Will Good Governance Make a Comeback in 2014?
The dialogue needs to move from being a general desirable thing to do to being judged using tangible, measurable indicators

The cynic would say the question to ask is whether ‘governance’, not even ‘good governance’, will make a comeback in 2014. In the last few years reforms have been dead and there has been very little to write home about on most governance fronts. Good governance as a concept has been as used as much as abused, and if the four 2014 Assembly results are any indication, the verdict is clearly anti-misgovernance.
The dominant economic strategy for success in good governance appears to be a highly calibrated 80:20 mix of (a) growth-enhancing, competitiveness-creating policies which increase the overall size of the cake and (b) carefully modulated left-of-centre distributive policies, respectively—these will split that cake reasonably fairly as per the political calculus. Economic growth has to be the lynchpin of good governance and this formula is a close approximation of that, provided the 20 is not growth-decimating which impacts the 80.
There are six key heads that make for an effective assessment but these, by no means, add up to an exhaustive list. However, they are the minimum necessary conditions by which one needs to measure good governance. There are other important pointers like preservation of law and order, civil service reforms, quality of roads and infrastructure, agrarian reforms, to name just a few.
Power and Water This is one sector which has seen maximum funds and reforms, yet, ironically, with little to show for it. Most states continue to have large debt-laden utilities, huge, unsustainable subsidies as well as poor quality and quantity of power. The metrics which can be counted towards good (or bad) governance are:
Investments and Ease of Starting a BusinessThe economic engine of every economy is the quality and quantity of investments committed versus those grounded—and this needs to be measured. This, in turn, depends on the overall investment climate, the entrepreneurial ecosystem and the ease of starting a new business. Every state serious about attracting investments must have a World Bank ‘Doing Business’ survey done. Subsequently, it must act on its findings along factors such as number of licences required to start a business, contracts enforcement, getting credit, registration of property and simplified payment of taxes.
JobsDespite significant unemployment (and underemploy-ment), strangely, political discourse in India does not measure jobs created, unlike in the West. How many jobs get created in the private sector, government sector and the informal sector, quarter on quarter, must be an important component of any measure of good governance. There was a highly lauded, well-designed Employment Guarantee Scheme (EGS) in the early 2000s with strict conditionalities for assets and jobs creation in Maharashtra —this could be a model worth exploring.
Desi Pork & Barrel Political Expenditure Governments, irrespective of political hue and colour, squander taxpayers’ money in pursuit of voters’ subversion. Waivers of farm loans, electricity dues and debt as well as loan melas—these are all systematic attempts at the pursuit of a targeted groups’ votes at the cost of the treasury’s health. Another indicator of good governance would be who does this least or doesn’t do it at all. ‘Bad’ subsidies versus ‘good’ subsidies need to be delineated, measured, and the bad ones need to be gradually done away with—this is a crucial indicator of good governance.
To sum up, good governance needs to move from talk to walking the talk in concrete, measurable terms. Good governance dialogue needs to move from being a general desirable thing to do to being judged using tangible, quantifiable indicators. These again need to be written into every party’s manifesto. Periodic quarterly reviews should happen on target achievement and a league table of states needs to be periodically created based on such factors. That will also engender positive, structured and well-organised inter-state competition which India needs desperately. This should replace the ad hocism and sometimes knee-jerk reaction to crises, masquerading as well-designed policy responses. There is no alternative to good governance and that is as important as self-governance. It is indeed the raison d’etre of modern democracy.
First Published: Jan 04, 2014, 06:47
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