Bureaucratic Values in Development
Bureaucratic Values in Development
's
.rt.
ureaucratic Values
in
Development
A Comparative Stucly of Value Orientatlon of
Bureaucracy Engaged in Developmental and N on- D ev elo pment al Tas k s
R. B. JAIN
P. N. CHAUDHURI
1982
PRINTBD
IN
IND1A
FOREWORD
'
Scionoo
Research's Sponsored Research Programme on Governmental Systems and Development, thc Contre for Policy Research has boen coordinating the work on the various studies. The prcsent study by Dr R B Jain and Shri P N Chaudhuri attempts a comparative study of bureaucratic values and orientation in developmental and non-developmental functions of the Govcrn' ment in two States, viz,, Punjab and Madhya Pradesh.
For obvious reasons the systemic importanoe of the bureaucracy has been widely accepted, both by the academio commu' nity and the politicsl leadership for rescarch and study.
We fecl that the prcsent study is a useful contribution to the literature and should enable development of wide perspectives if interproted along with other related works.
V A Pai Panandiker
Centro for Policy Researcb, Now Delhi
Dircctor
Junc, 1982
PREFACE
Max Weber's theory of bureaucracy delineates some of the oharacteristics of modern organisations which distinguish tbem,
from traditional forms of administration. These characteristics include, division of labour, hierarchy and authority, written rules and regulations, impersonality and the like. The present administrative structure in India is a continuation of the legacy of the British administrative apparatus which was built on the
of the Weberian characteristios of bureaucracy. has been argued and assumed by scbolars in India and elsewhere that administrators steeped in such value- systems may be less useful as developmental enterpreneurs than those who are not so rigidly tied to notions of bureauctatic statusn hierarchy and impartiality. The rule-bound behaviour, the precise delineation ofjurisdiction and the centralization of authority tend to be dysfunetional in the contoxt of develoment. Thc fundamental values of a development-oriented administrative apparatus are supposed to be difrerent from those of a traditional bureaucracy abd the belief that the dcvelopment bureaucracy provides a positive tbinking and a creative outlook has almost becomc a clich6. Thus the crucial question that emefges. in Indian context is whether the traditional bureaucratic structural and behavioural values and norrDs arc contradictoty or' complementary to the requirement of a developmental adminisvalue-systems
It
tration.
With a view to enquire into such fundamental issues, the towards a comparative study of the bureaucratic values, orientation and behaviour of the
present study makes an attempt
officials engdged in developmental and non.develpomentat tasks in the two comparatively good and not-so-good performance ctates of Punjab and Madhya Pradesb. The officials chosen for study belong to tho developnrental tasks of Irrigation and Rural Electri8cation programmes and primarily'non devclopmental' tasks of Revenue administration in the three blocks of the two districts in these states selected oo the basis of thir level of
vlrt
performanco
in
of
burca-
ucratic valuos chosen for empirical investigation is limited to only a few important ones having significant impact on the performance of development goals, Such a comparative study of the value perceptions of two sets of officials working in two different fields -developmental and non.developmental and in two different settings will, it is hoped, prcvide some insights into the kind of value constellations tbat impede or are conducive to the developmental process, and hopefully enlighten us on the ques(ion whether the much maligned bureaucracy in India, while largely remaining wedded to tho Weberian model of bureaucratic organization, has in fact adapted to the changing needs of the situation. Inter-alia, the study also seeks to enquire into the validity ofthe oft-repeated plea for debureaucratizing the administrative systems for achieving developmontal goals.
various officers
We gratefully acknowledge the help and cooperation ol of the two State Governments of Punjab and
in undertaking the project. The University of Delhi, Punjabi University, Patiala and the Indian Instirute of Public Administration, Ncw Delhi gave kind permissirrn to work on the projcct.
Sardar S.S. Puri, Chief Secretary to the Governmeot of Punjab and Shri Birbal, Additional Chief Secretary to the Government of Madhya Pradesh instructed their Secretaries in the Revenue and
lrrigation Departments and Chief Engineers (Irrigation) who in turn fequested theif junior officers at different levels for extending'cooperation for the field work. Sardar T.S. Madan, ChairmaD, Punjab State Electricity Board and Sbri G, Jagatpati, Chairman, Madhya Pradesh State Electricity Board also instructed their ofrcers to extend cooperation in the field work. Collectors of the two selected districts, Sardar S.S, Daura and Shri Sekhar Dutt were also of great help to '"rs.
We are also grateful to the Indian Council of Sbcial Science Research for financing the study. We also ow our debt to th6 Centre for Policy Research which providcd us tho basic administrative facilitios to conduct our research studics. Our decp sensc
tx
of the Centrc, who has Dot only evinc'cd keen interest in the study, but has also guided us through each phase of its oomple' tion. His deep insight in the subject, firm commitment to such researches, and the academic fervour that he had lont through his discussions. have been a source of constant inspiration and encouragement to us' We are also grateful to Mr. Y'L' Nangia, Chief of Administrative Services of the CPR, who along with his band of very efficient and hard working staff has putlod us through many difficult circumstan@s in the course of our study.
Wo are tbankful to our colleagues at the CPR, especially Dr. O. P. Shar$a and the team of research iovestigators comprising of Mr. Yogesh Kumar Sbarma, Mr. J.P. Noor, Mr. R.C. Yadav and Mrs. Achla Gupta and others who have rendered valuable ossistance in the completion of the field work and in the collec' tion of data. We record our appreciation for typing assistanco rendered by Trimbak Rao, P.K. Yegneswaran and Kalpana Missar.
We are howeve r, entirely responsible for any shortcomings that might have inadverstantly crept in this study.
R. B. Jain P; N. Chaudhuri
CONTENTS
v
vii xiii
xv
Pcrspective
: An
Analytical
I
3t
2. 3, 4.
5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
The Research
Design
The Bureaucracy at tho Grass Root Levol : A Study of its Profilc and Job Satisfaction
49
trative
values
r23
Values
Pcrformancc
149
181
213
Bureaucratic Values
Overvicw
and
Devetopmont: An
255 275
307
Appendices Bibliography
9r7
LI$T OF DIAGRAMS
l. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
9.
10.
95
98
103
of Rules
lt3
127
l3l
135 142 154 158
170
Rationality
Authority
Change/Result Orientation Hierarchy and Development
l.
12.
13.
2t6
220
223 226
t4.
15. 16.
All
Structural Characteristics of
229
xlv
17.
Integrity
of
18.
menr
Equalityoflndividualsand Develop-
x6
Bg
241
20. 21.
22,
Development
Rationality and
Development
,+3
Authority and
Development
and
Us
249
LIST OF TABLES
t1
38 38
50
3.2
5l
J.J
Distribution of Officials
Service
of
Officrrs'
<i
by
Class of ser56
).t
60
6l
62
xvl
63
.l
64d
3.12 Distribution of Ofrcers in the Developmontal and Non-developme ntal Departments by Districts and Levels
of Education
67
68
3.13 Upward Mobility of the Officials 3.14 Upward Mobility of the Ofrcials
by 69
Dcpartment and Districts 3.15 Job Satisfaction of Officers by Districts and Depadments
t+
77
l7
partments
8l
83
4.1
4.2 4,3
Respondents' Scores on Value of Hierarchy by Departments and Distriots Scores on Division of Labour by Departments and Districts
Scores on System of Rules ments atrd Districts
93
97
by Depart-
t0l
4.4 -Scores on the Fceling of Getting a Government Job Without Using InBu. encc
108
4.5 4.6
u2
u5
tv|l
4.7 State Electricig Boarde
.
l17
4.8 Department of lrrigation 4.9 Department of Revenue 5.1 Distribution of Opinions about
ll8
r20
tho
t25
,
'
als' Value Scales in Respect of Caste/ Class Considerationd by Districts and ' Departmcnts
Values by Districts and Departments
t34
140
5.4 Distribution of Socio.Administrative 6.1 Distribution of Values Attached by tbo Officials , to Rationality by Dis"
tricts and Dopartnents
t52
6,2 Distribution of Respondentg According to Their Perceptions of Authority by States and Departmentg
156
6.3 .Distribution of
l6)
t62
6.4
viour of Ofrcials
Departmontt
by
Districts and
6.6
t72
xviii
7.1
Mdin:
t85 t88
the
i,
l9l
7.4
Villagers' Perception
7.5 Aptitudc for Department Work 7,6 Viltagers' perception of their Cooper.
200
201 202
Bureaucracy
'
tion by
States
statcs
oa
Syetcm of
Statos
to
Dcvo222 by
Statos
225
Combiued
.
'
'
by,$Iata
228
tion by
Statoe
231 Develop-
st4tes
2y
237
States
8,9
States
240
242
Statos
8.ll
8.12
Statos
244
All
Dcvclopment by States
..'
I
Bureaucracy and Development
r
An Analytical Perspective
The concept of "dcvelopment administration" is of recent origin but has become quite a popular and a fashionable
expression in administrative
this is somewhat an artficial conccpt, whose meaninq is unexplored .and deceptively vague, most writers including Swerdlow himself, tend to agree that the conccpt is a useful one. It involves special understandings required in developing countries. Such understandings
be madc out, as Swerdlow has done, that
ate more perceptiblc at the operating levels of an administrative These imply that officials must make enough different decisions, adopt cnough differcnt policies, cngagc in enough differmt activities, and sharc difcrent value systems and orientation to warrent the distinctivc dosignation.l
system.
In simplistic terms, therefore, as Edward Weidner, one of the poineers in this field has suggested, development administration is synonymous with "an action-oriented, goal oriented adminis. trative system."2 He furthcr defincs it as .,the process of, guiding an organization toward thc achievenrent of developnien* tal objective."s Fred Riggs characterised developmcnt administration as an administrative problem in government reforms.. He views developmcnt o'...as a process of incrcasing auronomy (discretion)of social systcms made possible by rising levels of diffraction."5 Development admiuistration, thoreforq oncompa-
of new agencies such as plannilg organizatisns and development corporations; the reorientation of established agencies such as. departmotrt of agricdlture; the delcgation of administrativc powers to deveiopment agencies; and the creation of a cadre of administrators who can provide lcadership in stimulating and supporting programmes of social and economic improvement. It bas the purpose of making change attractive and possiblo.o
sses thc organization
The goal of development is, therefore, not westernization or modernization into industrial but the employment of modern technique, both technical and social in the pursuit of societal .objectives. As Caiden suggests, it is the attainment of results, not rationality, form or ritual.? "In common usage of the term", therefore, as Weidner has put it, "a rapidly'developing country is a goal oriented country, headed in the direction of modernity, with special emphasis on nation'building and socio'economic progress."s Development administration is thus that aspect of public administration that focusses on government-influcnced
with the 'management .development as a major national goal, an effective bureaucracy should, therefore, function more as an agent of change tlan an instrument of stability and continuity. ln order to be an agent of chango, a bureaucratic system must have the capacity to .(a) forecast, project and understand the direction and tempo of major or significant changes in its environment; (b) to plan for neccssary or desirable changes; (c) to adapt itslf to changes demandcd or planned by the political system, or to other unforeseen changes; and (d) innovate on its own.o
of
In the context of devolopment administration, the Weberian model of buroauoracy has beon much criticiscd on the ground that it being a product of particular historical, social aad political milieu is not conducive to the fulfilment of the developmental objectivos.lo It is argucd that in his burcaucratic model
Eureaucracy and
Development
3.
Weber has treated administrative system as 'stoady state' systems. Consequently he was neither interested in the problem .of consciously stirnutating develofment in a society nor in the problem of directing social change. Developmont situations require risk-taking and achievement orientation whcn decision making is situational, innovative and creative. In many dovelop'ing countries, including India, burcaucracies have come in for -sharp attacks for not bcing able to appreciate tho problems of .development, Where commitment to development needs and programmes have been called for, bureaucracies have been
r.found
to
Joseph
.J-a Palombara, therefore, suggested tbat (for developmental proposes) the Weberian cbaracteristics of bureaucracy like .organisational rules and procedures, division of duties etc,, should not get procedence over target achievement.lz Thus in .a place like India, he maintains, public administrators steeped .in the tradition of the Indian Civil Service may be less useful .as developmental entrepreneurs than those who are not so rigidly tied to notions of bureaucratic status, heirarchy and ,impartiality.ls The. rule bound behaviour, precise delineation ofjurisdiction, centralization of authority and systenr of promotion based upon seniority in the administrative oranization of India are dysfunctional in tbe context of development.ra
The Indian Bureauuacy and Development Administration
.and social change. The administration was solely concerned with the maiotcnance of.law and order and the collection of reve. .nues. After attaining .indcpendence, the functions of government have undergone a fundamental change. Instead of beinp -the guardian of law and order alone it has now assumed thi rols ofa custodian of welfare and thc well-being of its citizeqs. This has led to a greater intervention of tbe state into economic ,a nd social fslds. The pengtfation of the state into economic
of India has emerged from systen. As one of Britain's major interests 'in India, as in other parts of her colonies, was to use its rresources to her best intrests, little attention was given by the British to devolop administration as an instrument of economio
.the British colonial
The
Bweaucrattc Values in Developmettt' and social developmcntal activities has acquired new importance" in the task of nation'building' The odium for bringing about' greater' desired economic, and political change in India has in on thc bureaucracy, wbich has been built up over' part fallen ih. y.ut. by the British to suit tbeir objectives' The bureau' cracy in India has now to undertake several complex socio'econ' functions and bring about the necessary social and econmic'
omic
society' With' goals and objectivcs, the style of thc' in. uioptioo of these new iun"tiooiog of bureaucracy had atso to undergo changes' For' merly the bureaucracy in India had to function in the back' ground of a colonial rule and imperial order but it was now set up with Iuppored to work in the framework of a democratic welfare the Stata aciiue involuement of the people for whose existed. The fundamental question io the context of India bas' in...fo*, been whether the administrativs system developed' ani nurtureO in a colonial setting could aew play an appropri' rof" in a free demooratic State committed to a socialistiq "t" pattcrn of society and simultaneously respond to the oxigencies
of
development?
