The latest Kabali teaser with 17.2 Million hits has become the most viewed film teaser in the Indian film history. What makes him what he is? Everybody acts. There are a lot of good actors in India who act much better than him. But there is something in Rajni which is not there in any body else-his style. There is a subtle style in what ever he does. In Baasha his swish of the fingers was iconic. Also his gentle pull of his overcoat to the sides does'nt involve any huge effort or gadgets or costumes, but only his ingenuity and imagination but was very eye catching. Actors have been wearing cooling glasses right from the beginning but it is his unique quality for doing everything in style made him to invent his trademark coolers wearing style. Even at the age of 65, he effortlessly recreates his magic in his inimitable stlyle in the kabali teaser making it watchable again and again.
Saturday, May 14, 2016
Election reforms: Should freebies be banned?
The
Election Commission has deployed huge infrastructure to prevent cash
distribution to voters and we, the officers in the field are trying our best to
match the commission's expectations. But the biggest inducements are freebies
in the election manifesto. What started as a promise of cheap rice to the poor,
the culture of freebies has reached mad propositions with the promise of free
T.V, mixer, grinder, fan and now subsidised scooter and even free washing
machine that too without any targeting for the poor. One is really
scared to think what will be promised in the next elections. But can freebies
be banned by the Commission? A popularly elected government has the mandate to provide freebies to the people based on the needs and circumstances of the time. A welfare state is what is needed. But at the same time promises of freebies in the election manifesto, one may argue that, fall within the ambit of bribe or inducement to the voters. How to balance the two? What if the commission rules that governments
are free to give freebies on coming to power , but no party can promise freebies
in election manifesto?
Think, act and change.
Sunday, May 1, 2016
You can support
This summer is extremely unkind. My face could feel the extreme heat within a fraction of a second I lowered the glass of my A/C car to ask for an address from a passerby. I was literally cursing the heat, when I saw numerous women in their fifties and sixties sitting on the sides of the road selling cucumbers, tender coconuts, watermelons etc. I couldnt help but feel appalled at their plight sitting under hot sun, covering their head with a fold of their old cotton sarees and gesturing with their hands to each passing vehicles to buy their goods. It was afternoon 2.30 and one cannot miss seeing anxiety in their face to sell their entire goods within the evening. For them it is an everyday struggle to meet the ends of their livelihood.
All of us who are in a better position in the society can make a difference in their lives with a simple change in our attitude. We can and we need to support the people mentioned above who have opted not to beg but dared to live with dignity by trying to stand in their own legs. I am not asking to buy each and everything which is sold in the road side, but atleast we can buy cucumbers, tender coconuts, watermelons etc which are actually good for our health. It will cost only a fraction of the cost we spend for our movie tickets and pop-corns,but it could make all the difference in their life. By this we also contribute to the eradication of poverty in our country. They are after-all our mothers, sisters, brothers and fathers. Think, act & Change.
Thursday, April 28, 2016
innovative solution for a better india
Dual system of Governance: innovative solution
for a better India
India has special pride of place in the world stage.
Not only it is the largest democracy in the world, but it is also an
exceptional example of a third world country preserving and nurturing the
democratic ethos even during the most testing conditions. However does being a successful
democracy alone sufficient? Has that political democracy translated into any
tangible improvements in the living conditions of the masses
about which we can be proud of? The answer is not a whole hearted "Yes".
Even after 60 years independence a vast majority of our brethren continue to be
poor; we only seek to hide our failure with an utterly pitiable definition of
BPL by which if a person earns more than Rs 17 per day, he is considered not
poor. Our MMR & IMR are too high to call ourselves socially developed.
Our HDI of 0.554 is below the average of 0.64 for countries in the medium human
development group. Political justice without economic justice is hollow and our
policy makers are trying their best to bridge this gap for many years with only
limited success.
Purely from governance and service delivery point of view, if there is one thing which is a common denominator
for all our woes, it is corruption. From poor quality of roads to leakages in
PDS, from poor quality of primary education to lack of proper sanitation in the
villages, from environmental degradation to increases incidence of crime there
are a few corrupt officials who are responsible, though may not be fully. This
is facilitated by few corrupt supervisory authorities, which is in turn
possible or made to be possible because of the corrupt ministers sitting at the
helm. Higher bureaucrats are mostly helpless or in some cases themselves
corrupt. It is not a secret that in most government contracts percentage
cuts are shared as commission by politicians at all levels and some
officials.
