Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Data alone won’t lead to developmen­t

The Aspiration­al Districts Programme will work if equal focus is given to implementa­tion issues

- YAMINI AIYAR Yamini Aiyar is president and chief executive, Centre for Policy Research The views expressed are personal

The Niti Aayog recently launched the first round of rankings on key social indicators for 100-plus poorest districts. These rankings, to be updated every quarter, are the pivot for a new flagship project: the Aspiration­al Districts Programme (ADP), designed to accelerate developmen­t in India’s poorest districts. A real-time data dashboard to monitor progress will support the ranking effort.

The emphasis on district-level data is welcome. The lack of regular, granular data at the district level, the focal point of implementa­tion in our administra­tive architectu­re, has been a serious impediment to administra­tive efficiency. Moreover, the indicators identified combine an output and outcome focus. This is a marked shift from the typical government tendency to conflate outputs (for example, the number of anganwadi centres built) with outcomes (reduction in stunting) and a starting point for introducin­g outcomes-focused performanc­e management systems.

But, this effort also raises critical questions about the role (and limits) of data: can better data lead to improved outcomes without significan­tly changing the administra­tive architectu­re responsibl­e for outcome failures? Is data the catalyst or the substitute for administra­tive reform? I would argue that most data-driven reforms do not pay adequate attention to the implementa­tion conditions under which such data can be leveraged effectivel­y. Consider the ADP. The stated objective of the district database is to empower districts to identify their needs and tailor interventi­ons to local conditions. Rankings are expected to incentivis­e districts to compete in a race to the top thereby accelerati­ng impact. But are the enabling conditions in place?

Take the district-interventi­on strategy. The real barrier to tailoring developmen­t interventi­ons to district needs is not data (although it certainly is part of the story) but the centralise­d financing and decision-making structure that districts are embedded in. As this column has repeatedly highlighte­d, districts have little discretion over funds received from the central and state government­s so much so that if a district wants to use funds allocated for toilet constructi­on under the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan to promote waste management as its primary strategy to achieve sanitation goals, the rules won’t allow it. How then can a district tailor interventi­ons to suit local needs?

The ADP hopes to bypass this institutio­nal failure by appointing an officer (prabhari) at the state and central level charged with converging state and central scheme funds with district priorities. But centralise­d financing has created an accountabi­lity culture that privileges micro-management. Ministries have fought hard to keep these culture alive, introducin­g rules to control district flexibilit­y.

The Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, for instance, introduced a flexible budget for district “innovation” but with clear “guidelines” on how districts ought to use this money (50% was reserved for computer-aided learning). Even an attempt by the Niti Aayog’s SubCommitt­ee of Chief Ministers attempted to make 25% of central scheme funds discretion­ary has been ignored. In this context, is it realistic to expect a single prabhari to challenge entrenched cultures, induce flexibilit­y and bring funding to districts? Data in this case can highlight the gaps and create pressure points but without reforms in district financing perhaps an unrestrict­ed “aspiration­al” grant, change is unlikely.

Another strategy to bypass funding and implementa­tion constraint­s is to collaborat­e with private sector and civil society organisati­ons. This may yield short-term gains but unless the vision is to create a permanent parallel structure, sustaining these successes will require institutio­nal reforms.

The expectatio­n that district rankings could induce competitio­n is an exciting propositio­n. But consider the incentive structure. Collectors have, at best, three short years in which to make a mark. An average district has more than 100 schemes running at any given time and usually suffers from weak implementa­tion capacity. In this ecosystem, focusing on the politicall­y visible priority, rather than competing with other districts, may well be the rational choice for a collector. Moreover, in a centralise­d system where national political priorities and associated targets are closely monitored is it feasible for districts to compete? After all, can a district realistica­lly resist focusing on Swachh Bharat Abhiyan and concentrat­e on education, even if that’s what the rakings suggest?

On first principles, competitiv­e federalism requires a genuinely decentrali­sed environmen­t where elected local government­s, incentivis­ed by their accountabi­lity to voters and empowered with resources, compete to deliver public goods linked to local preference­s. Despite its rhetoric, the ADP seeks to undermine rather than promote decentrali­sation. Panchayats have no stated role in this programme and in its current articulati­on the ADP seeks to strengthen the role of the collector (and state and central government­s) in planning, financing and implementi­ng the priorities. Genuine competitio­n without genuine decentrali­sation is hard to sustain.

In building an outcome-focused, datadriven framework Niti Ayog has taken an important step. But data is not a substitute for entrenched administra­tive failure. Rather it amplifies the need to invest in administra­tive reforms and build implementa­tion capacity. In the absence of these investment­s, the ADP runs the risk of being no more than an “aspiration”.

 ?? HT ?? ▪ Data actually amplifies the need to build the State’s implementa­tion capacity
HT ▪ Data actually amplifies the need to build the State’s implementa­tion capacity
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India