the
functioning of Parliament more responsive to the issues
that matter to the majority of the Indian people.
The section entitled "Policy Watch” considers some of the
major initiatives taken by the Central Government in 2002,
which were directed towards improving social and economic
equity. In the health sector, there were three new
initiatives: the National Health Policy 2002, the Drug
(Pharmaceutical) Policy 2002 and the Patents (Amendment)
Bill2002, in addition to certain budgetary measures aimed
at promoting the privatisation of the sector.
This section highlights the already privatised and poor
state of the health infrastructure in India. While the
country still has very high rates of mortality and
morbidity, health infrastructure is woefully inadequate,
curative care facilities are almost non-existent in most
rural areas and the spread of infectious diseases
indicates that preventive care is also insufficient, at
the same time we have the most privatised health system in
the world.
Public health expenditure (at only 1 per cent of GDP)
accounts for only 17 per cent of total health expenditure
in India, compared to more than 45 per cent in most
developed countries and Sri Lanka, and 25 per cent in
China. Nevertheless, 43 per cent of the poor depend upon
only the public system for health care. The Report shows
how the recent policy moves will only worsen existing
conditions, accentuate the trend towards privatisation,
and increase disparities in access to health care.
In the sphere of education, Parliament passed the 86th
Amendment Act 2002, to make elementary education a
fundamental right. Nevertheless, inadequate budget
allocation, dismal school infrastructure in rural and poor
urban areas, high dropout rates, and bias according to
caste, community and gender remain the characteristics of
our education system. The report emphasises that
"mandating an act is obviously no guarantee that it will
be translated into action in the absence of appropriate
infrastructure, requisite investments, etc.” Here the
government has been much less energetic. The Report also
casts serious doubts on the functioning of the Sarva
Shiksha Abhiyan programme, which aims to universalise
elementary education, given the huge shortfalls that have
already emerged and the lack of a systematic strategy to
ensure that the ambitious goals will be achieved. The
report also points to a number of ambiguities and problems
with the 86th Amendment Act.
This section also deals with policies that affect poverty
and the lives of vulnerable groups, including an
assessment of conditions of food security, the National
Water Policy (which encourages the privatisation of water
services), etc. It points out that although the government
has committed itself (through Constitutional and
international declaration) to ensuring access to basic
needs for all its citizens, its current policy moves do
not inspire confidence even in terms of the direction of
change. In addition, redistribution of assets (including
land) and income are no longer discussed, the displacement
of the poor and the continuous violation of their human
rights continue apace, often in the name of development.
The third section deals with access to justice, in terms
of assessing the functioning of the Supreme Court. In 2002
the Supreme Court delivered a number of landmark
judgements, including those relating to disclosure of
assets by electoral candidates, asking for compliance
reports form Government, reiterating the independence of
the Election Commission, and allowing non-Brahmins to
perform puja in Hindu temples, among others. There was
also a lot of "judicial activism"
especially in the area of environmental protection.
However, while the Supreme Court emphasised that the right
to a speedy trial is part of Article 21 (right to life) of
the Constitution, the functioning of the courts tells a
different story. The Supreme Court has reduced its backlog
of pending cases from 1,04,936 in 1991 to 23,012 in 2002,
the lower courts over which it has jurisdiction are much
worse. In 2002, more than 36 lakh cases were pending in
High Courts all over the country, and more than 20 million
estimated to be pending in lower courts. There seems to be
little concern to address this issue.
These delays are related to
failure to fill up vacancies in the judiciary, low judge
to population ratios, poor rates of disposal of cases, and
failure to adopt information technology in courts. This
report does not cover more recent cases of alleged
criminality and corruption among the judiciary, although
that is also likely to emerge as an important issue of
accountability.
Finally, the report covers the various panchayati raj
institutions, although this section is perhaps the least
developed and researched part pf the document. The issue
of devolution of resources is only cursorily covered, and
the other important areas, such as administrative
decentralisation, are dealt with in very general fashion
and without sufficient concern as to the very wide
variations across states.
In all, however, this report is an
important breakthrough in terms of contributing to the
public life of the country. This kind of periodic
assessment is absolutely crucial for democracy to
function. A vibrant democracy clearly requires a lot of
work on the part of citizens; not just much more
dissemination of knowledge, but constant vigilance in
terms of monitoring policies and activities of both
governments and private agents, and subsequently
mobilisation
and organization to prevent detrimental tendencies, and to
campaign for more socially desirable processes and
outcomes.
In all this, the first
requirement is information and analysis, and this is where
reports such as this one have a critical role to play. It
is already mentioned that future Social Watch reports will
take up other institutions such as the media, and look at
the performance of the States. But the success of this
first report suggests that the entire process deserves to
be both lauded and strengthened through more dissemination
and discussion.
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