Witb the initiation of the process of national planning, heavy" responsibility now rests with the administrators for bringing about welfare goals in tbe society. The functions accruing to the governmental bureauoacy thus go beyond the t-raditional fraJe of reference of a laissez faire state' The officials aro now called upon to act as catalyst to tho process of social and economic transformation' It has been generally argued that the economic dovelopment of a society particularly il it is' public ' to bc implemented by a massivc intorvontion of the of bureaucrat different from the type sector, requires a breed of man who is useful when the primary concern of bureaucracy is the maintenance of law and order. Thus the need of the' hour is a kind of bureuacrat, wbo is more free'wheeling, less adhering to administrative forms, less attached to the importance oflhiararchy and seniority.ls Therefore th basic issue' that has einerged in recent timcs in India has been whether thE administrative'system inhcrited from tbe British c*n respond -to the changing values, aspiration and gorls' of' the- societyt
thureaucracY and
DewloPment
rigid
'The old bureaucratic conservation and indifrerenca o1' 11-ts civil .ervants, the closed system of imporsonal operations of develop'
adherence
to
formal
rulss'
iog, change, action and result'oriented system. Thc bureauuatic 'syiiem stroutd be in communication with outsido groups and 'pcrmit initiatives, responsibilities and innovations'
bureaucracy is partly structural and partly behavioural' The traditional concept of bureaucracy stems oot oi the Weberian characteristics like efficiency, impersonality, predictability' speed' precision, discretion, unambiguity, continuity, unity and heiralchy. Its role is that of exercising and expanding control over -people and other sphercs of life either in its own or in the 'inteiest of its masters. The Indian bureaucracy has so far been ,conspicuous by its nonpartisan, neutral' and constitutionally .based status and its paramount role in the governance of the .country. Its formal exercise of traditional' State authority has
forward look'
developmental
genarally been without any conpulsion of responsivcness to tho rpeople's needs, demands, aspirations and desires. Howcver, the rtasks of a developmental bureauaracy are supposed to be different inasmuch as it is concerned with promoting creativity and
growtl with the stability of thc system. Developmental pro' 'esses are also involved in bringing about appropriate changes 'in the values. attitudes and bhaviour of the individuals in the
,involvement
society. The success in respect of developmental activities ban. ,not, therefore, be achieved without the concurrence and active
traditional
thus needs different oricntation and attitudes which should *inds of valucs, .govern its behaviour, and the bslief that the development 'bureaucracy prescribes a positive thiuking and a creativc -outlook has almost become a clich6. A signifioant questionthat arises in this context is whether such dichotomization of the role of administration is realistic and even conducive {o development? Even if such administrative jargons do carry some distinctive notions, can the importance of traditional administrative funotions bo completcly ignored? Cannot the old
'bcreaucracy, a developmontal bureaucracy
administrative apparatus be revamped to give adequate support: to the developmental offorts of a devetoping society? Is it:
conceivable that one
continue to collect revenues for the maintenanee of the statc. macbinery and another part be concerned exclusively with the. developmental activities of a welfare state? In what way the two parts in such a situation will be different and antagonistic, or complementary to each other? If economic and social change. is the goal ofa developmental administration, is ir also essential. that an attitude of cbange orientation on the part of bureaucracy differentiates it from the status quo orientation of the traditionat, bureaucracy? If we consider developmental tasks as separarofrom those of keeping law and order, the fact remains that inr many countries today the.two tasks are performed by the same type of persons and there is considerable interchange and trans-fer of personnel between the routine and revenue departments. . on the one hand and'the developmental departments on the other. And even in the days of traditional administration, withl heavy stress on 'order' and 'revenue,' mauy of the officials wereinvolved in what might have been. then interpretsd as developmental aotivities. Thus, the crucial question that emerges is. whether the traditional bureaucratic structural and behavioural.
values and norms are conftadictory or complementafy to the. requirements of a developmental administration? The basic purpose of the present research study is to attempt to find answers. to such questions in the Indian context.
shouldu
cally democratic climate.u Bureaucracy is useful to the organisational system in societies with varied political systems, tbe context and character differing a great deal according to the, political set up. Thus a bureaucratic system controlled bv th*
tically coordinating the work of m4ny individuals.'10 It is not intrinsic to any particular ideology -communism, socialism orcapitalism, but can be found in any type of socjety with or without private property and in a basically dictatorial or a basi-.
BureaucraeY and
DevelaPment
'
Communist party in the Soviet Union or The Poople's Republic of China is a different system from that oporating in a liboral society like that of the United Kingdom or the United States of
Amcrica or France.
'
A Weberian form of bureaucratic organisation is characterised by the existence of hierarchical arrangement of offices' division of duties, observance of rules and procedures, selection of personnel on merit and meticulous recording of administrative decisions in writing. This classic modcl of bureaucracy not only incorporates the essential structural charecteristics that have been postulated as definition of bureaucracy as a form of organization-hierarchy, differentiation and qualification' It also specifies a network of interrelated characteristics, both sructural and behavioulal, which identify bureaucracy of this type'l8 It establishes certain standards of integrity, impersonality and professional competence and has been found to be useful and efficient in carrying out its responsibilities' But its capacity for adaptation to change has been rather slow. In the develop' ing countries whcre quick changes are necessary for bringing
about socio-economic transformation' such a concept of bureaucracy has not been found to adequately respond to these tasks. Its role in development administration has, in fact, been questioned in many countries.
its critics' by failing to is subjoct to various dysfunctional consequences take into account the individual and behavioural aspects of its members. In an atmosphere of development, Weberiau model of bureaucracy is said to be unable to meet the demands of the stuation. Robert K' Merton, the eminent social scientist, was the first to point out that although close control by the rules favoured reliability and predictability of behaviour, lack of flexibility affected the fundemental aspect of development'
The Weberian model of bureaucracy, according to i.e. good service to the people.re Excessive formalism becomes counter-productive, especialty tn rural development where the beneftciaries are illiterate and ignorant of government rules and regulations. Another writer, Philip Selznick, oonceives the central dilemma in bureaucracy as arising out of the need for delega-
8
'tion
of power to organisationsl sob-systems. The increasing complexity of organisational tasks makes decentralisation and delegation of responsibility to the intermediaries inevitable. The bifurcation of interest between the central system and its decentralised sub-units has again.the danger of <iisplacing the goal.20
Similarly Alvin Gouldner advances the thesis that bureaucrarrc techniques. p;oduce their own reactions. As the top level bureaucrats become aware of their subordinates' behaviour, they issue additional rules and procedures wbich uttimately lead to tensions between the top and subordinate officials causing displacement of organisalional goals.2l In the same vein. several other scholars on bureaucracy, such as, Robert V. Presthus have held the viewpoint that being tho product ol an alien culture the
for transplantation in
the
in recent times bave even predicted tho of bureaucracy. According to Warren Bennis, bureaucracy has served its purpose-to provide civilization with a great social machine for reorganizing rural life into industrial society, Bureaucracies are highly efficient organizations for mobilizing thousands of people into routine tasks fighting trench wars, building Model T-Fords, licensing automobile drivers, distributing agricultural products. They thrive on the sort of institutional plaoning that can develop only where organisations are allowed to pursue fixed goals within a relatively stable environment. When rapid change erases that stability, the bureaucratic form loses its utility. A leading futurist Alvin Tofler, thus observes, that it is "not surprising to find that whenever organisations today are caught up in the stream of technological or social change, wherever research or development is important, wherever mea must cope with frst-tirne probtems, the decline of bureaucratic forms is most
Some social scientists
demise
of
Weberian concept
pronounccd.2s
The problem of bureaucracy is somewhat complex in developing countries where social and political institutions are relatively less developed and whero the State has mainly to depend
Sureaucracy anrl
Developmenl
upon the admilistrative structure for the accomplishment of its goats. Thus, ihe bureaucracy in India aod other develofing 'countries have to perform functions which in developed coun' tries aro performed by a variety of other institutions' In socialist 'countries. bureaucratic systems are more integrally interwound with their political and party systems, while in a developing
'society tho poli ioal system may be less developed in comparison lo the bureaucratic apparatus. However,'wbatever may be thp
following manner: (a) Bureaucracy is heirarchically organised 'inasmuch as "principles of office heirarchy and of levels of graded authority mean a firmly ordered systcm of super and sub.ordination in which there is supetvision of the lower oliqer by the higher ones" (b) Bureaucracy is based -op a systematic division of labour (c) All bureaucratic operations are governed by a system of rules and the application of these rules to particular cases (d) Bureaucracy is impersonal in "character, i.e. its members function without regard to individual persons, and (e) Personnel for manning the bureaucratic organi'
his office with its files, rules and routine procedures which call for his adherenc to the Weberian principles and another world of men and women with their growing problems, aspirations and demands, The environmental constraints ol this world 'and the special consideration for backward castes, classes and -other weaker sections and communities necessitate deviation in his actual behaviour from the strict Weberian model'
' Notwithstanding ttre Weberian characteristics, in practical terms a bureaucrat in India must seek to reconcile the tlto different worlds in .which he lives and works-the little world of
Thus no study of bureacracy in India can be complete and fruit' :ful without an analysis of its behaviour and attitudes. Amongst
values, the most significant .of these relate to: (a) Rationality in decision-making, i.e. choosdng between alternatives puroly on consideration of efrciency
10 as
Bur eaucrat
ic
Value s
in
D eve I op
ment-
it has been asserted that bureaucracies in developed countries. are well known as being capable of eliminating fiom official" business all kinds ol emotional and other personal biases like love, hate or contempt, (b) Impersonality, i.e. the functioning ofbureaucracy without regard for any particular persons, places orthings, (c) Authority-the existence of superiority or inferiority' complex in the heirarchy of bureaucracy ensuring authority tbr execution of various measures, and (d) The Change/Result Orientation-bureaucraay and particularly developmental bureaucracy shouid have change orieotation and/or result orientation,.. for being successful in its mission as compared to the status-qua"
orientation.
engaged in development tasks is in any way actually differeni from the old traditional bureaucracy. Il the differences exist, are they significant or merely unimportant variations? Is the Indian bureaucracy static or dynamic? Are its structural and behavioural patterns interrelated? If there are significant variations",
As the bureaucracy in India is the principal tool for bringing about socio-economic changes in the society, it is also important to examine how far the bureaucracy is able to perforrn the growing development tasks. From the academic ooint of view. it would also be worth .investigating if the Indian bureaucracy.
l1l
to
differeacos
in
patterns
or
systelns
of'
Many studios in India in recent times have focussed theirattsntion to some of the above questions and to several aspect$' of bureauoratic petformance in the developmental field. It wouldr be fruitful to review briefly the findings of some of the more important of thcse works for providing a proper perspective to thepresent undertaking. It is significant that most of these studies ' havo been critical of the way the lelics of a colonial bureau' cratic system in India have hindered tho processes of developmetrt. A voluminous study undertaken by Ralph Braibanti and his associates ot Asian Bureauodtic System rn 1.966 had clearly shown that thr British values still continued to set the tone of bureaucracy in India, and there had boen no radical departure in their bohaviour from the pre-indepcndence norms'e4 Thu$' one rrf the earlier empirical studies in this rcspect had argued that the Indian Civil Service of yesterday had a penchant for' strictly adhering to rules and regulations, like obsequious depen' dence on superior's instructions and thc ostrichlike attitude to changing external conditions. And, therefore, the new bureau"
Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh, Kulde:p Mathur found a clear linkage betwedn administrativo culture and social environtlrsnt' In tho performance of development officials, the admioistrators seem to have admired inter'personal behaviour, morality and hooesty mote than their qualifications, comp6tence and intelli-
in
geqce. Mathur noticed that even though the need to fulfil devclopmont programmes was nrost u(geBt, much of the' bureaucratio pursuit was directed towards aotivities other than. the achievement of developmental goals.26 Thus, he argued'' that if change was the basic purpose, a new-look development bureaucracy was needed in place of the Weberian model..
tl2
A
recent study by V.A. Pai Panandikar and S.S. Kshirsagar revealed the existence of some interestiog pattern of felation. 'has ship between the bureaucracy and development administration in India, Thc authors concluded that the bureaucracy involved in the tasks of agricultural development at the field level necessita,ting mass participation tended to be less rigid and behaviourally
more flexible than the headquarter bureaucraey, while the in a regulatory and non-developmental- agency rtended to be more rigid and behaviourally less flexible.2?
