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State of Governance – N C Saxena » Inclusion / July -September 2013 / Vol IV / Issue 3
Developm ent Perform ance
‘Why have some done better than others?’
Despite good achievem ent on the growth front, India faces significant
challenges as its social indicators continue to lag behind. Mere increase
in the social sector expenditure would not be enough, unless it is linked
with outcom es directed to the socially excluded groups and effectively
m onitored, say s NC Saxena
The yawning gap between India’s economic performance and its poor social
indicators is generally attributed to delivery issues at the State and district
level. It is believed the capacity to implement inclusive and pro-poor policies
has always been limited to Hindi-speaking and eastern States. Laveesh
Bhandari, in a recent interview, remarked, ‘if you draw a straight line from
Kanpur to Kanyakumari, the States to the right of it are not doing well
economically’. As he later clarified, this view is under challenge as after 2003
many poorer states – Bihar, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, and Madhya Pradesh –
have grown as fast as the developed States, though the historical disparity still continues.
Historical factors behind regional differences
The question why some societies generate growth and change and
others stagnate, was at the heart of 19th century sociology, especially
in the works of Karl Marx and Max Weber. This tradition has been
carried forward in India too to explain population densities and social
structure in terms of ecological variables of rainfall and irrigation, as
well as to explain association between oppressive power structures in
eastern India and its agricultural involution in the 20th century.
Till the early 19th century, the eastern region was more prosperous
than the west and peninsular India, because of better rainfall and
more fertile soil. Due to plenty of groundwater, it was easier to dig
wells and irrigate crops. Better productivity not only reduced mortality, but also attracted migration from less fertile
regions, leading gradually to high population pressure. As labour was available in plenty, landowners did not have to do
manual work themselves. Gradually, a tradition to associate status with leisure emerged, in which performing manual
work was considered polluting and a sign of low ritual status. High co-relation between caste and landownership in the
eastern region helped in the evolution of feudal customs, which determined everyday discourse and almost became part
of the religion.
In semi-arid west and peninsular India,
nature was harsher, soil was infertile,
labour was difficult to find, and
landowners had to work on the fields to
eke out a living. The situation started
changing from the mid-19th century,
when the British land tenure settlement
brought the west and southern India
under a ryotwari system, in which
property rights were assigned to
individual villagers. Also, the British
invested a great deal in infrastructure to
facilitate revenue collection.
On the other hand, in the zamindari
(and taluqdari) areas of Uttar Pradesh,
Bengal, Bihar, Orissa, and Central
Provinces, land taxes and property
rights were assigned to landlords, who
did little towards development. In the
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east, non-resident landlords often owned rights to numerous villages and developed extensive bureaucratic
organisations and policing forces to oppress and employ local villagers to farm the land under exploitative
sharecropping or wage contracts. Public investment by the colonial government in terms of ports, canals, roads, and
schools was more pronounced in the ryotwari areas and north-west provinces (including west UP), whereas this task
was often left to the zamindars in the eastern India. Thus, acute pressure on land and the introduction of British
institutions reversed the fortunes of ryotwari regions.
In addition, there emerged radical movements of social reform in Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra, concerned
with fighting against the caste system and untouchability, and very often with female literacy and the status of
women. These led to higher level of literacy in these States; in 1961, Kerala (55 per cent), Tamil Nadu (36 per cent), and
Maharashtra (35 per cent) were far ahead of the national average of 28 per cent, or an average of 21 per cent across
the four big states of the Hindi heartland – Bihar, UP, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan.
A more pro-poor regime in Kerala and Tamil Nadu interacted with a more efficacious citizenry, creating what Amartya
Sen rightly called a “virtuous” cycle. This created both a supply of and demand for a variety of successful pro-poor
public policies, including land reforms, higher investments into and better implementation of education and health
policies, and greater gender equality. On the other hand, with long traditions of zamindari or taluqedari rule, the
quality of State-level bureaucracy that the Hindi heartland inherited was generally low. Virulent patronage politics
politicised the bureaucracy in the post-Independence years, further diluting the State’s developmental capacity. Land
reforms too were very poorly implemented in the Hindi-heartland States.
