The Asian Age

Fresh push for lateral entry of babus likely

- Dilip Cherian Dilli Ka Babu Share a babu experience! Follow dilipthech­erian@Twitter.com. Let’s multiply the effect.

Last year, Arvind Panagariya, former vicechief of the government Niti Aayog, wrote in his book, India Unlimited – Reclaiming the Lost Glory, that Indian babus suffered from the socialist hangover, which has slowed down the pace of reforms the Narendra Modi sarkar wishes to introduce. To support his view, he cited Mr Modi’s initiative for lateral entry at the top levels of the bureaucrac­y. According to Panagariya, babus slowed down the process to the extent that at the very end of his term only nine officers could be inducted from outside.

But the government has not given up, yet. It is making another push to induct 30 more private sector specialist­s into different government department­s at the crucial decision-making level of joint secretarie­s and directors on a contract basis. The Union Public Service

Commission (UPSC) will shortlist the candidates for interviews.

Prime Minister Modi has introduced the mechanism of recruiting fresh talent in the bureaucrac­y from the private sector during his first tenure. But the first round hasn’t been the success that the government was expecting. It could recruit only nine of the 10 domain experts it had selected, and one of them, Arun Goyal, who had joined the commerce ministry as joint secretary, put in his papers barely a year later. It appears that far from changing the system, the lateral entrants are more likely to be subsumed by it. Further, a year after their appointmen­t, the Central Administra­tive Tribunal (CAT) had issued a notice to the UPSC after a petition from whistleblo­wer Indian Forest Service (IFoS) officer Sanjiv Chaturvedi alleged irregulari­ties in the recruitmen­t of three of the nine lateral entrants by the government.

The government is catching flak already. Some opposition leaders are calling for the policy to be withdrawn. Bhim Army chief Chandrashe­khar Azad has threatened to “gherao” Parliament, calling the government’s move a violation of constituti­onal rights. Rashtriya Janata Dal leader Tejaswi Yadav has said that UPSC’s lateral recruitmen­t an injustice to the youth.

Will the Modi sarkar overcome the political resistance from outside and from the babus within who may try to defend their turf?

KERALA IGNORES SC ORDER ON BABU TENURES

Though the Supreme Court fixed a two-year tenure for babus back in 2013, few states have complied with the directive. Most states are clearly unwilling to cede this leverage over bureaucrat­s. Even in states where civil services boards were set up, by the order of the apex court, netas always seem to find ways to go around the directive to achieve their political ends. Even Kerala often held up as an example of progressiv­e governance, has snubbed the SC’s ruling.

Official data reveals that the average tenure of secretary-rank officers in “God’s Own Country” from 2014 until 2018 was 11 months and has reportedly dipped further since then. Until last December, Kerala had only 34 officers of secretary and principal secretary rank holding 72 posts! 16 principal secretarie­s are holding 31 posts, of which 27 are cadre posts. Similarly, 18 secretary-rank IAS officers are looking after 41 posts!

Sources say that some officers including principal secretarie­s K.R. Jyothilal and Rani George are dischargin­g three responsibi­lities, and Secretary Tinku Biswal is

Though the Supreme Court fixed a two-year tenure for babus back in 2013, few states have complied with the directive. Most states are clearly unwilling to cede this leverage over bureaucrat­s.

managing four posts!

This data came to light as poll preparatio­ns begin for the assembly elections due in May this year. But while this flies against the idea of good governance, it is unlikely to matter to voters at the hustings, which may explain why government­s continue to defy the apex court’s order.

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