Let us face it. The economic and social problems facing the country are too complex for a bureaucracy that has found it increasingly hard to carry out its original mandate — to preserve order and collect revenue. Without a well laid out plan for civil service reform, I have no doubt in my mind that the government installed after May 11 will quickly start hiding behind the familiar refrain that the bureaucracy is creating hurdles in its way. To give a fair chance to implement its manifesto, something like the American spoil system may be in order. A party winning the elections should be formally allowed to appoint people of its choice to top positions. Of course, the bunch leaves when the government falls or completes the tenure, rather than adding to the already bloated bureaucracy.
In this context, the profound implications of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution have not been understood. With most subjects and the bulk of resources devolved to the provinces, the concept of centralised services has become meaningless. Indeed, judging by the manifestos, the local governments are likely to be revived. For effective delivery of services, each level of government should recruit its own bureaucracy according to its needs. It makes sense for the federal government to recruit officers for the foreign service, but recruitment for the police service and providing officers to the provinces require special pleading. Similarly, the provinces have no business recruiting and appointing teachers and doctors for the districts. Finally, at the concurrent level of governance, the Planning Commission needs to become the secretariat of the Council of Common Interest as well as the National Economic Council, with powers to recruit professional staff directly, but in proportion to provincial quotas.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 3rd, 2013.
COMMENTS (3)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
Civil service reforms are mandatory but let us not forget the recruitment process in which CSS age limit plays a crucial part as it bars candidates from taking this exam under the pretext that they are over-age when in fact in the developed countries the age limit has been set as high as 35 years. The present 28 years age limit is a blot on the face of the FPSC because eduactional and qualificational criteria should be the yardstick and the the discriminatory age policy that is crippling the talented youth of pakistan and resulting in the worst brain drain the country has seen in the past 6 decades. I request the authorities concerned to extend the css age limit by 5 years general age relaxation and save the youth and future of the country before it is too late.
Kindly stop using euphuisms. Corruption and crime is not misgovernance. The killing of civilians is brushed over by terming it as collateral damage. What has taken place in the last five years is not misgovernance. Misgovernance indicates a lack of capacity, skills and knowledge. This was pure looting and pillage and the people involved, both politicians and bureaucracy, carried it out with due motivation, desire and agency.
The idea that provincial or even local level bureaucracy needs to be developed seems good. The best thing that can happen to poor Pakistanis is the elimination of District Management Group and the Police Service of Pakistan.
A bad carpenter ( politician ) always blames his tools ( bureaucrat ).