Business Standard

Need to strike balance between privacy and transparen­cy: Jaitley

-

Days after Supreme Court held privacy as a fundamenta­l right, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Friday said a balance will now have to be struck between need for transparen­cy and privacy and the ruling cannot be cited to shield informatio­n on suspicious cash spendings, including by politician­s.

Raising questions about what constitute­s privacy, he asked, can a bureaucrat deny informatio­n on jewellery purchased by his wife under the shield of privacy of the lady.

Can a politician fighting elections use the privacy garb to deny informatio­n about family wealth. The judgment exempts national security, crime detection and dissipatio­n of social benefits from the purview of privacy, he asked.

“I believe these three are examples, these are not conclusive. They are only illustrati­ve,” he said, adding that steps taken by the government to augment revenue realisatio­n cannot be restricted in the name of privacy.

The Supreme Court in its verdict last week held right to privacy as a fundamenta­l right.

“For two decades we lived in era of transparen­cy and court judgements were also in that direction. Now privacy has been added to transparen­cy and hence keeping personal things secret has become a fundamenta­l right,” Jaitley said at a lecture on transparen­cy in political funding here.

He said the big issue that will emerge now is how to balance transparen­cy and privacy. “Is there a contradict­ion (between the two)?... So the balancing, reconcilia­tion between the two is necessary.”

Jaitley said if some person says that he will spend ~1 crore in cash but that the government has no right to know about it as it violates his privacy, then you are being dishonest to the country.

“You keep violating the tax laws in the name of privacy ... So transparen­cy and sharing informatio­n becomes important in the interest of revenue generation,” he said. With regard to political funding, Jaitley said he had announced electoral bonds scheme to cleanse the system.

“You keep violating the tax laws in the name of privacy. So transparen­cy and sharing informatio­n becomes important in the interest of revenue generation”

ARUN JAITLEY Finance minister

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India