'bureaucracy
programmes, the offcials were lound generally to have structural properties of the organisation modified to suit their role 'effectively and efficiently.
In a searching probe into the structural properties of the ?anchayati Raj bureaucracy and its rote in agricultural development in the Mehsana district of Gujarat, Ramasbray Roy's findings indicate that the feeling of self-reliance and self-confidence on the part of bureaucracy in inter-personal relations at various levels and interaction patterns uith the ,environmental needs were found to be both facilitating and restraining factors in the role performance of the administrators.28 Although rigidity in administrative procedures and tbe absence of a tradition of allowing the ofrcials ro take instant decision restrained the adniinistrators in employing their .experience for improving the implementation of agricultural
In a similar study of community development in Rajasthan, Ftr.R. Chaturvedi has eramined the interbction between bureaucracy and the local community in the task of rural .development witbin the framework of Panchayati Raj. He 'came to the conclusion that the existing bureaucratic organisation developed for the maintenance of law and order and collection of revenue was inadequate for chrrying out the tasks of developmental change. Thus, he argues, that there is the necessity of restructuring the bureaucratic organisation on the one hand and a radical change in the orientations, attitudes and behaviour patterns of the bureaucrats on the other for the transformation of tbe rural society steeped in ignorance and laoking in resources.tn
Bureaueracy and
DeveloPmefi
13
In an illuminating article, J'N' Khosla has likewise suggested get that stfuctural de'emphasis of heirarchy is necessary to to centralisation rid of the conventional pyramid which leads most of and creates tension and inter-personal conflicts' As decentralisa' the developmental activities take place in the field, the lion of auihority enables the field units to take decision on spot without seeking clearance from the centre' Dccentralised decision making thus creates autonomous units of administration and is con<lucive for development.so
On the value systems of the bureaucracy, N'K' Singhi in his study of public and privato bureaucratic organisations in Rajasthan, has found that "there is dissonance between the defined goals and rational norms of bureaucracy and the value-orient' ition of the bureaucrats."sl The bureaucrats reveal ambivalence and contradiction in values wbich is the result of the twin proce sses of traditi,)nalism and modernity' A large number of Lureaucrats consider caste as a drag on the forces of develop'
the bureaucratio norms show both perception in regard to one attribute and greater non-rational iat onal prdeption for the other' There is thus a laclc of ment. The
rresponses to
which he thinks is necessary for the o"ttrrn oi "ooristency, bureaucracy' He also found a lack of impa*iaf functioning of and compatiUifity between the goals of socialism' ^democracy hand and the values of bureaucrats on rationalism on tbe,sne India tends to have the other. Tbe structure of bureaucracy in and the higher bureaucracy has greater caste-like structure
both of over-organization tU" ftign pcrceptions of dysfunctions development of those routines which within invotv-ioj excessive itit. "-t" f\tnctionally necessary' and of under'organization graft'.corruption' ioAoalos those ills like nepotism, favouritism' of adjustments of bureaucrats with their roles is eic., tne'qualitv .orc positively oriented' Half oflhc bureaucrats of "o-purutin"ty iJt[h satisfaction-with their jobs, natureof -work' prestig buroaucracv is dysfuoctional perceptionThc ;;;;t. level rise in rational expectations at the aspirational
in the Iudian society' Jxaggeraterl sense of status'consciousness becomes part of the personality of the filii".tutor consciousness their actual behaviour' Despite bureaucrats, which is reflected
ft;i;;;"
'14
'favouf ofroutine administrative tasks and concentrated authority and decision-making in the hands of tbe elite class which tended to be power-oriented, it was unsuitable for the achievement of the goals of national development. The realisation of an , effective welfare society based on justice, equality and democracy thus needs new values, structure and method of work and hish ' commitment to goals of national reconstruction.
and its lag at the level of actuality, He, therefore, concluded that as thd present bureaucratic system weighed heavily in
In yet another study on the Administrative Development in Indio,3z Prem Lata Bansal has made an empirical examination ofthe capacity of the civil services in India to respond to change. Her principal concern was to investigate whether the Indian Administrative Service (the IAS) alleged to be embedded in the traditions of the Indian Civil Service (the ICS) accopts, rejects 'or is indifferent to change, and if it accepts the change, whether 'the change is merely tolerable or is it one about which the IAS
,
is enthusiastic. Her findings indicate that a majority of administrators are developmentalists, but the level of their.commitment to modernizing values is low. Thus they cannot be expected to be the advocate-leaders of developmental planso who can put ''their prestige and influence to develop the support bases for a proposal. Her study further domonstrates that the administrators, "having scienco and engineering degrees are more developmentalist than those having degrees in Arts. The concentration of too much power in the role of the generalist administrator at the district level not only makes hirn authoritarian iu his attitude but also isolates him from the masses because of the heavy 'burden of paper work. Her analysis of the attitude of the administrator toward equality reveals that while on the one hand the administratirrs believed in the equality of opportunity for ..all, at the same time, howover, they wire opposed-to the policy
all in concrete .terms. Bansal's enquiry suggests that the modernizing values -are penetratiog into th IAS with only limited impact on those offcers whose tendency is retrospcctive and whose acceptance -of the new order is slow. The IAS omcers, who are intolerant
opportunity-
aimed
to
achievc equality
of
to
.EureaucracY and
DewloPment
'to modernizing processes despite m.odifications il-training and position to politioal executives' are non-
,iiJ.- r"t.t-oi[*e
l"urfopt.nrofist.
i"
,il""i"g p;tititt orientation administrative ,f".l"tjngnt ort significant revealations about the development to rttl.;i;;" higher civil services in relation
.administratiotr'
"nrl
and the prevalent valueThe impact of cultural environment tyr;;;;-il; ,o"ioty oo the bureaucratic behaviour has been the Higginbotham' ,'oUjr.t of another important study by Stantey in Conflict : The Four- .Faces of lndian ir-fiJ""av ot Culturei be' ..Bureaucracy,'" he dtscusses bureaucracy and bureaucratic changing ,nunioo, in a setting characterized by conflicting and the Indian bureaucrats' many ,cultural patterns' He has studied as they of whom were raised in traditional Hindu environments' which structures' aalry oo, their dutios in formal bureaucratic ll rirgg*r- are strongly reminiscent of the pre'Independence stf;-i""dtilttration. Rules, regulations' procedures' control practicc-s have remained mechanisms, and basic maoalemint past 25 ycars' He concluded that *r"otiuttv oo"Uanged over the by tbe British the firmness, harsbness and impersonality used suborditrf,tes were in turn .auiUorities in handling the Indian dealing with villagers' employed by those subordinates in thoir approach which became known disparagingly
The colonial way"' u-oog *-.oniiy develpoment workers as "the -official of colonial bureauoracy' was a-product boih of the paternatism emotions .and of the relatod sense that fear and awe were the anC otherwise co' *o*iiittfy to causo farmers to pay taxes
'operate with tbe rcpresentative of oxtraotive bureaucracy'
on tbe "Tho official way" of dealing with citizens relied no attempt .authority and prestige of ofrce' Bureaucrats made They emphasizerJ to gain the fricndship or trust of villagers' to causo uncooperative citizens endless instead their ability to aim."itv and expense. Offieials felt thcmselves accountable
16
superior.ofrcers and
in the service of an administrative machine, that was not ultimately responsible to the people. Their goalr and those of the agency were to control citizens and to extract. resources from them. The bureaucracy,s strict rules became weapons in the hands of its offcials, Blaborate regulations. facilitated their postures of aloof and formal inflexibility, but were ebsily forgotten when they received offers of grfts to appease the harshness of their feelings. Thus Heginbotham has. argued that colonial bureaucratic culture was opposed to the community development model inasmuch as it was based on close supervision, excessive control by higher-ups, and widespread distrust oflndian subordinates. The villagers had a wellestablished image ofthe exploitative, extractive and diadainful govornmcnt worker wbich they naturally applied to extension, agents when they first began to appear in rural areas.
The above brief review of some of the existing Iiterature on, Indian bureaucracy has invariably emphasised the fact that thc. effectiveness of the bureaucracy as an instrument of socio-.
economic dcvelopment is very much dependent upon its cultural.
bureaucracy? Whether the government itself suffers fro a lack of will or clarity of goals and is, therefore, the major barrier to devclopment is another question. Answers ro some of these important questions require sound and cmpiricallybasod analysis rather than a mere impressionistic acceptance or rejection without any systematic study. There is thus a need of. a,;r enquiry into the value-orientations of tbo bureaucracy in India.
of such constraints has not been fully investigated. Whether the procedures adopted by or for the bureaucracy are relevant in the light of policies it must execute? Or do the, bureaucrats themselves stand in the way of efective goal imple. mentatron is one of thc crucial issues of the functioning of
nature
and on factors presumed to hinder its innovative capacity. Thai there are constraints is generally admitted, but what is the,
i.c. its systems of values, belief and work-ways. However, many of these studies have not given sufrcient atteBtion to the stujy of constraints on bureaucracv
and value orientations,
t7
Any organizational form embodies values, Tb us efrciency good; wastefulness is bad. The organization as a peopled entity become value conscious; survival is good; threats to
is
survival, and those who makc them are bad. The political arena often influences institutional value. Parties in power make better allies than parties who are not. Individual employees bold values: like fat people are lazy; thin people arc energetic. These four value-orientations-the bureaucraticr the institutional, the political and the individ ual-permeate administrative policy. Altliough their presence is ubiquitous, their influences are over-lapping.sr
Thus
expertise provide the governmental organization with much of its power and autonomy. Efficiency and expertise win deference from the traditional branches of govetnrnent.ss Similarly organizations, as peopled structures, are social systems and bave goals like survival. Survival is an institutional value expressive of tho
instrument that employees have sunk into the organization. One survival technique is to maintain and augment supportive elements in tbe environment-while intermediatine or otherwise neutralizing i{eologies.sg
While bureaucratic values are part and parcel of the organizational form, institutional values arise out of an ideological or pecuniary comm,tment to particular goals of the organization. Political party values are, however, rather unique to the govertrmental organization. Wheo values of political parties are opera. tive, adminisrators attribute extra weight to policy proposals solely on the basis of the political colouration of their source.s? The most important of the value systems are individual perceptions of the administrators through which values are tfanslated into administrative policy. Decision makers are ofte n awarc. of their perceptions. As a result, decisions are consciously: frittered through ono or more biasos,38
As all officials are human beings possessing value judgements and biases, human values and orientations are regarded as enduring long-term goals which regulatc behaviour adaptation. Since,
18
the values of an official form part of his work environment and orientation and since lhe value systems of the civil services in India have been undergoing chacges due to factors like chanpe in educational system, processes of urbanisation and industrialisation, parliamentary democracy, impact of mass media, etc.. the pace at which the developmerltal goals could be realised in India depends mainly upon its officials' orientation towards certain types ot values and the extent to which their own values are consistent or in contradiction with values necessarv for realisation of new goals of a democratic welfare state.
The Objectives of the Study Tbe present study thus makes an attempt towards a comparativo
study of tbe role-perceptions, values, attitudos, orientation and behaviour of the Indian bureaucracy engaged in developmental and non-developmental tasks. It is hoped that such a study will examine the prevalent bureaucratic norms and values and their impact on the developmental orientation of the officials with a view to understand the changed character of bureaucracy
since Independcnce.
of bureaucratic values towards development orientation a're vast and varied, it was thought necessary [o limit the scope and coverage ofthe present study. The segmeot of the Indian bureaucracy that is proposed to be the focus of .enquiry is restricted only at the district level in two different felds of dcvel,opmental and one non-developmental activities in two diferent States of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh. These States are selocted purposively on the basis of thcir oomparatively
Rural Electrification Programmes and the non-developmental task relates to the Rovenue Adnrinistration. Similarly thc con. stellation of bureaucratic values selected for empirical iuvestiga-
good and not-so.good perflormance in developmental tasks. The .developmental tasks proposed to b6 studied are Irrigation and
to
onty
a few
of
l9
in
.r.r"t, a distinction betnon-developmental functions can be maintained, the project.is undertaken with a view to test the following prevalent hypotheses concerning the value.systems of ,the bureaucracy in l.ndia at the grass.root level:
,Assuming that in an administrative
"\veen the developmontal
and
engaged in developmental or oon-developmontal functions still, by and large, shares the same role-perceptions and values ? '(b) whether a different set of values and attitudes is necessary for the officials engaged in developmental tasks, ,(c) whether value-orientations of the Indian bureaucracy are dissonance with the developmental goals and are ambivalent, complex and contradictory,
'(d)
{e)
'.(f)
reflect the ethos of the social systenr from which rhe officials are recruitedo whether the possible inbuilt resistance of the bureaucra-
of the
bureaucracy
on colonial
whother the bureaucracy in India has no clear conccpt, perception and evaluation of its capacities for developmental tasks.