Corruption cannot be tackled unless there is a strong
push from the highest level-the political executive (the ministers). It
is not that every corruption by every government official has a direct nexus
with the concerned minister. What is emphasised here is that, if a minister is
honest and efficient, he or she has the wherewithal to significantly control
corruption in his/her department. Today if any talented, socially conscious and
honest youth wants to enter politics and dream to become a minister it is
simply impossible. First to get an election seat and then to win over the
support of local party cadres, he or she would have to make a lot of
compromises and by the time he could become a minister his/her original self
would have long been dead. He/she would have ended up investing (?) huge sum of
money and his/her natural human response when getting into power would be not
only to make good the losses but also to earn sufficiently to face the future
elections. Further any significant reform measure is delayed or simply dumped
if it affects any of his/her constituencies. Corruption by politicians is like
catching a tiger’s tail- once you catch it, you either continue to hold it
permanently or opt to die; killing the tiger is practically not possible. It is
this original sin of the politicians that spills downwards to the bureaucrats
and other officials below.
How to get an
honest and efficient person to head the government who is aided by equally good
and at the same time technically qualified council of ministers? This may seem
to be like asking for the moon in the present circumstances but it may not be
impossible. A reform measure is suggested in this article which can lead to
significant progress towards that end if not achieving it. There have been
several debates, past and present, regarding the system of governance-
Parliamentary or Presidential system and there has been a broad consensus that
Parliamentary system is better suited to Indian conditions. This article
suggests a unique model of reform which combines the best of both. We should
provide for a Presidential form of government at the state level while
retaining the Parliamentary form of government at the Union. The founding fathers of our
Constitution chose Parliamentary form of government over Presidential system
because Parliamentary system was already familiar with the people, the vast
majority of whom were illiterate, poor and of rural back ground. Secondly,
because of the strict separation of powers, the Presidential system may lead to
deadlocks between the executive and the legislature, which a fledgling
democracy can ill afford especially after a long and hard fought struggle for
independence with all the painful sacrifices including the partition. Thirdly,
India being not only vast but also extremely diverse, a single person may not
be able to cut across all the barriers- in other words, a person from one
particular region may not be acceptable for all the people of India. With
India's peculiar case, Parliamentary form of government
offered the best bet for representation for all the regions in the Union
council of ministers as had been the experience so far. Also Presidential form of government may lead to authoritarianism which has been the case in many instances.
There were lengthy
debates and discussions in the constituent assembly regarding the system of
Governance- Parliamentary or Presidential, but the discussions didn't extend
specifically to the system of Governance at the Central and state level may be
because the need didn’t arise at that time. But now the time has come for
some fresh thinking. There is a definite need to improve the governance of the
constituent states and if the individual states perform well then the Country
as a whole will perform better. All the arguments mentioned above for a
Parliamentary system of governance, which influenced our makers of the
Constitution, are still relevant even today at the federal level, But at the state
level they may not hold the same degree of relevance. The present literacy level
is reasonably high when compared to the time of independence. Also, more than
60 years of democratic experiment has made most people including those from rural
areas, politically conscious-that they are voting differently for central and
state legislature is a clear indicator in this regard. Secondly, within a
state, the level of diversity is not so high and one person can definitely
appeal to all sections of the society. Also, India has become politically
mature and experienced to handle any dead locks between the legislature and the
executive. Hence the time may be ripe to try this experiment-shifting to a dual
system of governance- retaining the Parliamentary system at the Centre while
changing to a Presidential system at the state level. Though there are certain
drawbacks in the Presidential system, the benefits which can come to us, as
outlined below, are worth a serious consideration.
In a Presidential
system at the state level, the CEO or the Chief Minister will be have the
leeway to rope in experts from different field to head the departments, like in
the USA. At present, the people mostly vote for the party not for the
candidate, though not in all cases. They decide which party to vote or which party not be voted for, at the macro level and vote for it or against it respectively, irrespective of the candidate except in some rare circumstances. Further
the culture of "cash for vote" is rapidly spreading sounding the
death knell to our democratic experiment. Thus in the present system there is
no real quality check on the candidates to the legislatures, only from whom the
council of ministers will have to be chosen. Further, even when there is talent
in the elected legislators, political considerations outweigh all other
considerations while choosing the council of ministers. Political heavy weights
(irrespective of their credentials and criminal antecedents) get the most
important portfolios. In the process, only the governance becomes the casualty
and this same scenario is getting repeated election after elections.
Secondly, having
experts as ministers will also pave the way
for a specialist-Generalist- specialist (SGS) hierarchical model as
against the present Generalist-specialist-Generalist (GGS) system in which
the minister who is heading a department is a generalist, the secretary, mostly
from the IAS is also a generalist and the concerned departmental head is
a specialist. The present model with two generalists at the top is not delivering
the results as expected because of the simple reason that each department
requires its own specific domain knowledge and expertise which a generalist
minister is not possessing. Having a subject expert as a minister will form a
winning and more balanced combination: the specialist minister will be able to
provide a broad vision and direction to the department, which will be
implemented by the concerned department head and the generalist IAS with his
own generalist expertise can serve as an effective organizational link between
the two by providing a wholesome perspective.