Growth rates
From 1960 to 1987, output per capita in India (measured by net domestic product at constant prices) grew at an
average rate of only 1.3 per cent per annum. In marked contrast, from 1987 to 2011, Indian output per capita grew on
average at 4.9 per cent per annum. If the reference period is changed to 2000-11, the growth rate further improves to
about 7 per cent. Even the four poor and slow-growing States did quite well in the last decade, as shown in Figure 1.
The fact that growth rates have increased across the board means that the gap between rich and poor States has not in
general been narrowing. Though UP and Assam have shown disappointing results, Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh,
and Odisha have done quite well, but so have Maharashtra, Gujarat, Haryana, Tamil Nadu and Kerala, thus negating
the possibility of convergence between the rich and the poor States.
Punjab, which both in 1987 and 2000-01, was the richest Indian
State, has had one of the weakest growth performances since the
turnaround. As a result, it has been overtaken by four States. But
the growth rates of other developed States were quite comparable
with the poorer States. In fact, the ratio of average growth rates
of five States with lowest per capita income (PCI), as against
those of five highest PCI States, did increase from 57 per cent in
the Eighth Plan (1992-1997) to 94 per cent in the Eleventh Plan
(2007-12), but still remained below 100, thus leaving inter-State
disparities unchanged.
Hum an Developm ent Indicators
India’s HDI value has improved by over 59 per cent, from 0.344
in 1980 to 0.547 in 2010, as against an improvement of about 22 per cent in the global HDI value, from 0.558 to 0.68,
during the same period. As expected, there is a great deal of inter-State variation (See Table 1).
Kerala is the best performer, witnessing a literacy rate of 94 per cent, sex ratio of 959 and infant mortality rate of 12 per
thousand. At the other end of the spectrum, the worst performing States are Bihar (lowest female literacy rate of 53 per
cent), Haryana (sex ratio of 830) and Madhya Pradesh (IMR of 59). Importantly, the BIMARU States, despite
witnessing impressive growth rates, continue to remain at the bottom of the distribution in terms of performance on
human development indicators (see Figure 2). However, the richer States too were not immune from poor
performance on some indicators. The below-average performance of Haryana and Punjab on gender-related indicators
points to the inadequacy of per capita output in measuring the economic and social progress in society.
Ironically, women’s status and child sex ratio is poorer in the richer states of the north and north-west regions,
including Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Gujarat, where harsher cultivation conditions discourage female participation,
in contrast to the eastern and southern region where double cropping of wet rice cultivation requires high female
labour for sowing, transplanting and harvesting. Moreover,
the north-west region in the medieval period was prone to
attacks from invaders, from whom women had to be
protected, leading to a perception that women are a
liability. This world-view unfortunately still persists as
witnessed by the lowest sex ratio in the region. Prosperity
of these regions also facilitates their access to medical
facilities leading to sex selective abortion.
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You have raised several issues
like denial of social benefits to
socially backward classes and
other minorities in our society.
You have also raised other
issues relating to good
governance, which I have
noted and will take up these
with our leadership.
Kodikunnil Suresh, Union
Minister of State for Labour
& Em ploy m ent
I appreciate your
thoughtfulness.
Manohar Parrikar, Chief
Minister, Goa
I find that the fresh
ideas/opinions of eminent
personalities in government
and corporate world brought
out in the magazine for
resuming and accelerating
growth in India are very
useful.
Avinash K Srivastava,
Additional Secretary ,
m inistry of Agriculture
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Social Sector Expenditure
According to the
Economic Survey
2012-13, the total
social sector
expenditure by Centre and the State governments, combined as a percentage
of GDP, has almost remained stationary between 6 and 7 per cent. This is
despite the fact that GOI allocation for education, health and other sectors
relevant to MDGs has increased significantly over the past two decades.
Roughly 70 to 80 per cent of the total expenditure on social sector is still borne
by the States. But they have not been able to improve social expenditure as a
proportion of total expenditure (See Table 2).
