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The Importance of All India Civil Services
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DC PATHAK | 13 Feb, 2022
Perhaps the most crucial decision of the then national leadership of
free India about the strategy of management of the new democratic
Republic was to retain the 'steel frame' left behind by the British in
the form of ICS and IP and establish IAS and IPS as the All India Civil
Services to succeed them.
These were envisioned as the
specially empowered national instruments to broadly handle development
administration and the law & order apolitically - across the
national grid - taking into account the federal scheme of things in the
Republic.
In no other major country in the world does an
equivalent of IAS and IPS exists in the sense that on a merit-based
selection at the national level, the entrant is installed in the
decision-making 'leadership' position of an Under Secretary of
Government of India just within three years after the training -
Collector and SP in the states represent that status granted at the
start of the service career itself.
That there was no conflict
between the Centre and the states about these prime services was implied
in the practice of the Centre handling the recruitment and training of
IAS and IPS officials and then placing them in the hands of the states
according to an assessed 'cadre strength' with the minimal subsequent
role of broadly keeping track of their performance and giving them a
sense of central protection against any unfair treatment meted out by
the state government wherever necessary.
The Centre has also
been helping the reallocation of the cadre of the spouse wherever
needed, if both husband and wife are members of All India Civil
Services. The allocation of cadre state was made on two grounds -
consideration of individual's preference allowed on the basis of place
in the merit list and exercise of Centre's discretion.
The
strong points of these services were the high-level of integrity at
personal level, independent decision-making in public interest and fair
play in the handling of the subordinate government servants down the
line.
The comparative perks and facilities provided to even the
young officers - considering the general economic situation of the
country - are noticeable enough to promote self-confidence and a sense
of pride in the All India Civil Services.
For long years after
Independence, many of their members distinguished themselves in both
Central and state governments. They served the cause of national
integration and also added to the credit of the leadership in power in
any part of India - regardless of its party label.
But then there was an inevitable slide reasons for which needed to be examined.
Members
of the All India Civil Services retained an inbuilt willingness to
serve the national government at appropriate stages of their career and
looked forward to that experience to enhance their work profile.
They
all carried the desire of holding senior most positions that existed
only at the Centre. It was therefore the normal thing for the officers
serving in their cadre states to aspire to get the opportunity of being
picked up by Delhi under the Central quota, which every state knew it
had to honour at any point of time.
This gave them an added
reason to perform well. There could be an occasion when the call from
the Centre had to be declined by an officer for some valid personal or
family reason, but it was otherwise a mutually agreeable arrangement
that operated without impediment.
Slowly but steadily.
politicisation of bureaucracy and police by the ruling parties of the
states created the tendency among officers of holding on to their
position in the state for vested interests.
The state
governments, for political reasons, also started giving weightage to
state service officers directly recruited by them, inducing the IAS and
IPS to become more and more 'compliant'. All of this resulted in the
unhealthy trend of All India Civil Services officers looking weaker as
they moved up the ladder - the Chief Secretary and DGP not minding even
the transfers and postings of officers done by the political masters at
their back.
The Centre was justified in feeling concerned about
the heads of administration and the police in the states not measuring
up to their apolitical Constitutional responsibilities. The Central
oversight on the two premier All India Civil Services had to be
maintained and legitimate procedural correctives made in the larger
national interest to ensure competent administration of the democratic
state.
An unreasoned refusal of the state to release an officer
selected by the Centre for deputation with the Government of India - out
of political recalcitrance - can adversely affect the great tradition
of All India Civil Services contributing to democratic governance
through their apolitical public-service oriented work.
If the
rule about the Centre's decision prevailing over the state's desire in
the matter of central deputation of an officer acted somewhere as a
deterrent against wilful neglect of Constitutional obligations at the
top levels of state and police administration, this is welcome.
A
few long-range steps come to mind for improving matters relating to
these Services. First, there should be greater transparency about the
appointment of Chief Secretary and DGP of the state. There should be a
healthy Central input in the process by way of UPSC in consultation with
the state governments, drawing a panel of three most eligible officers
of the cadre - on the basis of seniority and performance - to leave it
to the state government to make the choice.
Sometime back, the
Supreme Court commended this approach when striking down the practice of
appointing an 'officiating' DGP. There is no reason why this could not
be followed in the matter of selecting the Chief Secretary as well.
Secondly,
for senior positions at the Centre requiring specialised work
background, officers available in various states could be given the
opportunity of conveying their interest for being considered - this has
perhaps been done to an extent already.
Third, it would be
useful for Cabinet Secretary and Home Secretary - Director of the
Intelligence Bureau (DIB) to hold a biennial conference of Chief
Secretaries and DGPs purely for discussing the All India Civil Services -
related issues of performance, facilities and working conditions. For
DGPs, this can be a segment of the annual conference convened by the
DIB.
Fourth, in keeping with the lofty objective of providing a
uniform standard of efficient administration throughout the country
after Independence - that had inspired the creation of the All India
Civil Services - it is in the fitness of things that during the brief
spell of joint training for the new probationers organised by the LBS
National Academy of Administration in Mussoorie every year, education on
strategic matters and national security had been introduced recently.
This
will help cooperation among the All India Civil Services officers in
their later years on issues of national interests and foster in them the
spirit of serving anywhere in the country. The idea should be
replicated in the joint courses held for Civil Services in latter
stages, as well.
Last but not the least, there has to be a new
emphasis on a further build-up of IAS and IPS as the principal
instruments of governance through the intake of best available human
material, special facilities of housing, transport and allowances
provided in the early years of the career and introduction of the
practise of a central deputation after certain periods of work in the
cadre states, as far as possible.
The Centre heavily depends on
these Civil Services and the states should be happy if their officers
are selected for such deputation at the Centre. It seems there is a case
for increasing the annual intake of officers for these services and
meeting the demands of the states in this regard.
The states
should not hold on to officers needed by the Centre as a show of
political assertion - they are always free to take up individual cases
where they find it necessary to retain an officer for a longer time for
some special requirement of the state. Nothing should be done to further
politicise the handling of the All India Civil Services.
(The writer is a former Director of the Intelligence Bureau. The views expressed are personal)
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