A Female Touch To The Indian Administrative
Service
Those who
confuse the premier Indian Administrative Service (IAS), the Indian Foreign
Service (IFS), and indeed all the Central Services such as the Indian Police
Service (IPS), the Indian Revenue Service (IRS), and so on, with the army of
clerks that Thomas Babington Macaulay sought to create in the British Raj are
making a mistake.
It is true
Macaulay, historian, Whig politician, a former Secretary of War, and a
Paymaster General, via his Minute on Indian Education, in 1835, was
responsible for the introduction of Western Institutional Education in India. But,
it had a large number of unintended consequences, even as it led to the
creation of an enduring skeletal structure to build our nationhood upon.
The original
Macaulay-made sarkari babus were indeed clerks, and not the high and
mighty denizens of the Indian Civil Service (ICS), and their successors in the IAS
and other allied services. But the current day Indian bureaucracy is also built
on a solid foundation of very powerful clerks.
Macaulay may
have wanted to create a tribe of half-educated order-takers who read and wrote
English, but couldn’t think for themselves. But that may have been the
arrogance of imperial overreach that afflicted many in the British Empire on
which the sun never set at the time.
Indians were
surely glad to secure employment as clerks in the British Raj, particularly in
highly intelligent Bengal, which also housed the capital of British India for
most of its tenure. But because of extensive delegation by the relatively few
White men amongst them, originally the Writers of the East India Company, they
became much more.
And in just
over 20 years after Macaulay’s vision document, it was 1857. The First War of
Independence, or as the British like to call it, The Great Indian Mutiny of
1857, resulted in the British Crown taking over the administration of India
from the East India Company.
But an early taste for bureaucratic thrust and
parry was decidedly born in the Indian sarkari babu. It was different
from the elaborate formality of the Indo-Persian way already in situ from the
Moghuls. This new manner was redolent of Whitehall and Westminster, brought
over to India and the Orient by steamer. And made into a peculiar Indo-British
hybrid like no other. However, comparisons have been made with the Egyptian
bureaucracy, a post-colonial set up, suffering from similar malaise and
exalting similar strengths.
Western
liberal education in newly set up colleges and universities in India also fanned
the early flames of the independence movement. Indians began wondering quite
early about how to throw off the British yoke here, soon after Macaulay’s
introduction of Western education. The Indian students studied the independence
and republican movements in Europe and America that largely extinguished the
era of monarchies and empire after the two world wars in the 20th
century. What was good for the goose could not be bad for the gander.
Today, there
is a need to take stock of what has happened to the products of the competitive
exams over 75 years since independence. Three young Hindu women bagged the
first three places in the UPSC entrance exams for the IAS/IFS and the Central
Services 2021, just announced. It is significant that the top rankers were all Hindu,
because Muslims, even today, do not generally encourage their daughters to
study and excel in competitive exams.
This trend
of young women, from middle class families and others from much poorer
backgrounds selected and excelling during training, in the Armed Forces, sports,
the bureaucracy, the Police, becoming pilots, is a departure from the past,
when most became teachers in the main. It is therefore probable, that aware of
the need to be better to prove themselves as women administrators, soldiers
etc. that the female influence will help rejuvenate the services they have
qualified for.
In fact, of
the 685 successful applicants, 508 were men, 177 were women, and only 22 were
Muslim.
Of the
chosen, only 244 were from the general category, meaning the everyman, 73 were
from the economically weaker sections, 203 from Other Backward Classes (OBCs),
105 from the Scheduled Caste and 60 from Scheduled Tribes.
These
products of a highly competitive set of exams attract fine minds from all over
the country and form the backbone of the officer class administrative
structure. They are a cut above the State-run provincial services, and start
their working lives in senior positions that others can aspire to only at the
end of long careers. And this for the most diligent, working their way up from
the ranks.
Yet, in many
ways, the elite bureaucracy is not in aspirational fashion anymore amongst the
ambitious and upper classes. These are the days of multiple options, technology,
IT, Start-Ups, Unicorns, entrepreneurship, large Indian and MNC corporates,
with hugely better paid jobs.
For some
time, reservations and quotas have cut into the merit of the competitive exams,
medical college admissions, government jobs of all kinds, and led to a lesser
God amongst successful applicants.
The desire
to serve the country has been supplanted by a sense of self-importance,
aggravated by the permanent tenure and security of such government jobs. Could
this be the consequence of uplifting the under-privileged with affirmative
action? Have the chosen ones taken their positions for granted and become
arrogant?
The old burrasaheb
tone, copied from the British era Indian Civil Service (ICS), is intact still,
but a certain gaucherie has come into it. The louche manners of many IAS people
leave a lot to be desired. They copy politicians in this regard, many of whom
revel in their criminal tendencies. Times have changed, and the moral fabric of
society is definitely under threat.