Ironically, social sector expenditure as a percentage of GSDP is higher in
poorer States when compared to the richer States. This is because staff costs
are a significant proportion of such expenditure, and with low GSDP they
form a higher proportion for the poorer than for the richer States (See Figure
3).
However, the poorer States’ per capita plan expenditure (See Figure 4) is much below that of the prosperous States, as
their revenue collection is insufficient, and the devolution from the Finance and Planning Commissions, based on 1971
population, is not sufficiently equitous. States like Bihar, UP, and Rajasthan, which have not been able to control
population growth, suffer a great deal when compared with Kerala and Tamil Nadu. For instance, Kerala’s share in
India’s population is now 2.8 per cent, but for the purpose of central devolution of funds the share is calculated at 4 per
cent, which was the position in 1971.
Freezing the population criterion to a level it was 40 years ago is seen as a significant dilution of the equity principle by
the Hindi-speaking states. The southern States, on the other hand, see this as a necessary complement to their ongoing
efforts on population control. Interestingly, the new 14th Finance Commission has an added mandate that “the
Commission may also take into account the demographic changes that have taken place subsequent to 1971”, which
may give rise to north-south divide on this cantankerous issue.
There are two surprises in the inter-se position of the States of West Bengal and Chhattisgarh (See Figure 4). Tax
collection in West Bengal has always been very poor – at about 5 per cent of GSDP. This has also led to huge
borrowing by the West Bengal government (often from private parties), which means much of the State revenues are
used up in paying interest on State debt. On the other hand, Chhattisgarh, because of mineral wealth, is a revenue
surplus State and it is able to spend on food subsidies and other social subjects liberally.
Health
India is likely to miss achieving the Millennium Development
Goals in respect of health indicators. For instance, infant
mortality rate (IMR) is to be reduced to 28 by 2015, but the
decline has been from 60 in 2002 to only 44 in 2011. Rural
healthcare in most States is marked by staff vacancies,
absenteeism of doctors/health providers, low levels of skills,
shortage of medicines, poor management, inadequate
supervision/monitoring, and callous attitudes. There are neither
rewards for service providers, nor punishments for defaulters.
Indian public spending on health is amongst the lowest in the
world, whereas its proportion of private spending on health is
one of the highest. The private sector health care is
unregulated, pushing over-medication and the cost of
healthcare up, thus making it unaffordable for the poor.
As expected, Madhya Pradesh and UP define the bleak end of
health parameters, while Kerala and Tamil Nadu provide the
beacons of hope (See Figure 5). It is interesting to note that
after nearly 30 years of CPM rule, 44 per cent of children less
than 3 years in West Bengal are underweight for age. In Bihar,
while Additional PHCs continue to exist on paper, many centres
are derelict and abandoned sites, while others stand mined of all
human resources that have been diverted to ‘upgraded PHCs’
performing the function equivalent to CHCs in other States,
and still others have been contracted out on a public-private
partnership (PPP) basis. Similarly, 20 per cent of sub-centres at
the village level in Bihar were found to be functioning on an adhoc basis out of a primary school building or a room in
a construction site, with the ANM operating out of here only on immunisation days.
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The Planning Commission in 2009 evaluated National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) in four states – UP, Bihar,
Rajasthan, and AP. Its finding was that the human resource gap remains the singular most important challenge in
strengthening the public health system and meeting the NRHM goals. Medical professionals available in the country,
especially specialists, are not joining public services. Nursing colleges are far short of requirements, and ANM Training
Centres have been non-functional for about a decade in several States, leading to non-availability of staff nurses and
ANMs for recruitment.
Education
Enrolment levels for the 6-14 age-group have improved in all States in rural India. However, in Rajasthan and UP, the
percentage of girls (age 11-14) not enrolled in school has risen from 8.9 per cent and 9.7 per cent, respectively, in 2011,
to more than 11 per cent in 2012. Female literacy is quite low for tribal girls, and in some central Indian districts it may
not have crossed 10 per cent. The number of children actually attending schools is also quite low in poorer States, and
varies between 50 to 70 per cent. Increases in private school enrolment are seen in almost all States, showing
deterioration of quality in government schools. In 2012, more than 40 per cent of children (age 6-14 year) in Jammu
& Kashmir, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, UP, Goa and Meghalaya were enrolled in private schools. This percentage
was 60 per cent or more in Kerala and Manipur.
