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February
28, 2002
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Keeping
the suitcase men in check
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Where
does the money go?
Money,
money, money,’’ the music system in a neighbouring car blared out
as I was stuck in a traffic jam, ‘‘Always sunny in the rich man’s
world..’’
There
was more to it but that is the bit which stuck. As news of the fractured
Uttar Pradesh mandate poured in courtesy my radio, it seemed quite
applicable. It is only a matter of time before the suitcase salesmen
in Lucknow get busy. (If they haven’t already done so!)
It
is money time in Delhi as well, with the Union finance minister
opening his bag of tricks today. With recession gaping at us, he
has to explain where the money is coming from. Here is an equally
important question: where is the money going?
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I still recall
what a bureaucrat told me at that point, ‘You will see that
the most questionable deal struck by the Rao government will
never be scrutinised by the CAG’
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The
Constitution says that it is the Parliament that supervises all
expenditure. This is a joke; scoring political points takes up so
much time that debating economics takes a back seat. Most ministries’
demands are simply cleared at a trot in the eleventh hour before
the Budget Session ends.
Yet
I am not sure Parliament has the tools to study these complex issues
even if members had the time or the will. The United States Congress
has a non-partisan, highly-trained staff to help senators and representatives
decipher the intricate code making up a budget. There is nothing
comparable in India and without such aides even the most conscientious
Parliamentary committees are tied down.
In
practice, the actual act of supervision falls to the Comptroller&Auditor
General. Foreseeing the situation, the authors of the Constitution
took care to spell out the range of his powers and to guard his
independence of action. (These are given in Articles 148 through
152 of the Constitution.) So, on paper, the Indian Comptroller&Auditor
General has greater powers than even his United States counterpart.
Take,
for instance, the ongoing ‘Kargil Coffin Case’ controversy. Would
anyone have heard about if not for the Comptroller&Auditor General?
(I am not saying the castigation was justified, merely pointing
out that a Comptroller&Auditor General has the powers to rebuke
even the most powerful ministers if required.)
It
is thus a matter of concern for all of us that the right man gets
the job. But while everyone has an opinion on the selection of,
say, a governor or members of the Election Commission, the Comptroller&Auditor
General’s post barely figures as a blip on the radar of public consciousness.
(How many readers can name even one of the nine men who have held
the job?)
Sadly,
there is a loophole in the shields that guard the Comptroller&Auditor
General’s freedom. Rising from the ranks of the bureaucracy, will
he bother to inspect a decision with which he himself was involved?
That flaw meant at least two major deals were never inspected.
The
first was the Jaguar deal struck during Jagjivan Ram’s tenure as
defence minister in the Morarji Desai administration. The Comptroller&Auditor
General appointed in 1978, Gian Prakash, came to that office having
served as defence secretary. The defence ministry had taken up 49
paragraphs in the Comptroller&Auditor General’s report for the
fiscal year 1976-77; it shrank to 37 paragraphs in Gian Prakash’s
first year, and continued to drop after that.
I
am not saying Gian Prakash himself was at fault in the Jaguar deal.
But it wouldn’t have been human nature had Comptroller&Auditor
General Gian Prakash chosen to re-examine decisions made during
the tenure of Defence Secretary Gian Prakash!
The
Congress(I), which had raised a ruckus over the Jaguar purchase,
did not forget this lesson. Six years ago, when the Government of
India needed to appoint a new Comptroller&Auditor General, the
Prime Minister’s Office wrested the decision away from the Union
finance minister.
Manmohan
Singh, probably the man with the cleanest image in the Narasimha
Rao ministry, recommended an IAS officer called Yuganthar. The Prime
Minister’s Office, however, was adamant about appointing another
IAS man, V.K. Shunglu. The finance minister gave way.
I
still recall what another experienced bureaucrat told me at that
time. ‘‘You will see that the most questionable deal struck by the
Narasimha Rao government will never be scrutinised by the Comptroller&Auditor
General.’’ He was referring to the sale of Maruti Udyog shares to
Suzuki, and he was absolutely correct.
To
refresh everyone’s memory, the Narasimha Rao government agreed to
sell 5 per cent of Maruti Udyog to Suzuki, allowing the Japanese
firm an equal voice in the firm with the Government of India. The
price fixed was a scandalously low Rs 269 per share, and this was
at a time when even Hindustan Motors was being quoted at Rs 200.
For the record, Suzuki itself had earlier offered a higher price!
If
memory serves me correctly, Narasimha Rao himself held the industry
portfolio with Krishna Sahi as his deputy in the ministry. Neither
has explained to this day how and why they agreed to sell out at
such a price. More to the point as far as this column is concerned,
the deal was never inspected by the Comptroller & Auditor General.
The
decision seems to have been pushed through by the Prime Minister’s
Office rather than by the Union ministry of industry. So Shunglu,
who was serving in the latter when the deal was struck, probably
had little say in the matter. But the Prime Minister’s Office seems
to have calculated that he would be reluctant to delve too deeply
into a ministry where he himself had recently held a high post.
And so it proved.
The
Jaguar purchase and the sale of Maruti lie in the past. Yet there
have been dubious decisions made in the last four years, too, not
just in the ministry of defence but also in, say, those of power
and communications. An unbiased scrutiny is required, if only to
clear the air.
A
Comptroller&Auditor General is helpless to control the hire-purchase
system being employed in Lucknow just now. But he has much to do
in Delhi. I hope the prime minister, a former chairman of Parliament’s
Public Accounts Committee, finds the right man for the job.
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