A
'Theoretieal
As has been discussed above, most studies of public administra-tion in developing countries have stressed the viewpoint that the band of ofrciale who have been brought up and trained in the colonial administiative culture, wedded to the Weberian .characteristics of heirarchy, status and rigidity in the adherence of rules and concerned mainly with the enforcemeot of law and 'order and collection of revenues, were quite unfit to perform thc ,duties expected in the changed situation of an administration
'20
As the government is the main institution throogh which the development goals are to bc accomplished in the changing turbulent and unstable political, environment of a democratic framework in India, it is thought. desirable that the' officials engaged in developmental worlc sbould be the kind, who "emphasise results, rather than procedures, teamwork rather than hierarchy and status, ffexibility and decentralisation rather than control and authority" The develop. ment administrator, it has been argued, had to be outgoing and people-oriented, 'he had to be responsible to the new political. pressures, and must know how to get along with politicians."sF The kind of qualities and personal traits that a successful new administrator should possess, viz., " tact, pragmatisrn, dynamism,. flexibility, adaptablity to any situation and willingness to take rapid, ad ftoc decisions witbout worrying too much about procedures and protocol,"t0 has now become a well accepted theory
geared to the task of developmcnt.
in
Against such widely accepted and prevailing notions, in his. of the profile of a single IAS officer brought up. in a colonial b:rreaucratic culture, Anil Bhatt has raised some. very pertinent and relevant questions which need to be answered in the context of any empirical study on development administration. His study analyses the profile ofthe IAS officer who" bclieved in the Weberian principles of hierarchy, line of command, and adherence to rules and regulations. Bhatt did not find him in any way less democratic. His adherence to rules did not prevent him from going out of his way to extend the benefits of thc area development plojects to adivasis. The respect for authority did not come in his way when he rcfused to attend th MPs meeting. On the contrary he asserted thc principle of locat autonomy against the directives of the highest administrative authority-the State's Chief Secretary. While he did not go out of the way to mix with the people he was not less people oriented. His experience, as Bhatt analyscs, suggests that what is ofteo criticised as rigidity has another dirnension and that is resilencq and firmness. On the othel hand adaptability;. pragmatism, aBd tact in their operational rnanifestations have:
recent study
2t
.ofteo meant doing iregular and uqiust things, allocating unfair priorities, and striking tnuous consensus and pseudo'compron:ises.a1 Biratt therefore, argues that what requires reorganisa'tion and investigation is whether the prescription prepared for the oew bureaucrat-go.getting, free-wheeling, flexible, dynamic, adaptable and so on-is couducive to development aad rvhether "it equips him to cope with the turbulence and uncertainty of tho political envitonrnent. The irnportant theoretical qucstions that need further investigation in this context are:
(l) .
bureaucratic tradition
. formance? , {3) Were these qualities really unimportatrt in adapting to thc demouatic developmental framework? ,
"{a) Are
also train the bureaucrats to respect political masterc, to '5bserve the rule of law, to develop a sense of dedicatiol and maintain high standards of intcgrity and per-
(5)
the classical attributes of capability and honesty all that irrelevant to development? For the sako of achieving results and getting along with colleagues, supervisors, and politicians, qan administrators afford to ignore all rules, regulations, procedures and norms,. criteria of fairness, just distribution and allocation? Would this lead to development?4z
The prescnt study seeks to throw some light on such type of questions that have been posed by scholars in this respect. It attempts to examine the the oretical dimensions of the socialisation process of Indian bureaucracy, the socio-economic milieu
,in which
it
in
which it is
'brought up and the theoretical framework of its vision in which it worlcs. An analysis of the typ of motivation, value percep ;tion, environmental milieu, would possibly enable us to derive certain specific suggcstions for the recruitment and socialisation 'process of the bureaucracy in India and to dcvelop policy altematives for the implementation of developmental tasks. It 'inay also enablc us to devise certain concrete steps that oould
22
be undertaken for mouldipg the present bureaucratic system for' increased performance-achievements, The study would also help us adopt certain policy measures with regard to the. structural components of the bureaucracy that might be conducive to changes desired in the bureaucratic behaviour for promoting developmental tasks. A comparison between the value orientations and attitudes of sets of bureaucrats working in two different fields-developmental and non-developmental (if the non.development&l task of revelrue colloction could be trcated as a continuuar of thtt oldl colonial bureaucratic values in the post-independence period)" and in two different settings, one wbere the developmont hac taken place comparatively repidly and in other comparatively at a lower pace would, it is hoped, provide some insights into. the kind of value constellations that impede or are conducive to the developmental processes. It is also expected that thE study would enlighten us on the question whether the much, maligned buroauoacy in lndia, while largely remaining wedded to thc Webefian model of bureaucratip organization, has in fact: adapted to tho changing noeds of the situation. And finally,. the study is also supposed to enquire into the oft.repeated plea. for debureaucratizing thc administrative system for achieving. dovelopmental goals. To what exteot such steps are feasible or conducive to the processes of development ls an enquiry tbat is being presently attempted.
two
NOTES
See Irving SwErdlow, (ed.), Deyelopment Admlntstration
Conceplg and Problems (Syracuso, N.Y., Syracuse Universiry press, 1963), p, ixThero is a ipowing literaturo in the field of development administration and administration in developing countries, Besides the $orks citod in
F.W.
Developmenl Administration (Durham, NC, 1970) J.D. Montgornory and W,J. SiffiD, (eds.), Approaches to Development , Politics Admlnbtration and Change York, 1966) ; Harry Maddick, Democfey
af
(N*t
Bureaucracy and
DeveloPment
23
Decentru|izattott and Development (Bombay, 1963) ; Ralph Braibaati' Development (Durham, N.C'' Dukc 1969) ; James W' Bjorkman, Politlcs of AdministruUniversity Press, tire Alienation in India's RwaI Dewlopment Prcgrammes (Dalhi. l9?9)' sec also A. Roy, (ed.), Development Admlnistation in the Middle East (Beirut, 1973) ; B.K' Dey, "Buroaucracy and Developmenr : Somo Reflectioos", Indian foarnal of Public Administation, vol' 15 (1969)'
2 Vols, aod Goorge F. Gaat, DeYelopment ,4dministration i Concepts, Goals Methods, (Madison Wisconsio, Univer' sily of Wisconsin Press, | 979). 2 Edward W. WEidner, "Development Administtation-A Now Focus for Research", in Ferrel Heady and Sybil Stokes, (eds.), Parers ln Compara'
Detelopment (Dolhi, 1977),
pp. 223-43;
V.A.
tive Public Ailministrctlon (Ann Arbor, Michigan, Iostitute of Public Administration, 1962), p. 98. 3 Edward W. Weidner, Technical Assistance in Public Adminhtrnlion . The Case for Development Administrutlon (Chicago' Public Adminis-
4 F.W. Riggs, Adninistrction in Developing . Countrles-Theories Prismatic.tociett (Boston, Houghton Mifrin Co., 1964).
of
5 F.W. Riggs,
The
Erology
of
versity Pros, 1964). 6 G.F. Gant, "A Notion Application of Devlopmeot AdmiDisttation", Publlc Poltcy, vol. 15 (1966), pp.200-1. 7 Gerald B. Caiden, The Dynamics of Public Admlnlstration t Guideline s to Current Tran{ormation in Theory and Practice (New York, Holt Rinhart and Winston, Inc,, 1971)t p. 269. 8 Edward W. Weidnei, ted.), Development Admlnstrutlon in Asio (Durham, N.C,, Duke University Prors, 1970) p. 7. 9 See Unitcd Nations, Development Administratlon i Current Approaches and Trends ln Public Adminlstration for National Dewlapment (New York, Uaited Natiotrs, Departmnt of Economic and Social Affairs"
1975),
p.
21.
ll
Kuldeep Mathur, Mobit Bhattacharva and Sudipto I\tundle, IIow Crisis-Three Studies (Indian Institute of Public Adminisfatioo, New Delhi, 1975), p. 54.
Bureoucracy Meets a
"An Overview of Bureaucracy and Politicai Dovelopmont", in Josoph La Palombara, (ed.,), Burcaucracy and Politi' cal Development (Princeton, N'J., Princeton Univcrsity Press' 1963)'
p.
12.
14 Richard
P, Taub, Bureaucrats Llnder Slress (Berkeley, University California Prss, 1969), pp. 196-98.
of
24
15 La Palombara, n. 13, p. ll. 16 Pstcr M. Blau and Marshal W. Mayor, Bureaueracy ln the Modern Socre4, (New York, Random House, 1966). 17 Joseph Bnsmen and Barnard Rosenberg; Mass, Class and Bureaucracy (Englewood CIifrs, N.J., Prentice Hall, 1963). 18 For a discussion of Max Weber's theory of bureaucracy see Max Weber, From Max Weber : Essays in Sociology, Translated and edited with an iDtroduction by H.I{. Genb and C. Wright Mills (New York, Oxford University Press, 1946) j Max Weber, The Theory of Social and Economic Orgonisation, Edited with an introduction by Talcott Parsons (New York, Free Pross, 1947) and Martin Albrow, Bureau$acy (London, Macmillan, 1970), and Ferrel Heady, Public Admlnistration.
A
ch.
1969),
lI.
23 See Wafrn Beu,ris, Organization Development (Reading, Mass., Addison-Wesley Publishing Co., 1969); Warrr Bennis and Pbillip E. Slatcr, The Temporary Socierl (New York, HarDer and Row, 1968); Warten Bennis, Changing Organisdtions (New Yofk, Mccraw tlill Book Co , 1966);lAlvin 'foffier, Future Shocti(Now York, Bantom Books, 1970); and Howard E. McCurdy, Publia' Admtntstration i A Slnthesis (Menlo Park, Calif., Cumming's Publishing Co., 1977),W,268-295. 24 Ralph Braibanti (ed.)i, Asian Bureaucralic Systems Emergent from the British lmperial Tradition (Dtrham, N.C., Duke University Press, 1966). 25 Shanti Kothari atrd Ramashray R.oy, Relations betveen Polltieians and Admlnistrators at the Dlstrict Level (Delhi, 1969) p. 155. 26 Kuldeep Mathrt, Bureauffatic Response to Development-A Study of Block Development Offrcer in Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh (Delhi, National Publishing House, 1972). 27 V.A, Pai Panandikar and S.S. Kshirsagar, Bureaucracy and Development Administrat bn (New Delhi, Centre for Policy Research, 1978). 28 Ramshray Koy, Bureaucracy and Development i The Case Study of Indian Agriculture (New Delhi, Manas Publications, 1975). 29 H.R, Chaturvedi, Bureaucracy ancl Local Community i Dlnamics of Rural Developmenl (Delhi, Allied Publishers, 1977). 30 J.N, Khosla, "Development Administration-New Dimcnsion.", Il e Indian Joumal of Public Adminlstraltoz, January-March 1966, 3l N.K. Singhi, Bureaucracy : Posltions and Percons (Role Struttures
19 Bobert K. Meion, Social Theory and Social Structure (New York, The Free Press, 1968). 20 Philip Selznick, TVA and the crassroots : A Stdy in the Soclology of Formal Organisatfar (Berkelely, University of California Press, 1949). 2l Alvin W. Gouldoer, "Cosmopolitans and Locals : Towards an Analysis of Latent Social Roles, I and II", Administrative Science Quarterly,II, 3 & 4, December 1957 and March 1958. 22 Robert V. Picsthus, "Weberian vs. Welfare Bureaucracy in Traditional Society", Administrative Science Quarterly, June, 1961.
,Eureaucrucy and
DeveloPment
of
Bureaucracy in &aiasthan\
25
(New
Delbi, Abhinav Publications' 19;4). (New Delhi' 32 Prem Lata Bansal, Administratlve Developmen' ln Indla Sterling Publishcrs Pvt. Ltd,' 1974)' :: StanleiJ. Higginbotham, Cr,ltues inConflict:The Four Faces of Indian Burcaucracy (New York, Columbia UDiversity Press, 1975)' 34 Samuel J. Bernstein and Patrick O' tlara, Public Administratlon ' 1975)'' Organisatlons, People and Public Policy (New York' N'Y '
pp.258-62.
.35 rbid, 36 lbid. 37 rbid. 38 lbid, .39 See Aoil Bhatt, "Colonial Bureaucratic Culture and Development Administration: Portrait of an Otd'FashioneC Indian Bur@ucrat" ' Journal of Commonweahh awl Comparatbe Politics, vol' 17 (July 1979)'
p.
159.
/t0 Itrid.
*41 lbid.
