Indian Military
Veterans
Rajan has a good theory about this. (Reuters/Danish Siddiqui)
This is an excerpt
from a speech India’s Reserve Bank of India chairman Raghuram Rajan delivered
this week. The full text is available here.
Even as our democracy and our economy have
become more vibrant, an important issue in the recent election was whether we
had substituted the crony socialism of the past with crony capitalism, where
the rich and the influential are alleged to have received land, natural
resources and spectrum in return for payoffs to venal politicians.
By killing transparency and competition, crony
capitalism is harmful to free enterprise, opportunity, and economic growth. And
by substituting special interests for the public interest, it is harmful to
democratic expression. If there is some truth to these perceptions of crony
capitalism, a natural question is why people tolerate it. Why do they vote for
the venal politician who perpetuates it?
A hypothesis on the
persistence of crony capitalism
One widely held hypothesis is that our country
suffers from want of a “few good men” in politics. This view is unfair to the
many upstanding people in politics. But even assuming it is true, every so
often we see the emergence of a group, usually upper middle class
professionals, who want to clean up politics. But when these “good” people
stand for election, they tend to lose their deposits. Does the electorate
really not want squeaky clean government?
Apart from the conceit that high morals lie
only with the upper middle class, the error in this hypothesis may be in
believing that problems stem from individual ethics rather than the system we
have. In a speech I made before the Bombay Chamber of Commerce in 2008, I
argued that the tolerance for the venal politician is because he is the crutch
that helps the poor and underprivileged navigate a system that gives them so
little access. This may be why he survives.
Let me explain. Our provision of public goods
is unfortunately biased against access by the poor. In a number of states,
ration shops do not supply what is due, even if one has a ration card – and too
many amongst the poor do not have a ration card or a BPL card; Teachers do not
show up at schools to teach; The police do not register crimes, or
encroachments, especially if committed by the rich and powerful; Public
hospitals are not adequately staffed and ostensibly free medicines are not
available at the dispensary; …I can go on, but you know the all-too-familiar
picture.
This is where the crooked but savvy politician
fits in. While the poor do not have the money to “purchase” public services
that are their right, they have a vote that the politician wants. The
politician does a little bit to make life a little more tolerable for his poor
constituents – a government job here, an FIR registered there, a land right
honoured somewhere else. For this, he gets the gratitude of his voters, and
more important, their vote. Of course, there are many politicians who are
honest and genuinely want to improve the lot of their voters. But perhaps the
system tolerates corruption because the street smart politician is better at
making the wheels of the bureaucracy creak, however slowly, in favour of his
constituents. And such a system is self-sustaining. An idealist who is
unwilling to “work” the system can promise to reform it, but the voters know
there is little one person can do. Moreover, who will provide the patronage
while the idealist is fighting the system? So why not stay with the fixer you know
even if it means the reformist loses his deposit?
So the circle is complete. The poor and the
under-privileged need the politician to help them get jobs and public services.
The crooked politician needs the businessman to provide the funds that allow him
to supply patronage to the poor and fight elections. The corrupt businessman
needs the crooked politician to get public resources and contracts cheaply. And
the politician needs the votes of the poor and the underprivileged. Every
constituency is tied to the other in a cycle of dependence, which ensures that
the status quo prevails. Well-meaning political leaders and governments have
tried, and are trying, to break this vicious cycle. How do we get more
politicians to move from “fixing” the system to reforming the system? The
obvious answer is to either improve the quality of public services or reduce
the public’s dependence on them. Both approaches are necessary. But then how
does one improve the quality of public services? The typical answer has been to
increase the resources devoted to the service, and to change how it is managed.
A number of worthwhile efforts are underway to improve the quality of public
education and healthcare. But if resources leak or public servants are not
motivated, which is likely in the worst governed states, these interventions
are not very effective.
Some have argued that making a public service
a right can change delivery. It is hard to imagine that simply legislating
rights and creating a public expectation of delivery will, in fact, ensure
delivery. After all, is there not an expectation that a ration card holder will
get decent grain from the fair price shop, yet all too frequently grain is not
available or is of poor quality. Information decentralization can help. Knowing
how many medicines the local public dispensary received, or how much money the
local school is getting for mid-day meals, can help the public monitor delivery
and alert higher-ups when the benefits are not delivered. But the public
delivery system is usually most apathetic where the public is poorly educated,
of low social status, and disorganized, so monitoring by the poor is also
unlikely to be effective.
Some argue that this is why the middle class
should enjoy public benefits along with the poor, so that the former can
protest against poor delivery, which will ensure high quality for all. But
making benefits universal is costly, and may still lead to indifferent delivery
for the poor. The middle class may live in different areas from the poor.
Indeed, even when located in the same area, the poor may not even patronize
facilities frequented by the middle class because they feel out of place. And
even when all patronize the same facility, providers may be able to
discriminate between the voluble middle class and the uncomplaining poor. So if
more resources or better management are inadequate answers, what might work?
The answer may partly lie in reducing the
public’s dependence on government-provided jobs or public services. A good
private sector job, for example, may give a household the money to get private
healthcare, education, and supplies, and reduce their need for public services.
Income could increase an individual’s status and increase the respect they are
accorded by the teacher, the policeman or the bureaucrat. But how does a poor
man get a good job if he has not benefited from good healthcare and education
in the first place? In this modern world where good skills are critical to a
good job, the unskilled have little recourse but to take a poorly-paying job or
to look for the patronage that will get them a good job. So do we not arrive at
a contradiction: the good delivery of public services is essential to escape
the dependence on bad public services?
Money liberates and Empowers…
We need to go back to the drawing board. There
is a way out of this contradiction, developing the idea that money liberates.
Could we not give poor households cash instead of promising them public
services? A poor household with cash can patronize whomsoever it wants, and not
just the monopolistic government provider. Because the poor can pay for their
medicines or their food, they will command respect from the private provider.
Not only will a corrupt fair price shop owner not be able to divert the grain he
gets since he has to sell at market price, but because he has to compete with
the shop across the street, he cannot afford to be surly or lazy.
The government can add to the effects of
empowering the poor by instilling a genuine cost to being uncompetitive – by
shutting down parts of the public delivery systems that do not generate enough
custom. Much of what we need to do is already possible. The government intends
to announce a scheme for full financial inclusion on Independence Day. It
includes identifying the poor, creating unique biometric identifiers for them,
opening linked bank accounts, and making government transfers into those
accounts. When fully rolled out, I believe it will give the poor the choice and
respect as well as the services they had to beg for in the past. It can break a
link between poor public service, patronage, and corruption that is growing
more worrisome over time.
Excerpted from the RBI
governor’s speech at the Twentieth Lalit Doshi Memorial Lecture on
August 11, 2014 at Mumbai.
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