Thirdly, having a
Presidential system at the state level will help to decrease electoral corruption by
discouraging the use of money by the candidates to buy votes. Presently people
accept money and tend to vote accordingly because interalia, there is no direct link
between the candidates they are voting and the quality of governance in the
state. The candidate may or may not become a minister. However in a
Presidential system people's vote will have direct bearing on their future and
they will certainly weigh the credentials of the CM candidates more than the
money being offered. Face to face debates between the CM candidates will help the
people to understand clearly what to expect from each of them. Nobody will buy
a defective product for his home just because a bribe is offered to buy it. Can
a US Presidential candidate dream of winning the election by bribing the
voters? Any such act will only cast him/her in bad light that of lacking in
substance and he/she is sure to lose the elections. We should not underestimate
our Indian voters that they will not behave similarly; if given the right
conditions they too will display their political maturity. Even if they are not
presently politically mature, having a such a system ( Presidential ) will
certainly act as a catalyst to their political maturity. As said earlier money
spent by the politicians during the elections forms the original sin for
corruption which then spills downward to the bureaucrats and below. Once that
is checked, there will be a significant overall decrease in the incidence of
corruption in the society.
Fourthly, the
Presidential system will not only improve the quality of the top executives
(ministers) but also will improve the quality of the legislators. The elections
to the state legislature will be delinked with the election of the political
executives. Once the people
come to understand that they are voting not for any government change but only
to elect their local representative in the legislature who will genuinely protect the interest of their constituency, they will be weigh the
credentials of the candidates more than the money being offered.
Fifthly, in the
present system, even if a CM desires to do bring in drastic reforms, he is
prevented from doing so by multiple factors- first he\she himself would have
corrupted during his/her long political career and secondly if he reigns in too
much on the corrupt and inefficient ministers, he may lose their support and
lose power. The Presidential system, which guarantees security of
tenure to the Chief Minister will certainly motivate him/her to
utilize the opportunity to the maximum. A question may arise what if he/she
misuses the security of tenure and becomes authoritarian. This author acknowledges that this is one of the real problems of this proposal. But the executive can be held accountable in the following ways. Firstly, elections to the legislature may be held midway through the term of the CM, which will become a sort of referendum on his/her performance. Thus he/she cannot afford to deviate away from people centric policies. It may be appreciated that in Parliamentary system if the ruling party or ruling coalition enjoys complete majority, then they tend to be authoritarian blatantly violating the democratic ethos of our constitution with the legislature ending up simply echoing the stand of the executive. Secondly there are already many safeguards in this regard in our Constitution which has created a strong Union relative to the States; further safeguards may also be made as deem fit, by taking the inputs from constitutional experts.
Sixthly, we can
have a Presidential system in which there is a two term limit to any
person to serve as a Chief Minister. This will end the sycophancy surrounding
the present Indian Leaders. At present we have many states where a person has
been the CM for multiple terms. A picture is carefully created
that the party and even the entire state will be doomed without their
leadership. The other undesirable feature in the present system is that, after
one particular leader, his/her son or daughter is seen as the natural successor. The feudal hangover has still not cleared from our
collective consciousness. For all our boasting of being the world's
largest democracy, there is an absolute lack of intra-party democracy in
India. In many parties, talented people end up spending their entire
career without getting any important party positions or ministerial berths to
showcase their talent. This lack of intra party democracy and family
politics is another crucial factor discouraging socially conscious youth from
entering politics. It is not the case that India doesn't have any talent other
than the existing leaders and to give examples would be superfluous. But, in
the present system, leadership is not being allowed to be groomed in our
political parties; leadership and talent are being sacrificed at the altar of
the existing leadership. If we have a two term limit for post of Chief
Minister, automatically second rung leaders will raise and the country can
benefit from some fresh leadership. No leader will be considered indispensable
and genuine equity will emerge. The two term limit may not be suitable in the
Parliamentary system because, in it the Chief Minister is only the first among
the equals; the government is only headed by him/her and strictly it cannot be
called as his/her government.
Lastly, a fixed term for CM will provide stability to the state government; Horse trading of MLAs, manipulations by party in power at the Union by misusing enforcement agencies to engineer defections etc will not affect the term of a duly elected CM. Also the office of Governor which is most often misused can be done away with if Presidential form adopted at the State level. These will restore/ re establish State's autonomy and rightful place in our Federal setup as envisioned by our Father of our Construction Dr B.R.Ambedkar. Infact this proposal creates stronger States than now which this author believes would inturn make the Union more stronger as the Union can be only as strong as the constituent parts.
We
have seen debates coming up every now and then about the idea of shifting to a
Presidential system. As said earlier, the idea suggested above combines the
best of both systems of Governance. Critics may argue that India's managerial crisis has other roots and the idea won’t
work. But the fact that even after more than 60 years after independence, we
are not progressing at a reasonable pace suggests that there is a systemic
malaise. The idea suggested above needs a serious consideration and may be
tried atleast on a pilot basis in one state. I must again reiterate that Parliamentary form of government is one of the basic features of our constitution and it should never be tinkered with at the Union level.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)