The main objective ofthe study, as stated in the earlier chapter' is to examine the value systems of the officials at the block and village levcls in two districts engaged in developmental and nondevelopmental tasks, one oach in a good developmcnt performance- Stat and another not so-good development performance' State. Since the o6cials work within a oertain organisational' framcwork, their performance is conditioned by the roles de' fined in their respective departments aud by the methods oftheir operation. In coutse of time tho incumbents develop their own perceptions about the role performance and operate in a system conditioned by the socio-cultural and socic'economic environment. The effectiveness with which an ofrcial performs'' bis own role depends, ultimatoly, upon his perceptions in the prevailing environments. The study is, therefore, intended to' aoalyse the role relationships of the incumbents aqd their departures from thEir formally assigned roles. ln other words' the study also propores to exmine the relevance of bureaucratic
theory to an understanding of bureaucratic behaviour ag visualised in the existing context of development tasks in India' The study further aims to enquire lnto thc extent to which. tha development orientation ofthe officials helps them in effective" implementation of the dcvelopment programmes ar.d interalio' proposes to assess the significant factors in the personal and"
28
.sxercise
which
influence their
'The
of the members engaged in developmental and primarily aon-developmental activities. The oficials chosn belong to the irrigation and rural electrification departments, who are engaged 'in carrying out development programme in the rural sectors, and the officials of revenue adminisftation, engaged in collection of 'revenue.which has been assumed to be primarily a non.devclopment activity for the purpose of this study.
study has been conducted amongst a sample
The agencies chosen for study bclong to two different States stages of development. The States chosen on the basis of this criterion are Punjab and Madhya Pradesh. Punjab is a State where considerable developmental activities have takcn place with respect to both irrigation and electrification. It is a State which is the best irrigated ia India (75 per cent ofnet sown area .is.irrigated by all sources) and where all villages are 'electrified. Madhya Pradesb, on the other hand, is a State with the lowest percentage ofirrigation and electriflcation (9 per cent of not sown area is under irrigation from all sources) and 19.5 per cent villages are only electrified. These States werc purposively selected for our study as examples of good and uot-so.good 'performance in development functions, whereas the regulatory activities remain almost on the same par in both the cases.
with different
Unlike most other States in the country, punjab gives a larger share of electric power to its farmers. All villages are electr! -fied and the tubewell connections for irrigation pulposes are readily given. The agriculture sector is thc largest consumer of power in the State. ln 1976, the annual per capita consumption .of electricity for irrigation in Punjab was 6l .K.W,, which was the higbest in India. Against the 77,450 electric connection for tubewells given during 1972 to 1977 in punjab, 47,429 were given between ltne, 1977 to F'ebruary 1979.
The ResearcklDesigi
'
2*
The belief that the State inherited a iast nbtwork of canals from the British is not true. ln 1947 at the time of Indepen'
dence, the portion
oflndian Punjab had only 30 per cent of the of undivitled Punjab and half of its land was agriculturally canals poor. The present irrigation system is mostly developed by tbe normal investments of the State Govarnment. The per hectarc yield of wheat, rice, cotton and potatoes in Punjab is the highest in India today. During 1971-72, the production of' wheat rose to 56.2 lakh tonnes from a mere I lakh tonncs in, 1965-66, ln 1965-61 the Coopbrative bodies in Punjab gave Rs. 25 crores in short-term crop loans, out of which only Rs. 4 crores was meant for fertilizers, while in 197l-72 the fertilizer distributed on loan, increased to Rs. 34 crores. The long term, loans for sinking tubewells by Cooperatives amounted to Rs. 3l' lakhs in 1960 which increased to Rs. 16 crores in 1972. The National Agricultural Cooperativo Marketing Federation of India now maiotains 5,000 depots of.fertilizers for 11,000 villages, These statistics are good cnough to indicate the rate of development of Punjab in the field of agriculture. The yield' of wheat and rice rose to 2,537 kgs. (next only to Mexico in' wheat) and 2,910 kgs. respectively per hectare in 1978. Similar production records have also been maintained for cotton"
potatoes, sugarcane, etc,
Madhya Pradesh, the percentage of electrified villages in 19.51. Upto 3lst March 1977, only 249 cities and towns and 13,829 villages were electrified. The total number. of new consumers under irrigation during the year came to 35.5 thousands in the irrigation sector. fhe State has lately' made considerable progress in rural electrification. Against at averago (per consumer) consumption of power of 3,249 K.W., the average per consumer consumption of power in the agriculture sector iryas 1,075 K.W. or 33 per cent approximately.
1976-71 was
In
The State lacks in a network of cau.ls. The oanals arc mainly meant for distribution of stored water accommulated
from the
The geographical position and configuration land masses are such that Madhya Pradesh is one of cultirrable of the least irrigated States in India. For increasing agriculturatr
rainfall.
-30
Bureaucratic Values
ln
Development
"production, conjunctive use of undergrourd water is a very -important factor for supplying watcr input. The Statc does not have a good network of effestive cooperatives and sale depots for supplying loans for financing agricultural production and -the oarketing of the produce, The private moncy-lenders and traders havo still a large grip on the cultivators who are often doprived of their fruits of labour. The introduction of high yielding varieties of wheat and paddy and the application of 'fertilizers in assured irrigated or rainfall areas have no doubt increased the per hectare yield of the crops under the Integlated Agricultural Production Plans, but the increase in total yield of crops is very small, compared to that of Punjab. Madhya Pradesh, the district of Morena which has a of physiological tcxture was selected for our study as . a result of discussions with the Secretary, Department of Irrigation & Power and Secretary, Revenue Department at Bhopal and Members, State Electricity Board at Jabalpur. In Morena, there are some areas where canal irrigatiou has been undertaken and where the Chambal Ayacut authorities have completed some works. This area has also been developed .through a number of rural elcctrification programmes and gained some prosperity. The areas around Amba, Jawra and Sabalgarh have also beeome prosperous to a varied degree, These factors would be clear from the irrigation map of Morena : given on tbe opposite page.
complex
In
In Prrnjab, all the districts are welFirrigatcd and electrified. Patiala district, Patiala, Rajpura and Dera Basi blocks have different degrees of irrigation. Villages by the side of the Grand Trunk Road in Dera Basi block have higher elevation . and therefore canal irr.igation has not been extended to these areas. Of course, all the villages in patiala district are electrifi:d but the number of rural consumers of power is vet to increase in ertain areas. The irrigation map oi patiala on p"g,
'In
The development pfocess in thc sectoral dimensions of irriga_ . t tion and eleetricity in Morena and patiala districts, as elsewhere
iir
33
been a continuous
#ilffi;;t
Governments have also The Revonuc departmnt of the State various rni promotion of development activities in t"* work' For instance' "tritfi collection their -"* it addilion to to. therevenue relating to asricultural inputs fatmers loans ;;;;t;;;; a village Patwari' and iik.t;; *"t.., t rtilize., pesticide stilt power'person. Therefore a key is . ll.iii"n_iraar or a Tehsitdar in the develop' Jo"n foo.tioouries have also some involvement of8cials engaged mont activities. The distinction made betwoen a.G"ptti,rf or non-developmental tasks i3 thus..somewhat a vicw to differentiate between tbeir value
"mcials and ofrcials - from tbe Revenue oerformiog deoelopment tasks cslntiailv involved in non'dovelopnental *orL*
ono'
,JiUitt"ty with
systems,
for
StudY
Patiala srcrg As stated earlier, the two districts of Morena and at the state .;i";;t;t a rssult of discussions with the ofrcials each of the l-.".i. af,"t selection of districts' three blocks in two States were solectcd on the followiog principles'
The district
l0 fcation is as on
Morona in the State of Madhya Pradesh has position of blocks in respect to rural electriblocks and tho
of
Page 34.,
:
I
good In the selection of the three bloclcs for our study' with the criterion of 660/" .medium and poor stages of development, a block ..and above of olectrified and irrigated villages in block with 33% was taken as the well-developed bl'ock' A -oi l"tS of eiectrified aod irrigated villages was taken to be io th" poo, stage of development. A block having between 33% "ana a6o/" of electrified and irrigatcd villages was considered to be one with medium dovelopment. With these criteria' 'three blocks, Amba, Jawra and Sabalgarh wcre setected for our -study. Theso three blocks also satisfied the criteria of develop..ot io irrigation. Amba Blook is very well irrigated whilc Jawra Block is onty partly irrigated. Sabatgarh Block is ill-
34
B ureaucratic Vahies
in'Delelopment
,Sr,
Block
Total
villages
Electrified
villages 69 62
74 46
Perc.ntage
No.
l.
2.
Porsha
73
95 87
39
Amba
7l
180
Morena
4.
6. 7. 8. 9.
10.
Jawra Pahargarh
Sabalgarh
99 127
46 22
JI
27
28 49 38
t24
99
Kailaresh
47
Vijaipur
Sheopur
r54
213
109
24
6
t4
9
Karhal Total
1249
4t3
SourcB:
as reprsentativcs of good; medium and poor developmental performance blocks ln the Morena district of Madhya pradesh.
Applying tho samc criteria of developmcnt so far as irrigation
were chosen somewhat subjectively.on the basis of discussions. with block lcvel ofrcers, ae thc rolevant statistics about the irrigation and clectrification programmes were noi available for all villages in tho selected blocks. Good, medium and poor. pcrformancc villagos, in fact, fopresent a comparative concept. In a good performance block a good performance villagc meanr a village well irrigated and welFelectrffied, while mediul performance village meaut a village which is only partly irrigated and partly electrified, A poor performance village in a gJoC Utock moant a village where irrigation and/or o'iectricitl facilitics,
and electrification were concerncd, three villages in each of thesc blocks were selected for dctailed study. These villages.
35
it
is geographically located within th jurisdiction of a block, one third or less of which is irrigated and electrificd. Similarly, in a poor performance blook where electricity or irrigation facilities are available in <ine-third of th.' area or .less, a good perfor. mance village was one which shared these development benefrts to the sams cxtent. A medium performance village in a poor performanc"e block was one where electricity and/or irrigation was available only to a small portion of the village. A poor performance village in a poor performance block was one where electricity and/or irrigation facilities wor not available. With
criteria the villages that were chosen for study in the sclected blocks of Morena district in Madhya Pradesh were:
those
I
Amba
block) (good
perJbrmance
II
Jawra (medium
performance
III
Sabalgarh (poor performance block)
block)
L
2.
l.
Good villageChhaira
t. Good villageSunhera
,,
Medium
Medium
villageBharatpura
J.
villagcBelgaon
3.
villageLakhanjhari
3.
Poor
village-
Poor
village-
Paikapura
Manjra
Poor villageRampahari
The same methodology was apptied in the selection of blocks and villages in thc district of Patiala in the State of Punjab. The Patiala block is very well irrigated by the Det-work of Punjab irrigation canal system as well as by the Bhakra-Nangal canals. Patiala is also the hcadquarters of the Punjab State Etectricity Board. Although all the villages of Punjab are electrified, the numbcr of agricultural connections differe from area to' area. In Patiala block the agricultural connections are very
36
it was takn as representative for a good performance block. The Rajpura block is well-elcctrified (although not to the extent as Patiala block) and only a portion of it is irrigated. This block was, therefote, taken as representativc of the medium performancc blocks. Dera basi block which is
mance,
near the Grand Trunk Road between Chandigarh and Rajpura has little irrigation facilities but some elcctrification work bas been carried out, It was, therefore, chosen as a rpresentative of poor performance blocks.
The same criteria used for seiection of good, medium and poor performance villages in the Morena district of Madhya Pradesh were also applied for seleotion of villages in the tbree blocks of the Patiala district in Punjab also. The villages. ultimatelv selected in the Patiala district were as follows:
I
Patialn (good
performance
II
Rajpura (mediunt
performance
III
Dera Basi (poor
performance
block)
block)
block)
t. Good Village
Re
was
|. Good Village
Chhat
1. Good Village
Ghanoune
'-
Bankberpur
3. Poor
Village-
3.
3. Poor VillageMohmedpur
Old Sular
for Study
for lrrigation, Blectricity and ofthe Madhya Pradesh Government and postod in the headquarters of the district of Morena and thc three selected blocks consisted of 92 officers at the time of the Survey. These officers at the district and at selected block leadquarters consisted of the Executive and Assistant Engineors
The universe of ofrcials working
Revenue departments
lIIe
Rescarch
Design
37
-and sub*ngineers, Revenue Sub'Divisional OfEcers (SDOs)' Tehsildars, and Naib Tehsildars' Out of thesc 92 ofrcors, 88
.canvassod alter personal discussioirs. Thc overall position ,;the three types of officials intorviewed is given ia Table 2'1'
-were available for interviews and-ctructured questionnaires were
of
_.
The universe of officials working for the two developmental -and one non-devclopmental departments of the Governmcnt of -rPunjab an$ posted in Patiala and two other blocks consisted of '136 officers. The city of Patiala has the largest concentration of officers on account of the shortage of acoommodation at .other block headquarters. The rovenue work. of Dera Basi -block was, in fact, managed by officers posted at Rajpura. On account of the reorganisation of the Revenue Department of Ponjab, a number of promotions and transfors were taking
TABLE 2.1 Number of Ofrcials Interviewed in Morena by Department and Places of Postine
Place of Posting
Departments
Elecitricity Irrigation
Revenue 5
Total
Morena Headquarters
Amba Block
Jawra Block Sabalgarh Bloch
4
4 3
9
6
l8
15
20
6
8
29 26
88
t
13
t6
51
Total place
24
at the time of the survey. The number of officials belonging to the Revenue Department, that wc.could contact, was, therefore, somewhat less. The total number of officials of 'the Government of Punjab interviewed was "thus 124. The dis. ,tribution of the thrce types of the officials in Punjab who were :interviewed during the enquiry was as follows:
Bureaucrat
ic
Yalues tn Development
TABLE 2.2
Number of Officials Iuterviewed in Patiala by Departments and Places of Posting
Place of Posting
Departments
Electticity
Itigatlon
JI
Revenue Total
32 24
8
3
?l
35
l8
74 39
Total
tRevenue officers posted Dera Basi Block.
l1
l8 t24
at
In addition to the officials, a numbor of beneficiaries irr the. selected villages were also interviewed on a structured qustionnaire in order to know their reactions and attitudes to the value systems of the ofrcials in their dealings with them. The table below gif.bs the number of villdgdrs iiiteiiiCw;d inl6e niiE selecte d villages each of the Morena and Patiala districrc.
