When the Eighteenth Amendment was passed, the main focus of attention was the removal of clauses added to the Constitution by General (retd) Pervez Musharraf and Ziaul Haq, the clipping of the president’s powers and an end to term limits for prime ministers. On the rare occasion when the question of devolution arose, it was batted away by pointing out that this may help restore disgruntled provinces’ faith in the federation.
Now we are beginning to see the effects of the abolition of the concurrent list, which gives powers previously shared between the provinces and the centre solely to the former. Along with human rights, the provinces now also have greater powers in education and health. If the Musharraf experiment in devolution should have taught us anything, it is that minimising the federal role in these areas is counter-productive. Provinces are free to set their own curriculum and standards of education which guarantees that there will never be standarisation in the quality of education provided and no uniform standards to which everyone will have to adhere. Even more curious is the fact that higher education standards were taken away from the provinces when the concurrent list was abolished and placed under the Council of Common Interests. Why this was not done at all educational levels is puzzling.
Other countries that have a similar federal set-up nonetheless have ways of enforcing national standards. In the US, for instance, states have a healthy amount of autonomy but can be coaxed into adopting standards desired by the centre. The most common way of doing this is by denying federal funding to states that do not comply. That option, too, has been closed off by the Eighteenth Amendment since it does not allow the state to reduce National Finance Commission awards.
The problem here is not with devolution per se. Other than the few subjects I have mentioned above, where some federal input is necessary, it is usually better to have as much localised control as possible. Devolution, however, does not simply mean handing over power to the provinces and then patting yourself on the back for a job well done. Local politicians have to be empowered by giving them the fiscal means to be independent. The devolution promised by the Eighteenth amendment should be seen as a small step in a ladder where the main rungs require provincial governments to devolve power to more responsive politicians who have greater contact with constituents and run for local elections. These responsive politicians will only emerge if the leadership of political parties, so keen on devolution of government, apply the same principle to their own parties and devolve power there, too.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 21st, 2012.
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PPP trying up break Pskistan with 18th amendment by and Mayawati type politics .
18the amendment is peanut autonomy to provinces but look how again pure establishment pro-center mindset is resisting it. Pakistan is federation of four states and by depriving full autonomy to constituent federal units, No good could be achieved. but it will intensify row between Center and provinces. Baluchistan is burning, Sindh is boiling and KP is under deep crisis. Autonomy is sole way to keep this federation thriving and strong.
Agreed. 18th amendment was a good achievement in an attempt to de-centralize our historically over-centralized governance structure, but it was too much change all at once. Transfer of responsibilities to provinces was not accompanied by transfer of accountability for revenues, as a result, now we have a center that can hardly meet its fiscal targets and provinces who have too much money to waste (ex: laptop schemes). If this continues, our fiscal deficits will continue to widen and economy will continue to tank. Furthermore, some strategic sectors such as education and energy should be kept with the center and even if those are devolved, should have a strong oversight from the center with long-term decision making done at the center and operationalization devolved to the provincial level.