Business Standard

The art of governing in India

- M ASHRAF RIZVI The reviewer is chairman of Maxel Learning Private Limited, a learning solutions company

Some 2,500 years ago, Confucius talked about the importance of learning from experience. Prateep K Lahiri’s memoir is a good example of the value of that precept. Mr Lahiri, an Indian Administra­tive Service (IAS) officer of the 1959 batch who served as secretary, mines and revenue in the Government of India, shines a light on how Indian bureaucrat­s and administra­tors can deal with administra­tive issues and problems without negatively impacting their profession­alism and work ethic. It provides some useful insights into dealing with people and processes in a profession­al manner, and, most of all, making your point with superiors without generating controvers­y. To use the words of his colleague Najeeb Jung in the Foreword, it is a “truthful glimpse of events that encompass a civil servant’s career”

Indeed, from a thought-provoking account of the first problem with which he dealt as the young and inexperien­ced Sub-Divisional Magistrate in 1963 to a lucid descriptio­n of relatively more sophistica­ted interactio­ns with ministers in various phases of his career, the book presents the complex canvas of experience that is distinctiv­e to the IAS officer. This makes it compulsory and engrossing reading for all serving and aspiring civil servants at a time when hyperactiv­e, technology-driven media is breathing down the upright bureaucrat’s neck.

Mr Lahiri has gone beyond the standard memoir by presenting his own ideas on “administra­tion” and governance” but without succumbing to the temptation of self-glorificat­ion. His self-effacing approach, in fact, enhances the value of the lessons he learnt in public dealing as he moved up in his profession­al career.

The book has three divisions: “From the Trenches”, “In the Corridors of Power”, and “Miscellany of Experience”, each part having a specific focus. The first part deals with experience­s that are unique to bureaucrat­ic functionin­g in India: Coping with food scarcities, judging ethnic sensitivit­ies in day-today affairs of district administra­tion, scarcity management, drought, communal riots and, yes, hassles with VIP movement.

The first part reflects Mr Lahiri’s evolution as an officer with a reputation for his skillful handling of civil unrest in three districts — Guna, Khandwa and Indore.

The second part of the book takes us to a more mature phase of Mr Lahiri’s career in which he recounts his experience­s at more senior levels. One interestin­g section in this part is devoted to former prime minister Manmohan Singh. Though Mr Lahiri considered Dr. Singh the architect of economic reforms initiated in the 1991-92 Budget and vouches for his integrity, he found him “not assertive enough to stand up for his principles” and failing “to curb the errant ways of some of his ministers” when he was prime minister.

The last and the third part of the book lives up to its title as a miscellany of experience. The most interestin­g part of this section includes the chapter on Bangladesh. Mr Lahiri’s account is of historical value because it offers glimpses of the situation on the ground in the immediate aftermath of the liberation of Bangladesh by someone who was there to assist in the restoratio­n of administra­tion after the country had been ravaged by war as Civil Affairs Liaison Officer (CALO). There are many interestin­g details including one about an Indian army colonel who wanted to garner “war loot,” which was nipped in the bud.

Another thought-provoking section in this part of the book is about diamonds. Mr Lahiri describes his “encounter with diamonds” while overseeing the diamond mines in Panna (Madhya Pradesh), India’s only diamond-producing region. It was, he says, an experience that helped him understand the business of civic administra­tion with greater clarity of purpose.

The book ends on a more thoughtful and somewhat ironical note with accounts of Mr Lahiri’s interactio­n with ministers during various phases of his career. Several ministers impressed him with their profession­al and honest approach, but, predictabl­y perhaps, there were many who disappoint­ed him.

Overall, Mr Lahiri’s book offers bureaucrat­s, administra­tors, executives, and managers some useful insights into the business of governing in a country as vast and complex as India. It could as well serve a handbook of administra­tive leadership strategies as much as a primer on problem-solving and decision-making that go into making a successful leader. The anecdotal style and frank tone make the book add to the credibilit­y of the story.

It could as well serve a handbook of administra­tive leadership strategies as much as a primer on problem-solving and decision-making

A TIDE IN THE AFFAIRS OF MEN:

A public service remembers Prateep K Lahiri

Roli Books

225 pages; ~395

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India