TABLE2.3 Districts
Morena
Ambo
Patiaia Patiala
Block
BIock
Thara Chhara
20
Bharatpura Belgaom
t9 20 erpur 20 Paikapura Manjra Rampehari Old Sular Basi Sikha Mohmed22 pur 20
2t
Ghanoune,
20
20 20
19
20
20
39
of irrigation and/or rural clectrification or nonteneficiaries but knowledgeable persons in the areas. The total number of villagers interviewed was L74 in the Morena district
lprogrammes
and
'The
180
,19
and 20
A study of
valuc-orientation
of
'mental and non-developmental tasks]is important for an analysis of buteaucratic performanc;. Values are enduring long-term goals directing and regulating bohaviour patterns and adapt. .ations. Values refer to thosc aspects of individual's orientation wrich commit him to ths observation of certain rules, various 'standards and criteria of selection of certain courses of actions.
tends to srow out of a of rules. Values may be explicit or implicit, and restrictive to an individual. In other words, they enable bim. to tako actions in terms of certain
valuative standards.
Since the attainment of independence the value system of the society in Indiahas been undergoing rapid changes, A number of complex, interwoven and diverse factors are responsible for ,it. In relatioo to the sub-systom of bureaucracy, the officials' ,commitment to the nature of value-orientation assumes a great .significance. The problem of bureaucratic capabilities and preparedness for development tasks is intimately conneced with the problems of its values, orientation and behaviour. This study 'is, therefore, concerned with a comparative analysis of values, ,perceptions, attitudes, orientation and behaviour ol tho bureau,cracy in India engaged in developmcntal aod non-developmental {traditional) tasks (assuming, of course, that such a distinction an be maintained structurally). The questionnair, is thus designed to provide scope for analysing the bureaucratic capabilities and preparedness for dovelopmental tasks as also to {rnderstand tho change in the character of bureaucracy sinco
"Such orientation is not random but .system having some organised set
4,0
Independence and to examine if the Indian bureaucracy and large, shares the same values and role-perceptions. Values Selected
ctill, by'
for Enquiry
Kee ping thesc considerations in mind, the scale and items in', the questionnaire were designed to probe into the following sets'" of values and characteristics otit of a large constellation ofr values that the ofrcials possess in a bureaucratic structure.
S t ruc tur al
Character
is t
ics
l.
Hierarchy of AuthoritY
4.
II
Selection on Merit
5. Inpersonality
Social Per sonal Values
VI.
l.
2,
III
Socio-cultural Value
1.
IV
S ocio-
Value s
Section
VIlft
Status Consciousness
V Behavioural Values
Section lX.
Rationality
4L,
of the officials ald their role perceptions and for inquiry into factors like education, training, work experience, age, income' class of jobs, promotions received, exposure to larger environment having varied influences on their accomplishing developmeotal or non{evelopme ntal tasks, .some questions on persona} particulars were incorporated in the questionnaire fieant for tno officials (Sections X and XI of the questionnaire in Appendix II).
For the measurement ol the degree of bureaucratisation we had to dovelop Likert type scales for the various charactsristics of bureaucracy. To avoid the problem of summated rating in
or decrease in the possible scores, coding from "strongly in the variation agree" to "strongly disagree" instead of merely "agtee or disuEi.J' *u. 'ntroi'iced .6 that u higher scorb on a particular item indicated stronger agreement or disagreement with thc attitude being scaled. The medium scores thus reffected differences from the highest and lowest groups. The irrobable anti" cipated replies were given in codes which could be used manually or directly for mechanical tabulation. Some of the quostions were, however' negatively framed to facilitate the spontaneity of replies, say for instance the question 1.2 (Appendix II). It was asked if the respondent official could take action at his discretion immediately aftor the question 1.1 where the rcspondent was askeC if he was guidcd by his senior officers for taking a decision. Sirnilarly, after asking the responclent if there was any clear.cut division between his and hie senior/junior officers'duties (questions 2.1 and 2.2) it was again asked if the respondent had to do things performed by his supe' rior officers at his level (questions 2.4 and 2.5), A number of sucb positively and negatively oriented questions were includert in the officials' schedule. This was only for facilitating clearcut replies with the least possible thinking and hesitation.
scales measuting the same concept and the increase
ol'tho the active involvement of the people. The developmcrtal outlook of the people can give some concrete shape to programme implemen' tation. In order that the officials are assured of people's
Developmental cfforts on the basis
needs
of the felt
42
booperation in the development programme, it was felt trecessary that the people in villages should be enquired as to what extent did they appreciate the officials' actions, role performance and capabilities. Thus a villager's schedule was also designed for the eramination of thc people's perc:ptions of the officials, performance (Appendix III),
Section I of the Villagers' Schedule started with the enquiry into the nrost important agricultural development programme and the frequent natural calamities in the locality that the people had to face. Questions on administrative inefficiency and delay, inadequate staff, insufficient funds or people's cooperation etc. wero included in this cluster. Questions about rbgular/ interrupted supply of irrigation water and power, state of maintenance and the availability of agricultural spare parts locally formed the subject matter in Section II. Questions o n the behaviour of officials and their aptitude for development work were put in Section III. Questions in Section IV elicited information about personal particulars of the rural respondents. The replies expected in five scales of values were all coded.
A
dmi ni st ra t ion
of
Que
s t
io
n n
aire s
After our meetings with the oflcers of lruigation, Blectricity and Revenuc Dcpartments, we approached the officers selected for interviews through their heads to get responscs on the offcials' schedules. The respondents were all cducated and ought not to have had any difficulty in answering the self-explanatory qucstions. But our experience was otherwise. As the response to our request was very poof, we had, ultimately to afrange personal meetings with them for getting responses to the officials'
schedule.
Diffculties
In
of the offcials and the villagers to respond xactly to the inten sity scales which the Likert scales provide for a useful analysis of agsociation between different variables. This happened parti-
43
cularly during the filting up of the viltagers' schedules. The levels of rating which created confusion in the minds of the villagers was resolved after some time through personal dis.cussion w th the villagers. The ofrcials, however, had no difficulty in grading their replies.
'The St,uctural Linkages of the Field Oflcials broad
Iinkages of tho field ofrcials that we interviewed for the purpose .of our study with their parent departments at the head-
.quarters for obtaining a proper perspeotive of their positions. In Madhya Pradesh the offce of the Superintending Engineer. '(Irrigation) responsible for development of thE Chambal Ayacut
Project is situdtod at Gwalior. The irrigation officers and 'staff in the Morena district worh undcr this Superintending Engineet (lrrigation). Ao Executive Engineer (Irrigation), with his Assistant Engineers and other staff, posted at the head' .quarters of the Morena district is responsible for th construc' tion, maintenance and distribution of irrigation water. As more :irrigation water became available on account of the develop' ment of the canal network, a different irrigation .cirole under an Executive Engineer, assisted by Assistnnt Engineers and othqr 'technical staff, was created and housed at ttre headquarters of
"the Jawra block.
Similarly the development of power, transmission and distri' in the Morena district is under the chargc of an iExecutive Engineer (Power) posted at the headquarters of the Morena district. He works under the supervision and guidance .of a Superintending Engineer of the Madhya Pradesb State iElectricity Board stationed at Gwalior and is assisted by Assis' tant Engineers and other technical staff Another division in
bution
underground water resources and for industrialisation. The staff is housed at Vidyut Colony, Sabalgarh from where it operates.
44
The Headquarters of the Chief Engineer (Irrigation), Punjab' is at Chandigarh, The Offices of two Superintending Engineers, one for Irrigation Branch of the Governnent of Punjab and another for Bhakra Main Canal System, assisted by a r,umber of Executive Engineers, Assistant Engineers and technicat staff, are located at Patiala. t he engineers and overseers are, however, responsible for maintenance and distribution of water. .line-w ise and canal-wise.
As already mentioned, the headquarters of the Punjab State Electricity Board is located at Patiala. Tbe Supsrintending Engineer of the Patiala Circle works under the Chief Engineer (Soutb Punjab) posted at Patiala. The Superintending Engineer has a number ol Executive Engineers supported by the power staff stationed at Patiala and Rajpura. The maintenance, generation and distribution of power in the selected block of Dera Basi is done from Rajpura. However, for depositing the. electricity dues, villagers have to travcl long distances to the Head Quarters to avoid thc possibilitv of the disconnection of electric supply. The officers of the Revenue Department, Patiala and Rajpura, Commissioner, Patiala, located at Patiala.
llork
During the State level discussions at Bhopal, the Additional Chief Secretary to the Madhya Pradesh Government, Secrotary, Departmcnt of Irrigation and Power and Secretary, Department of Revenue were reguested to issue instructions to tbe local olficers in Morena to render assistancs to our research team. The Divisional Commissioner, Chambal and the Co ector, Morena received instructions from Bhopal to see that the revenua
45
department officors posted in Morena oxtended all coop'eration to our study team in the field rvork. Similar instructions were issued by tho State Elsotricity Board, Jabalpur to tho Supcrintending Engineer (Power), Gwalior and Executive Bngineer
(Power) and Morona and Sabalgarh. The Chief Engineer' (Irrigation), Bhopal and Superintending Engineer (Irrigation)'. Gwalior also issued instructions to the Executive Engineers (Irrigation) at Morena and Jawra which facilitated our feld investigltion work.
to ths Government of
Chandigarh, and the Chief Eogineer (lrrigation), Chandigarh to extend all cooperation in our survey work. Thdse officers in turn requcstod the looal officors of the three departmeDtc posted at Patiala to render facilitios for the survey. The field work in Patiala was thus facilitated en account of the coopera. tion receivcd from all the dopartmental officers. The field survcy in the district of Moiena was 'conductod in January 1979. After meeting tbe senior officers of the depart* ments of Electricity, Irrigatiiin and Revenueo the offlcials' schedules.for 6lling were distributed amongst the various officers of the Madhya Pradosh Government. Subsequently appointments had to be made with the officials (as they were mostly freld offioers having touring dutios) and the schedules were gof, filled after iotcrvicws and discussions, The same procedure was followed in thc fcld survey work in Patiala district in February 1979. Thereialso the officials' schedules were got comploted aftor interviewg and discuesions on tho appointed days. Similar field survoys wero conductcd in the headquarters, sglccted blocks and villages oftho:district of Patiala'in Punjab during February 1979.
Punjab requested the Chairman, State Electricity Board, Patiala' the Secretary, Department of Revenue, Govcrnment of Punjab"
At the distribt, block and village levels, discussions were held with officials and non-offncials like the District Collector/Deputf Commissioner, District Revcnue Officer, Project AgricultureOliicer for Intensive Area Development, Chairman, Zila Parishad, Panchayat Offioer, President of District Cooperative
46
'Unions,
etc., who gave us mase of information rclating to the 'development and non-development prograromes of the area, -and the attitudes of the officers and citizeos towards dewlop ment etc.
Discussions with the villagers in the remote areas of the 'selected districts offered good opportunities to know about the "desired needs
ofthe people in the area, the shortcomings and advantages of development plans, the cooperation ofrered by 'the people to the ofrcials in implemcnting developmental plans and value perceptions about tho ofrcials. . Village level workers, school teachers, Tehsildarr, Naib Tehsildars, and persoDs like political leaders, beneficiaries of developmental activitiesland other non-beneficiarics (but knowlodgeabte persons) werc of grat help io this exercise.
-Pre-testing
of
S chedules
prc.tested. A number of officials proposed to bo interviewed were given "copies of the rclevant questionnaircs. The questionnaire was revised in the light ol oommcnts givcn by the ofroials in the
sample.
thc draft
question.
in thc scale values of replies, throe scales of values were taken for tabulatiotr, The two extreme values on cach side were -combined while the middle values were retained intact. With this proccss thc tabulation of data became more neaningful.
Regarding the quertionnaire for villagers,
'schedules enahled us to delete and add romc qiestions
Although some doubts were exprcssed about the retention of fvc sceler of values for offcials' perceptions, the number of 'qcales was not reduced, But on account of inadeouate entries
the pre.testing of to make 'thc quertionnaire oore comprchensive, But at the tabulation stagc retcntion of fivc scale valuer for eaclr reply seered to be 'supetfluous on account of inadequate frequenciec in some cells
4T
of extreme value, Ultimately the analysis of village schedules" had to be restricterl to three value scales.
Margin of Errors
The offioials' schedules were canvassed on a complete enumeration basis as the number of available officials according to the proposed schemo ofthe survey was only 212 in the two districts of tle two States. The question of margin of error did not,. therefore, arise.
schedule wero (a) age and (b) income. Income figures, as is. well-known, arc not free either from under-estimation or over' estimation. As propor representation was given large,
in the villagers''
to
medium and small farmers and landless labourers while visiting a village, the variance of mean income was found to be high. and erratic. The mean and variance of age of selectcd random, villagers were calculated in respect of sampled villagers for one . village each in the two states. The coefficient of variation for this characteristic for 18 villagers in the Morena district and. 20 villagers in the Patiala district was found to be less th'rn 4.. Thus, on an average, a sample of 19 and 20 villagers in the
Morena and Patiala districts rospectively was considered adequate to keep the margin of error within tolerable. limits.