In 2010, nationally only about half (53.7 per cent) of all children in Standard V were able to read a Standard II level
text. This proportion fell to 48.2 per cent in 2011, and further to 46.8 per cent in 2012. The decline in reading levels is
more visible among children in government schools compared to those in private schools. For all children in Standard
V, major decline in reading levels (of 5 percentage points or more) between 2011 and 2012 is seen in Haryana, Bihar,
Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Kerala. There is evidence of a more than 10 percentage point drop in the ability to
do basic subtraction in almost all States. Exceptions are Bihar, Assam and Tamil Nadu; and AP, Karnataka and Kerala
where there has been either improvement or no change since 2011.
Kerala’s historical success in education has been largely attributed to the actions of organised collective movements,
both in the formal and informal sectors, in the form of militant peasants associations and labour unions. Lately, due to
budgetary deficit, the percentage of public spending on education to total government expenditure – which was 29 per
cent in 1982-83 – declined to 18 per cent in 2005-06. In 1990-91, out of a total student population of 5.9 million,
private unaided schools accounted for only 2.5 per cent. By 2005-06, this rose to 7.4 per cent. The enrolment in
government schools declined from 39 per cent in 1990-91 to 31.5 per cent in 2005-06. The people of Kerala seem to be
losing faith in the government system.
Reduction in poverty
The Planning Commission estimates poverty based on consumption that was fixed at 1.63 for rural and 1.90 per
capita per day for urban India at 1973-74 prices. The poverty line has been indexed upwards in subsequent years to
reflect the impact of inflation, but the civil society is not happy with the low poverty cut-off line of 27 per day per
capita for rural areas and 33 for urban areas at 2011-12 prices. However, one must remember that the Indian line
compares well with the International line of US$1.25 a day, taking the PPP value of dollar at 22. Surely the present
cut-off is too low – it could be called the destitute or starvation line – but still 27 crore people were surviving in 2011-12
on such a meagre amount. One should worry more about them rather than attack the line itself.
India’s poverty remained stagnant at about 65-70 per cent level throughout the period 1951-75 (based on the
Tendulkar methodology), when per capita incomes rose by less than 1.5 per cent a year. Perceptible decline in poverty
during the next 15 years was associated with high annual growth rate in agriculture of more than 2 per cent in per
capita terms, benefitting regions with fertile soils and irrigation (see Table 3).
Several features of poverty in India stand out. First, poverty is getting concentrated in the poorer States. Out of the total
number of people below the poverty line, share of the five states of UP, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh (all undivided), Odisha,
and Assam went up from less than 50 per cent in 1973-74 to more than 65 per cent in 1993-94. In terms of absolute
numbers, UP and Bihar account for around 27 per cent
of the country’s population, but 30 per cent of India’s
poor lived there in 1973-74, which increased to over 41
per cent by 1999-2000.
Second, in 1973-74, except for the States in the north-
west region, all other States in India had almost similar
poverty levels – between 60 and 70 per cent – with
even higher levels in the eastern states of Bihar, West
Bengal and Odisha. The decline during the next 20
years was the highest in Kerala, followed by West
Bengal and AP. In fact, Kerala was the poorest state in
India till the early 1960s, followed by Tamil Nadu. The
poor benefited in these States due to strong public
action, spurred by informed citizen action building on
high literacy in Kerala, and acute political rivalry
between DMK and AIADMK in Tamil Nadu which led
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between DMK and AIADMK in Tamil Nadu which led
to announcements of a number of populist programmes
by successive governments.
