When I was the health minister of
Odisha, the grant from the Central Government for building the rural health
infrastructure was negligible. In comparison, from 2007-08 to 2011-12 Odisha
received 1821.69 Crore under the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM), which is
a much needed investment in the health sector. If we look at 15 Flagship
programs of Government of India like MNREGA, JNURM, Mid Day Meal Scheme, PMGSY,
Annapurna, ICDS etc, all of which are key social sector expenditures, the
non-utilization of funds by the state comes to more than 7400 Crore and such
not-utilization in a state with tell-tale poverty, hunger, disease is to say
the least highly unfortunate. The inability to utilize Central funds has been
an old problem and we need to understand the reasons and find solutions.
Denying non-utilization and demanding more funds from the centre will not cure
this malady. We need to improve administrative capacity to spend money in a
proper and timely way and then only our claims for more funds will be taken
seriously. We cannot surrender funds and ask for more money at the same time
without being laughed at.
Odisha historically has had a weak
administrative and delivery mechanism. In 1936, the British amalgamated Odia
speaking tracts to create the separate state of Odisha. Till 1936, Odisha
division consisted of three districts only: Cuttack, Puri and Balasore. In 1936
a large area, earlier called agency area or hill tracts were added to Odisha
along with the princely states. In most of these areas there was no presence of
the Colonial Government. This historical problem persists even today,
particularly in districts known with the acronym KBK (Kalahandi- Bolangir- Koraput)
and even in many other parts of the state.
Under the central schemes Government
of India provides grants mostly for one-time capital expenditure. Let us say,
they provide money for construction of roads under PMGSY. But, Central
Government does not pay for recurring expenditure like the salary of the
Engineers without whom the road cannot be built or expenditure cannot be
incurred. We not merely need engineers, but we need competent and honest
engineers, doctors and development administrators for proper and timely
implementation of developmental schemes. For example, in most of the KBK
districts the vacancies of doctors is between 50 to 75 %. So, how do health
services get delivered without doctors and paramedical staff? Even as far as
engineers are concerned, most of the work is being executed through contractual
diploma engineers. So, the problem is not merely of utilization, but also
quality of works and preventing leakages without which the central funds would
not yield optimum results. In the 15 Flagship programs mentioned earlier the
Central Government has poured in Rupees 41176.82 Crore, between 2007-8 to
2011-12, a huge amount of money indeed. Under-utilization is an issue. But,
equally, there is a problem of very weak delivery. Mr. Naveen Patnaik has spent
12 years in office. But, he hardly displays any understanding of the
administrative weaknesses and has done virtually nothing to remedy them. His
main focus is on propaganda to take credit for whatever benefits people get
from the development programmes and to blame the Central Government for the
rest of it. While being unable to utilize central funds, he also uses some
money from the state budget as a token to reinforce his image building
exercise. Go to these districts and you will find delivery of health services without
doctors, schools without teachers, diploma engineers executing crores of rupees
of work without supervision. In the naxal-affected districts Government
servants do not want to work or visit interiors, more so after the kidnapping
of the Collector Malkangiri and MLA, Laxmipur. There are large areas without a
functioning Government and all that you can find are Central and State Police
forces fighting Naxalites. Bhubaneswar is unconcerned, though fully aware of
the situation.
For a long time the Central Government
has been asking the state to strengthen the Panchayti Raj Institutions, to hold
Palli Sabha and Gramya Sabha, to hold social audit etc. The State has finally
complied the instructions only after the Supreme Court ordered a C.B.I.
investigation into irregularities under MNREGA. Why were these meetings not
being held all these years? Better late than never though and I welcome the
state Government’s decision to finally follow the instructions of the Central
Government. Unsurprisingly, the State Government is taking credit for this
forced and delayed compliance.
The real problem, as far as I can
understand having worked as a political activist for four decades at the
grass-root and having held ministerial positions in the state Government, is
poor quality ministerial supervision over developmental programs. Mr. Naveen
Pattnaik has removed many experienced political leaders from the Government and
has cut others to size. The ministers play second fiddle to the bureaucracy and
prefer inactivity to preserve the red lights on their cars. They understand the
practical and governance problems, but maintain silence. The Chief Minister
takes very little interest in getting into details of governance and has no
worthwhile understanding of grass-root problems. The administration is left to
unelected bureaucrats.
The State Government signed an MOU
with the World Bank in 2009 for a $ 250 million loan for the Odisha State Roads
Project covering Bhawanipatna-Kahriar, Berhampur-Taptapani and
Bhadrak-Chandbali roads. In 2011 World Bank suspended the loan, which has
recently been lifted. World Bank suspended the loan not because of any
step-motherly treatment or because the World Bank President Jim Yong Kim is
against the BJD. If such an action had been taken by the Central Government BJD
would have gone to town protesting against non-existing central neglect. The
loan was suspended because the World Bank was not convinced that the tender
process in which the same construction company, namely ARSS was awarded the
contract, was competitive and transparent. Also ARSS had sublet the
contracts, there was poor progress of work and the entire process of land
acquisition, rehabilitation and resettlement had not met agreed
social-safeguard requirements.
The problem of under-utilization of central funds and failure
of developmental programs will continue unless ministers are active, the PRIs
exercise real control and the administration at the cutting-edge level
improved. The Chief Minister has kept the Works department that executes the
World Bank-aided Road project under him and the performance of the department
was miserable leading to loan-suspension by the World Bank. As a critical first
step, the State Government has to acknowledge the existence of a problem with
the delivery mechanism in the State. Odisha needs a vision, which is totally
lacking. Image cannot be a substitute to vision, nor can it substitute
administrative skills, more so when the image is manufactured by chicanery.
2 comments:
Its nice to find a column from your end. All the best. 2014 election is perhaps going to be historic. Continuous effort is required to re-built the image of parties.
Binay Panigrahi, Editor, Raddi.
www.facebook/theraddi
Nice one. Keep blogging.
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