It is with these limitations that the work of the survey was completed during December 1978-February 1979, the results of which were tabulated. The interpretations drawn from the various statistics and tables are analysed within the framework of our hypothoses and objectives.
The Bureaucracv at the Grass Root Level : A Study of its Proflle and Job Satisfaction
trn
[nclerstand the value system of the officials at the India it is essontial that their personal profile .and socio-economic background be analysed fully. This chapter is devotod to an analysis of the personal characteristics of the .officials that we had interviewed for our study.
grass root level in
orler to
The investigation
for an analysis of their attitudes and Lehaviour in the porspecdive of their social environment. It is also expected that the background ioformation about the offcials may further reveal -the capabilties and potentialities of thc officials for developmen.
it
is
provides an occasion
tal
tasks,
in terms of marital status, number of dependents, rural/urban back.ground, educatiorr, parental occupation and economis class .origin, class of present service, promotion received, etc.
Profiles of the official.respondents was examined
,age,
.Age of Classification
'Table'A'of Appeodix I gives the ilistribution of respondents by age-groups, State and Class of service, It may bc seen that imoro than half (52 per cent) of the respondents of our study
50
one.third (33.5%\ belonged to thc higher middle age-group 36.45 years and thc remaining rcspondents belonged cither to" tho old (46-58 years) or young (below 25 years) categories. Thc age distribution of the relpondents acoording to age-groupt.
as
follows:
II
III
Totat
4.2
52.4
7.0
(young)
26-35 years 47.4
26.3 26,3
63.r
30.8
(Middlc aged)
J. 1.
47.6 35.9
9.5
36-45 ycars
33.5
(Higher Middle)
46 yearc & above
6.1
9.9
(old)
Total
I-38.4
years
Total-35,3 ycars
It is clcar from the above table that 86 per cent of officers. cngaged in developmental activities in both the developmental,
dcpartmcnrs of electricity and irrigation and the non-developmental dcpartment of revenue administration oosted in Morena and Patiala districts belongcd to the age-group of 26-45 ycars-
.A Study
Sotisluction
5l
(47 per cent each). Thus the civil servents in the developmental, ald non.developmental bureaucracy were quite young. Howcvcr, the mean age of Class I offccls was somewhat higher at 38.4 yeare. This was so beoause according to the respondents the main criterion of promotion and advancement of career in their departments was seniority and many incumbents occupy_ ing Class I positions had been promoted as such.
The highest pcrcentage viz 63 of Class II officers belonged to the ag6 group, 26-35 ycars, The lext highest percentage* wro in the same age-group of Class I and Class III offi""r*
of Class II and III cadres also,oftho whole group varied between 3"+ to 35 years. Analysing tbe details of age composition of developmental and non.developmental personuel in Morena and patiala we fiind the peculiarities shown in the fo owing table.
Theaverage age of the omcers
as
TABLE 3.2
Age Conposition of Developmental and Non-developmental personnel by Districts. (Parcentage)
Age Groups
Morena
mental
lopmental
t.
2.
?
25 years and
8.3 20.8
)7
58.3
3t,2
7.8
37.6 33.3
34.s
4,5
27.3
27,3
4.
Tolal
52
Tbe largest conccntration of ofrcials engaged in developmental work in both Morena and Patisla belongs lo the age group, 26.35 years and.the proportion excreds 50 per cent' In fact 186-93 pr cent of devolopment pqsonnel in both the States comc from the age group 26-45 years' The officials of the non'ceve{opment departments of both the States of Madhya Pradesh 'belong to higher age group. In Moreira ancl Punjab seem to
more than one-third officials each of the non-developmenlal dpartment belong to the two highest age-groups. viz,' 36'45 years and 46 years and above. Similarly in Patiala more than one-fourth each of officets of the non'development department of Revenue belong to the two highest age groups' although 45 per cent of such officets wete comparatively young belonging to the age-group of 26-35 years. This showed that tbc rctuitment of tcchnical personnel for the development departments !vas, of late, heavy and fast while the recruitment to non'developmental jobs was lagging far behind. In fact the expansion of tbe Revenue departments of the two State governments was less on account of reform in land revenue laws and the Stato assuming directly the responsibility of collecting revenue from ,the ownerr of land. But compared to the expansion of develop' mental activities of the two Stats and heavy recruitmerit of development personnel, the non-devclopment dgpartmeot failed to otfer increasing opportunities of ncruitment and promotion fo older staff. This characteriitic was more conspicuous in Madhya Pradesh than in Punjab
Rural lUrban Background
.A popular belief prevailing in academic circles is that the "ofrcials who have spent a good part of their lives in rural areas 'wanted to examine how far the rural or irnall town background was responsible for the existencc of such an outlook amongst the officials choson for our study. For this purposc, we put a
of rural
development. We
question to our cfrcial respondents enquiring about their .maximum place of stay until thoy attended the age of upto 20 ycars. Thc places of their rcsidence were divided into fivc categories, (i) village with 5000 poplc or less (rural), (ii) a towl
Satisfaction
53
with a population between 5,000 and 10,000 (small town), .{iii) a town with a popularion between 10,000 and 1,00,000 -(big town), (iv) a city with a population betweon 1,00,000 and 10,00,000 (city) and (v) a metropolitan city with more than 10,00,000 people (metropolitan city), Thc replies wcre analysed .and are given below while the main inrbrmation is shown at Tablc 'B'(Appendix I).
TABLE 3,3 Distribution of Officials by Classes of Service and Maximum Time Lived Upto 20 Years of Age
Percentage Lived. M aximum
Time Upto 20
Years
of
Age
areas
Class
Class
II
Class
26.6
III
Total
16.0
l. Rural
2.
3.
5.3 57.9
l;
52.3 26.1
32.0 23.4
12.5 5.5
23.r
35.4
18.9
5.
10.8
6.6
100.00
Total
(N-212)
their
'littlo less than one.fourth (23 per cent) of the respondents spent their early formativc lives in a small town. In the absence of high
towns, they had to spend their school/college lives in bigger {owns. The respondents felt that this exposure to urban surroundings in a way broadened their outlook and ultimately .helped thom to carry out their tasks.
schools and technical schools and colleges
in
and small
The majority of higher civil servants (58 per cent) had exposrrres to big.towns followed by one-third (36 per cent) of officeis rbrought up in an atmosphoro of a city life. Thir pattern was
54
rn
ent
officials were not completely found cut off from the rural surroundings, An important feature in the social, background variables in the rural/urban cxposures of the ofr'csrs as revealed by Table 3:2, is that in Class III services of the' state governments, ofrcers of botb the developmental and nondovelopmental departments had the background of rural, semirural and urban areas. As is evident fronr. a comparison of corresponding percentages, the Class II officers of the State ser. vice had groatr exposure to urban areas compared to the Class III service officers. 'I'he Class I officers of course had greater exposure to towns/cities, Examining the details of ruralurban background of the officers interviewed in Morena andr Patiala ws find the following particulars'
set
noticed among Class III officers also. In Class III positions'we find all types of background cbaracteristics, having leaning toivards small towos and villages' In the course .of interviews' it was discovcred that migration to towns of smaller and bigger' sizes was necessary for availing educational facilities in bigh schools and engincering schools/colleges' Any way, the presenl
of
TABLE
3.4
R.rallUrban
Background.
Morena
Patiala
Develop- Non-deve-
mental
29.7 20.3
Dnelop- Non-deve-
lopmental
mental
5.3
lopmental
45.s 45.5 9.0
t. Rurel
areae
t6.7
16.7 45.8 20.8
24.2
41.6
2s.0
17.0
4. City
2r.l
7.8
7.8
100,0
(N:64) (N:24)
100 0
Satisfaction
of
5j
developmental personnel
tad the background of a big town (25 por cent in Morena and 42 pet cent in Patiala) while the lowest percentage belonged to metropolitan towns. Rural areas, howover, offered the highest percentage of development ofrcials in Morena. Both the States 'do not have a melropolitan city and the officers with the background of a metropolitan city wcre educated outside their 'States. In Patiala officers having rural background and enga'ged in developmental activities wete very few. In Madhya ?radesh and Punjab it was found that the ofrcials engaged in
developmental activites came in good numbers from small towns and cities where technical institutions in both the States wero
'locatdd.
entage 'close to
of Madhya Pradosh and Punjab, the perof officers engaged in non-developmental work was 46. However, the background of these officials differed in the two states. While in Madhya Pradesh thoy had the
In both the states
background of big towns, in Punjab the same officErs had the backgound of rural areas and small towns.
Xarental Occupation The parental occupations of the official respondents are given in Table 'C' in Appendix I. The most numerous family occupa-
tions wcre reportcd to be service and agriculture. A large majority of respondents in Class III service of the Government .of Madhya Pradesh came from agricultural households while a sajority. of respondents in Class II service reported their
service
,and
?arents' occupation as service, Similarly, respondents in Class III of the Government of Punjab came mostly from service
sectioo oI population ia the military service. Thus service in general was reported to be the main occupation of the parents of the ofrcials in all thc three categories of respondeqts, Moreover children from the families with background of scrvie were more attracted towards the government servic. Agriculture being the occupation of moro than half of the population of lwo States, the lower cadres of servioe class are manned by
56
of
respondents, as revealed
Parental
occupation
Class
Class
15.4
II
Class
A1
III
Tbtal
33.0
6.1
1]t4
Agriculture
31;l
5.0
,
4.
5.
'
I;dustry
Business
4.6
13.9 t
?.0
-r.
2l.l
21.1 21.1
Profersion
Service
13.9 52.2
1.0
30.5
10.4 36.3
Total
The above table reveals that more than one.third (36 por cent) of the official respondents belonged to the families with service occupations. The incumbent were perhaps attracted by sorvice occupations of their fathers. The occupation of service, includes both the civil and military jobs. The respondents in Patiala were widely found to belong to families with military. service. The next highest group of respondents came irom the families having tho agricultural occupations. Over tbe years,
agriculture which had become a good commercial occupation of, a large number of families in patiala. In comparison to this, however, in Madhya Pradesh, because of the abience of other
occupations, agriculture is the profession of agriculture marnly as a subsistence economy
io
Satlsfaction
57
officers in the Class III category of both the States belonged overwhelmingly to the parental occupation of agriculturists and the servico class. Our findings also support the conclusions of other similar studies. For instance in their study, V.A. Pai Panandiker and S.S. Kshirsagarl have found the highest per-
maniao's studya of I.F.S./LA.S./I.P.S,/I.A.A.S. officers foue&' 3J and 14 per cent of such ofrcers having government service and farming occupations respectively. Similarly, in other develoging countries like Bgypt and Pakistan civil servant$belonged mainly to families having such occupations. Morroe Berger's studys in Egypt and Muneer Ahmed's studyo in Pakistan showed that about 40 and 66 per cent respectively of the civil servants in their countries were drawn from families ofthe govcrnment servaots. However, tbe opposite is the case in the U.K. where 10 per cent of the senior civll servants were found to bave parents in the civil services.T If we look into the, break-up of percentagos of the officers of Madhya Pradssh and Punjab (Table 3.6), so far as their parental occupations are concerned, we find agriculture and services (which includo military services in Punjab) contributing about three-fourths of ' the personnel engaged in developmental activities. The maxi-. mum number of officials in Madhya Pradesh and Punjab was from agriculture and services respectively.
Regarding the officials of the non-developmental department in the two States, it is obseded that the maximum percentage of such officers came from agricultural families in Madhya
centagos of parental occupations of bureaucrats having government service which varied from 19 to 36 per cent and' agricultural occupations which varied from ll to 5l per ceflt according to the types of reporting agencies. Kuldeep Mathurt found agriculturo as the main parental 'occupation of the Block Developmcnt Officers of Rajasthao and Uttar Pradssh. H.RChaturvedis also found agriculturo to be the parental occupation of l7 and 25 per cent of the development officers working. respectively at the district and block levels of Panchayati Rai administration in Rajasthan, while 38 and 25 per cent of such officers working at the district and block levels respectively had the parental background of government service. V. Subra-
5E
TABLE 3.6 Distribution of Parental Occupation of Develoymental and Non-developmental Personnel by Dlstricts.
(Percentage)
Parental
Occupation
Morent
Potiala
mental mental
l. Agriculture
2. Industry
? Business
43.8
3.1
24.8 8,8
11.5 8.8
27.3
15.'l 6.2
31,2
t6.7
t6.7 t6.7
LI.J
4. Profession Services
36.4
46.0
9.0
100.0
Total
100.0
(N:64)
100.0 100.0
from familics belonging to teaching, legal and medical professions, etc. Very few ofrcers having industry as the father's occupation were attracted towards jobs in both the development and non.developiment offces of tbe two States.
