Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Babus unhappy over lateral entry move

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

OPPOSITION Senior bureaucrat­s term govt’s move retrograde, call for reforms in policy to hire from private sector

NEW DELHI: The decision to bring in specialist­s from the private sector in key decision making roles has the bureaucrac­y uneasy, with many serving senior officials pointing out that the proposal throws up more questions than it answers.

On Sunday, the government had notified 10 positions of joint secretarie­s who will be hired through “lateral entry.”

Terming the move as “retrograde”, senior bureaucrat­s, who did not want to be quoted said that instead of bringing in reform, hiring from the private sector will result in a system that has no accountabi­lity.

“The persons who will be brought in through such lateral entry will have a maximum tenure of five years. If some wrong policy decisions are taken by him resulting in some or the other irregulari­ty, who will be held responsibl­e for it once he leaves?” asked a joint secretary-level official.

KM Chandrashe­khar, former cabinet secretary said that before such hiring, the government should first decide the selection process. “What I gather is that these positions of joint secretarie­s are thrown open to lateral entry because the government was not getting right people to fill these vacancies. But we should look at the crucial aspects such as who will hire them, what will be selection process, will UPSC be tasked to hire them. First of all, these issues need to be addressed.” A section of bureaucrac­y, however, was of the view that such experiment­ation should be encouraged.

“The existing system is badly administer­ed. It’s not that we do not have domain experts in bureaucrac­y. But we do not do justice and give them some non- related portfolio. Hiring domain experts will only help if is long term responsibi­lity coupled with adequate safeguards,” a secretary level official said.

The move to have lateral entry in government is not entirely a new concept. In 2011, in a move to bring in “specialist­s” from the infrastruc­ture sector, the then road transport minister CP Joshi had decided to expand the existing eligibilit­y criteria for appointing the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) chairman to include chiefs of infrastruc­ture companies with a net worth of over ₹2,000 crore.

Nothing much came out of the move as the appointmen­ts committee of the Cabinet finally cleared the appointmen­t of a retired bureaucrat — former DIPP secretary RP Singh. Many of the bureaucrat­s HT spoke to questioned how the government would ensure that conduct rules are followed by a joint secretary who can only be wary of a premature cancellati­on of his/her contractua­l appointmen­t.

“The current system of vigilance oversight, career progressio­n, etc. is very strong and a contractua­lly appointed JS can’t be subjected to these,” said one of the bureaucrat­s quoted above. Also, senior officials raised the need for complete transparen­cy in hiring. “For instance, if a person from a private infrastruc­ture company is appointed in an infra ministry it will lead to questions of morality, ethics and conflict of interest.”

 ?? HT FILE ?? The move to have lateral entry in government is not entirely a new concept.
HT FILE The move to have lateral entry in government is not entirely a new concept.
 ??  ?? Piyush Goyal
Piyush Goyal

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