In the
pre-independence Raj, it was the ICS that upheld the order, ethos and prestige
of the British Empire, backed, if necessary, by the Police and military. The
denizens of the ICS were drawn from the gentrified upper classes in Britain,
with a smattering of well-heeled ethnic Indians in the latter day. They were
paid well, had stupendous perquisites, and wielded enormous power under the
Viceregal Council. They concerned themselves with just Revenue, a colonial
extraction process, and Law & Order. To a large extent they were also
responsible for intelligence gathering, keeping a finger on the pulse and the
mood of the vast masses they oversaw. Many became chroniclers, writers,
indophiles, genuinely interested in the welfare of ordinary people.
Our IAS have
a lot more on their plate now, with full-service cadres involved in the
progress of the country in a comprehensive manner. The British Raj ICS had no
bother of elected officialdom over them, nor the vagaries and tumult of a
forever jostling and jockeying democracy. They enjoyed more or less untrammelled
power at their level, with just a hundred odd running the bureaucracy.
English
August, Upamanyu Chatterjee, (IAS), wrote an early novel from 30 years ago. His
protagonist, the twenty-four year old Agastya Sen, anglicised, city- bred,
spends his first posting in small town India, bored, waiting to be transferred
somewhere more salubrious. He kills mosquitoes, surreptitiously smokes ganja,
masturbates, tries hard not to look down the cleavage of his boss’s wife. But
all this did not mean he wasn’t out to serve his country as promised.
The elitist,
westernised, convent-educated type, joined the competitive services in the
first few decades since independence. It was a great desirable to people from
the reasonably well-off upper crust from the metro cities, who believed in an
essential integrity and sense of duty. They wanted to be nation builders, just
as the ICS before them wanted to preserve and strengthen the British Empire.
They weren’t joining to see how much dowry they could now command, nor for the
opportunity for politically sponsored advancement, and the filthy lucre from
graft. Nor did they want to throw their weight around in district towns,
sometimes forgetting to rein it in, when posted in the national capital.
And that is
why most IAS folk of that vintage saw authenticity and truth in Chatterjee’s
novel. Upmanyu Chatterjee himself, who stayed with the Service till retirement,
also wrote a number of other books, mordantly preoccupied with loss and death.
None of them had the sly send up of English August, an Indian Story.
Can there be
radical reform in the competitive services to bring in a longed-for sense of
urgency and accountability, in place of obstruction and red tape? Can the
bureaucracy, a vast army of clerks and officers, in the centre and the states, be
divested of their iron- clad job security in all but the most clear-cut cases
of corruption, dereliction of duty and so on. Can the short service lateral
entries being utilised of late make a dent in the ways of the permanent bureaucracy?
Can vast amounts of out -sourcing to, and collaboration with, the private
sector/Start-Ups, Unicorns, as is now being done in the area of defence
production, help? Can the bureaucracy be realistically down-sized, when the
number of MLAs and MPs are being upsized, and a bigger parliament is under
construction for them?
The answers are difficult. Whatever has been
accomplished by way of reform has been done internally by the bureaucracy
itself. But there is a political makeover of great consequence. Is there hope
for a closer alignment between a Hindu nationalist government as it obtains
today, that may well be headed towards declaring a Hindu Rashtra, and the old
bureaucracy that has been left-inspired, and largely Nehruvian in outlook? What
will be the impact of laws such as the Uniform Civil Code, The Population Bill,
the movement to reclaim Mandirs from the usurpation of Mosques in the Mughal
era, the CAA, the NRC, have on the bureaucracy and its functioning going
forward?
Since
retirement at specified ages is an all but rigid requirement of government
service, many die-hard opponents will retire. The new entrants may prove to be
Hindu nationalists too, provided the UPSC selection procedures are tweaked to
suit. This will reduce, if not eliminate bureaucratic split-personalities. Instead
of the distortions that have stood in place of a genuine secularism, and
resulted in decision-making, or the adamant blocking of developments, on an
ideological basis, one that was pushing a very different agenda. The
bureaucracy, like all organs of the government, media and public opinion,
cannot operate in a vacuum.
The same
problem and possibility exists when one contemplates the judiciary, and
possibly a number of other government institutions essential for fast- tracking
nation-building.
But there is
great hope, because the actions of the present government have markedly
increased prosperity and modernity already, and promises to do even better.
The political
landscape has turned favourable for a long innings for the BJP and its allies,
while eclipsing the fortunes of those that subscribe to the thinking of the old
order. From changes in the NCERT syllabus, and a reordering of recent history,
a more representative set of films. To the substitution of Mughal era names of
cities and towns. To a more assertive and nation-first foreign policy, a great
emphasis on Aatmanirbhar defence production, massive infrastructure development.
There are great changes afoot.
The biggest impact
will be felt when India becomes the third biggest economy in the world, in the near
future. This is proof of the pudding that recalcitrant forces cannot hold back.
The competitive services are essential to all this, as always from the start, and
must play its part in building the New India that is firmly on the anvil.
(1,910
words)
June 1st,
2022
For:
Firstpost
Gautam
Mukherjee
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