On the other hand, basic universal services in schooling,
healthcare, child immunisation, public food
distribution, and social security in the BIMARU states
appear to have been comprehensively neglected, with
no particular efforts to ensure results. By the 1980s,
electoral competition in UP and Bihar had become
intensely socially polarised, with voting decisions
overwhelmingly based on a candidate’s identity. Public
spending on education and health accounted for 45 per
cent of public expenditure in Kerala in the 1970s, while
it was less than 30 per cent in the Hindi-speaking
States, with the exception of HP and Uttarakhand which have a high literacy levels (See Figure 6).
Whereas AP, Tamil Nadu, and Rajasthan have done quite well, Assam and Chhattisgarh’s performance was
disappointing. In the period of 2004-12, the steepest decline in poverty was in India’s poorer States. Bihar has
experienced a substantive decline with the percentage of the BPL population coming down from 55 per cent in 2004-05
to some 35 per cent in 2011-12.
Policy instruments thus should be designed to address not only the low income and consumption aspect of poverty, but
also the complex social dimensions.
Food security & PDS
According to the latest Global Hunger Index Report, India continues to be in the category of those nations where
hunger is ‘alarming’. What is worse, despite high growth, hunger index in India between 1996 and 2011 has gone up
from 22.9 to 23.7. The scores for Indian States range from 13.6 for Punjab to 30.9 for Madhya Pradesh, indicating
substantial variability. All 17 States have hunger scores that are well above the ‘low’ and ‘moderate’ hunger categories.
Twelve of the 17 States fall into the ‘alarming’ category, and one – Madhya Pradesh – into the ‘extremely alarming’
category.
The Public Distribution System (PDS), which is the most important programme to fight hunger, suffers from several
weaknesses – ration cards being mortgaged to ration shop owners, large errors of exclusion of BPL families and
inclusion of APL families, prevalence of ghost BPL cards, weaknesses in the delivery mechanism leading to large-scale
leakages, and diversion of subsidised grains to markets and unintended beneficiaries. As per the 2004-05 NSS Round,
households in the bottom obtained only 17 per cent of their foodgrains consumption from the PDS for the country as a
whole. The percentage varied from 2 per cent for Bihar, 6 per cent for UP to 50 per cent for Tamil Nadu and 68 per
cent for Karnataka. The heartening news is that leakages have come down from 55 per cent in 2004-05 to 43 per cent
in 2007-08 to about 30 per cent in 2011-12.
PDS had always worked quite well in Tamil Nadu, Kerala, HP and AP, but now States like Chhattisgarh, Odisha and
Rajasthan have undertaken State-level PDS reforms by extending coverage, improving delivery and increasing
transparency. The best results are seen in Chhattisgarh because of replacement of private dealers by panchayats,
increased commissions, coverage of more than 80 per cent families under the scheme as opposed to only 40 per cent
who are officially recognised as BPL by GOI, and regular monitoring and grievance redressal mechanism that leads to
swift action if foodgrain does not reach the people. Gujarat has made FPS multi-product shops, but no such order exists
in many other States.
Political initiatives in som e States to im prove indicators in last 10 y ears
States’ poor record in human development indicators is primarily due to lack of political will. Right from the grassroots
and upwards, politics in India has become a business. Politicians put pressure on the system with a view to maximise
private gains. Politicians think that electoral behaviour can be manipulated through precipitating caste or other
populist wave at the time of elections. At the same time, elections require funds which have to come through the
looting of the government treasury. People too contact MLAs for seeking personal favours, but not for improving the
quality of public services.
The political system in many States is accountable not to the people, but to those who are behind the individual MLAs;
these are often contractors, mafia, corrupt bureaucrats, and manipulators who have made money through using the
political system, and are, therefore, interested in the continuation of chaos- and patronage-based administration. The
fact that half of the politicians in some States are either criminals or have strong criminal links and thus have no faith
in the rule of law, further compounds the problem.
