The ruling United Progressive Alliance has decided to try and develop a roadmap for cleaning up much of the functioning of Indias administration. Administrative reform has been a recurrent theme in the Centres agenda for governance,but so far that has fostered more academic debate than actionable plans. Now,after a slew of scandals that hit the UPA government in the past months,and the political fight-back that began at the Congresss
Burari meet,the government has announced an ambitious frame of reference for an empowered group of ministers: to examine the discretion available to ministries,to find ways of fast-tracking corruption prosecutions,and to make government procurement more transparent and accountable.
The UPA government has already lost one session of Parliament and precious time to its inability to manage the situation. The simple truth is that no government can effectively function when it has a sense of being under siege from the legislature. It is incumbent on the UPA to break this deadlock by whatever mechanism that enables both government and opposition to move forward. Simply put,each of the three pillars of government relies on and supports the other. For a substantive and durable clean-up,the government needs to recover a working relationship with the opposition in Parliament. And given the stakes,it may have to make the first move.