The legislative assemblies have been meeting for very few days despite holding the State to account for results through
informed debates in the assemblies. Today, many legislative assemblies meet only for 20 to 30 days in a year. Most
MLAs are not interested in the legislative functions; they all want a share in the executive! Most of the time they
interfere in the executive wing of the government with no sense of accountability, but they have the nuisance value for
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influencing through the back-door transfers and posting of officials, contracts, and licenses. Such backseat driving
means informal control over the bureaucracy and it also promotes irresponsible decision-making and encourages
corruption. This has resulted in erosion of internal discipline within civil servants who think that government is not a
level-playing field and that one cannot expect fairness from the government. In some north Indian States, parallel
authority structures and mafia gangs have emerged. In such a situation, it is no surprise if the bureaucracy too is in a
bad shape. Thus, poor governance generates and reinforces poverty and subverts efforts to reduce it. Many States in
India, especially the poor ones, have lost the dynamism and capacity to undertake reforms on their own.
However, there is a perceptible change in the electoral
behaviour of Indian masses in the last 10 years that
gives the hope that improving programme delivery
may overcome incumbency and lead to electoral
victories, as in Gujarat, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Odisha,
and MP.
There has been a growing realisation among some
chief ministers on the need to improve governance, but
unfortunately only a few have been able to translate this into concrete action. This would necessarily involve keeping
the MLAs and ministers under check, which is difficult when the State is under a coalition regime, or the ruling party is
constrained by a thin margin in the assembly, or is divided into factions. The reformist chief minister is often at odds
within his own party officials, who hate getting sidelined in the process of establishing rule-based policy procedures. In
many other States even chief ministers seem to be averse to professionalising administration. But, some chief ministers
(and their number seems to be on in the increase)
are able to drive policies that are much more coherent and cohesive than typically what’s seen in the past. But, in order
to improve delivery, they seem to be centralising power within the chief minister’s office.
Among the States not doing well is West Bengal. One would have expected things to improve with the new
government, but actually things are worsening in terms of economic freedom,
which has an impact on investment and on growth in the medium to long term, though immediately it may not show
up.
But Bihar, which was lagging behind earlier, is improving at a tremendous pace. During the last seven years, 2004-05
to 2011-12, due to superlative growth in the construction sector, the economy has grown at an annual rate of more
than 10 per cent; but agriculture, the bedrock of Bihar’s economy on which the large majority of households depend,
has performed poorly. This has resulted in the lack of growth of employment within the State.
The power sector is another area of concern. Only 41 per cent of its villages and 10 per cent of the households are
electrified. The supply is erratic and small towns reportedly receive power for less than 10-12 hours a day. One critical
issue is the management capability of the Bihar State Electricity Board to take over
the created assets and manage them efficiently.
Sum m ing up
Despite good achievement on the growth front, India faces significant challenges as its social indicators continue to lag
behind. Mere increase in the social sector expenditure would not be enough, unless it is linked with outcomes directed
to the socially excluded groups, and effectively monitored. The reforms, which have been put in place, are essentially
‘soft’ reforms, which have not seriously addressed the issues of lack of accountability, corruption, criminality and
collusion within the government.
The constraints to growth are rooted in lack of political and administrative will, bad policies, faulty design of
programmes, lack of appropriate monitoring and evaluation, poor governance, and lack of political will. The success of
targeted development schemes in India is dependent upon proper identification of the beneficiaries, transparency,
supervision of field staff, and social mobilisation. Funds have more than tripled in the last 10 years for poorer districts,
but neither GOI nor donors have studied whether there is capacity at the district and sub-district level to absorb the
funds and produce quality results.
Governance reforms are intractable under a ‘kleptocracy’ that exploits national wealth for its own benefit and is, by
definition, uninterested in transparency and accountability. A pliable and unskilled civil service is actually desirable
from its point of view – public employees dependent on the regime’s discretionary largesse are forced to become
corrupt, cannot quit their jobs, and reluctantly become the regime’s accomplices. Providing financial assistance from
GOI to such States without linking it with performance and reforms, would be a waste of resources. In all other cases,
reform is manageable, albeit difficult, complex, and slow. Therefore, considering that the States would need external
pressure on them to improve outcomes, certain control by GOI over funds and policy domain in social sector is
necessary, till such time that the States show signs of improvement in governance.
N C Saxena is Distinguished Fellow, SKOCH Development Foundation
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