Economic Background of the Officials
!t is gcnerally argued that the fepresentation of the various economic classes in the administrative services in accordance with their strength makes bureaucracy representative in character. Tbe bureaucracy in India is not considered to be representative as it is mostly filled by the incumbents belonging to the middle and upper economic classes. This is largely due to the botter educational facilities which the parents of the officials fiom this class could afford and also due to a greater awareness
of the employment opportunities on their part. The pre-entry
Sotisfaction
59
.education and training that they are able to get help them to Eet entry into the services. Thus if one is abte to afford better ducation in a good university or a good engineering college/ school, one's chances of selection for a good job are bringhtened. 'Every candiCate is not, how-ever, in a position to migrate t6*a -top institution for obtaining higher education. On this account many candidates are victims of unmerited disability, To investigate into the economic class of origin of the respondent ofrcials we canvassed a qucstion to identify the economic class to which 'their parcnts/guardians belonged at the time of the first eDtry
middle class, i.e., income between Rs. l0l to Rs, 250 p.m. and {v) Iower class, i.e ., incoms of Rs. 100 p..m. or less The replies, 'shown in Table D in Appondix I show that more than half the 'oftcers (53 pcr cent) belonged to families having income between Rs. 251 to Rs. ?50 p.m. One.fifth of the officers belooged "ach to the categories of income ranges Rs.751 to Rs. 1500 p.m. and Rs. 101 to Rs. 250 p.m. Few officers belonged to the upper class and lower class of income categories, The replies of the respondents iirdicate that most of the Class I .officials in Patiala or Morena belonged to the upper middle and middle class families, Most of the officers of Class 1I .eatogories in Patiala und Morena either belonged to the middle 'class or upper class, More than half of the officcrs in Class III in Patiala and a little less than half the number of officers in Class III in Morena came from the middle class families. 'Curiously enough although no officer in class I and class II in Patiala came from the upper class, 10 out of 73 class III off0cers .of Patiala stated that they belonged to the uppcr economic class. .In Morena only one class III officer out of 55 identified himself with the upper cconomic class. The distribution of the officials according to main economic background is given below.
into the scrvioc. The economio classes were divided into five categorics-(i) upper class, i.e., parents/guardiaos having .income of more than Rs. 1500 p.m., (ii) upper middle class, i.e., income between Rs. 751 to Rs. 1500 p.m., (iii) middle class, i.e., income between Rs.25l to Rs. 750 p.m., and (iv) lower
60
Bureoucratic
Va
TABLE
3.7
of
Class
II
Class
III
Total
8.6
42,1
3
\)
20.1
Between
Between
8.5
7.8
3.
4.
52.6
55.4
5l.6
30.4 1.6
<t
Between
Rs. 101-250 p.m.
5.3
6.1
20.8:
0.9
Total
100.0
100.0
t00.0
100.0
Thus it can be secn that all the catesories of the services. derived their staff mostly from the mid-rlle class (percentage. varying between 52 to 55). Tho upper middle class provided most of the Class I and Class II officers and the Class III officers largely came from the lower middle olass. The details of break-up of the economic class background ofthe offcials enagaged in the developmental and non.developmental acrivities can be seen in Table 3.8 on p. 61,
Most of the ofrcers, engaged both in the development and, nod-developmental departments came from the middle clasc. household income group of Rs.25l-750 p.m. with the exceprion of the officers of the non-developmental department in punjab,.
6t
of
(Percentage)
Parents' lGuardian's
Morena
Au.Non-deve'
Patialo
Income at the
time of first
appointment
DeveloP'
Deve-
Non-deve
mental
lopmental
lop8.8
lopmmtal
mental
t.
Morc than
Rs. 1500 p.m.
Between 4.1
26.9
Rs.75l-150O
p.m.
Btween
8.3
18.6 57.4
15.2
54.5
Rs.25l-750 p.m.
tt. Between
50.0
41.8
.4
5.5
Rs. 101-250
28.1
37.5
p.m.
5.
8.3
Total
100.0
(N:64)
55 per cont of whom belonged to the higher household income range of Rs.75l and 1500 p.m; This was not surprising
begause Punjab had been having the highest per capita income agriculture and industry since and enjoying prosperity
the officers engaged in developmental activities belonged to the lower middle income group of Rs. l0l -250 p.m. and the higher middlo income range of Rs.751-1500. In Moreqa 38 per oent of Revenue Dcpartment Officers and ia
in
62
Patiala 46 per cent of such officers belonged to the parental 'income groups of Rs. l0l to Rs. 250, and Rs. 250 to Rs. ?50 .and Rs. 251 to Rs. 750 respectively.
Marlnl
As shown in Table 3.9 below, only 6 respondents in Patiala and ll respondents in Morena were found to b young and unmarried out of 124 respondents in Patiala and 88 respondonts in
Morena, respectively.
Patiala Morena
6
Total
17
1. 2,
3.'
Unmarried Married
Widowed/Divorced
1l
(r2.5)
(4.9)
113
(8.0)
184
7l
(80.7)
6
(91.1)
5
(86.8)
7l
(s.2)
212
(4.0)
(6.8)
Total
t24
(t00.0)
(100.0)
88
(r00.0)
in Morena
'unmarried (compared to Patiala district) while the widowed/ 'divorced respondents in the two areas were more or tess
'similar. About
.dents. While the former had to look after parents, brothers and sisters, as is normally expected in the Indian society, the widowcd and divorced respondents had many children to 6upport. Thc number and percentage of dependents that the respondents had to look after ie shown in tablc 3.10 on page 63.
The social obligations of unmarried and widowedidivorced respondents were not materially different from married respon-
63
TABLE
3.IO
Number of Denendents of Officials in the Districts of Patiala and Morena Number of dependents Morena
2
Totnl
J
1. Nil
(1.6)
(t.l)
t4
(1s.9)
36
0.4)
37
2, l-2
petsons
23 (r 8.5)
(17.4)
97
3-f
4.
pcrsofis - 'Persons
6l
(49.2t
(40.e)
26
(4s.8)
57
5-6
?l
(25.0)
(29.6)
(?6.9)
5.
1l
(r2.5)
88
18
8.5)
Total
124
212
(100.0)
(100.0)
(100.0)
(N.8.
The highost
group of
dependency ratio is observed in thc dependcnt 3-4 persons (46 per cent) followed by the next higher dependent group of 5-6 persons (2? per cont) and tho lower, group of 1-2 persons (17 per cent); 8.5 per cent of the official respondents said that they had more than 6 perons to support. It seems that the government servants both in Patiala and Morena arc normally aware of family planning programmes of the government and small family norms are vety muoh in evi. dence among the officials.
Levels
is highly correlatod with the present study related mostly to (with class of sorvicc. But lhe th exception of a fow rvenue offflcers having been educated in
Normally tho level of education
'64
'the generalist tradition) the civil engineers of the Irrigation 'Departments and electrical engineers of the State Elcctricity Boards having professional qualifications which they usually acquired after passing the Highcr Secondary or Intermediate examination, The percentage of respondents in vario $ ',categories of educational levcl is shown below.
.
TABLE
3.1I
Levels of Educatton
I
Class
II
III
Total
9.0
Matriculation
Bachelor's Degree
Post-graduate 6.0 21.0
6.2 4.6
15.4
tt.7
1t.7
9.5
.2. .3.
9.0
t2.2
-4. Technical/Professional
*,
69.8 100.0
Total
100.0
!00.0
Class
__The
III
levcl of education in the case of Class III oficers oo the- *hol, ,r, *oompensatod by the higher percentage (12 per cent) of bachelor
'varied between l0 and 2l among the tbree classes ol services. Tbe smaller percentage (10 per cent) of the post-graduate
fh"
p.r..niug,
65
degree level. Many Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars with gradu' 'Class
ate and matriculation levels of education were working io II and Class III Services' Tho direct reoruits in the State Civil Service working for the Revenue Department were
mostly post-graduates.
Executive engineers in the State Electribity Boards or thc Irrigation Departments, who are in Class I Service, are promo' tees with expcrience and seniority from direct recruits as assistant engineers in Class II Service. The scales of pay prescribed by the Punjab and Madhya Pradesh Governments exclusive ,{of allowances) are moro or less similarDesignarion
of
posts
Puniab
Madhya Pradesh
Assistant
Junior
'0verseers/Lino SuPerin'
'0endents/Sub-engineers
The State Electricity Boards, being autonomous, scales of ttheir oficers aro marginally higher and the officers have com,paratively more allowances. There are two engineering collegos in thc State of Punjab at {.udhiana and.Patiala and one engineering colloge in the Union Territory of Chandigarh awarding engineering degrees and a 'number of enginoering schoolslpolytechnics producing diploma'holders in engineering. Tl?e graduates ofthese institutions form {he bulk of the candidates for rccruitment to the various posts in Ponjab State Etoctricity Board. The diploma-holders, are usually tho Class III services of thc State Government' 'inducted for Linesman
Even diploma-holding ongineers are recruited as lClass IV) who are eventually promoted on th basis ofseniority .as Line Superintendents (Ciass III). Thorc has boen lot of resentment overitagnation, porticularly in thc Class III and Class .lV positions. In order to facilitate the scope for promotion.to .Class Il positions of ongineers, the Govornment of Punjab has
66
fixed the quota of promoticns and has also created posts of. junior engincers (Rs. {00.650) in Class II service. The Govcrnment of Madhya pradcsh has also created posts of Junior Engineers (class II) in tbe scalc of Rs,350-650 to givo relief to the sub.engineers/ovcrsecrs who have becn working for long time in their own scales of pay. The Class II engineor officers are rrcruited as follows (i) 75 por cent as direct recruitment of-graduate cngineers, (ii) 20 pei cent from promotion of. sub.eagineers/overseers and (iii) 5 per cent as promotion of draftsmon.
with soniority and good record of."rui." to-r.nio, Jcales and. senior scale officcrs are promotcd to the Indian Administrative, Service rrndor the assigned quota, promotees from various. Class III serviccs of the State Govcrnment$ aro taken in the_ State Civjl Service Claes II with seniority and meriJ under tho assigtred quota system. The ofrcem oi th. R.uroue Departments that we interviewed wcre usually goneralists and did not. have any particular specialist or professioial qualifications.
The collection of electricity and irrigatiotr charges are made. by the rovonue staf of these- dopartmJnts, Therl was a pro* posal somc time back to draft a few
In the Dcpartments of Revenue of the two State Govcrnments recruitmont is done in senior and junior scales of the State Civil Servicc (Class II). - Junior-scale civil servants pro*ot.d
*.
Departmcnt
to the
Departmente
of
ofrc"r,
oiin.
RevenuE.
tion of the eloctriciry and irrigation duos in M;;y; pradesh. But thc ofrcers in the Revenue Department Oia noi-slow any -to'them ioterest as thc extra allowauce thai was uAmissiita for this p-urposc was only to the tune of Rs, 100 or Rs. tSO p.-.. and thc scheme fell through.
- Tbo dotails of eduoational levels of the oftcors cao from the following table 3,12 on page 67. ------ -'" be see&
67
Distribution of officers in tho Developmental and Non.devolopmental Departments by Districts and Levels of Education
(Percentage)
Morena Letels
of
-Devehp-lop:-fr ;n'Aev4op-
education
mental
mental
mental
l 1.58
lopmental
l.
Matriculatiotr.
Baoholor's
Degree.
'
54.6
9,7
9.0
36.4
J.
Postgraduate Professional
4. Technical/
78.8
Total
(N:6a) '
100.0
100.0
(N=24)
(N:113) (N,,-ll)
100.0
100.0
It will be seen that all the ofrcers posted in the Morena dig: trict for developmental work were stated to have teohnica[
professional qualifications after the high school/higher secondary education while the corresponding pe{cpntage of ofrcers engaged in the developmental activities in Patiala was 79. The ofrcers of the Revenue department in Morena had either a Bachelor's degree or a Post.graduate degree, But most of tbe officers of the non-development departqrent . in Patiala had cducational
qualifications either
graduate.
of
(Ipwartt Mobility
qf
the Officials
68
evelo pmen
index
from Table 3.13 below that 55 per cent of the officers surveyed did not have even one promotion and most of them were young recruits. Only 33% of officers had one promotion at the time of the survey. Th.e details are given in Table F in Appendix I,
TABLE
3.13
ffi
Officers
{?
68.3
65.6 25.8
55.2
33.0
Two
Three
2r.l
5.3
100.0
8.6
r0.4
?1
100 0
t.4
Total
(N:19)
(N:65)
(N:128) (N:212)
100.0
100.0
,causc of demoraiisation amoogst the officials which would effect devclopmcntal programmes in the two selected districts. Most of the Class I officers (68 pcr cont) came to this class as a result of one promolion while 2l per cent came as a result of two promotions. Among class II officers, 49 per ccnt and 32 per cent .came to thig class as a result of one and two promotions respectivcly. The casc of Claes III ofrcors, aE statcd carlior, also did not prscnt I gloomy picture, as will be seen from'the above
Only onc young Indian Administrative Service Ofrcer wbo lvas on probation was found to be working in a Madhya Pradesh block for the Revenue Department. It was in fact his first training in revenue administration. About two-thirds of Class III officers (66 per cnt) did not have a single promotion. Of course, a large majority of them were direct ricruits to Class III and were comparatively young in age. A quartor {26 per cent) of Class III ofrcers came to this Class as a result of promotion. Thus it can be said that thefe is not enough
Statisfaetion
69
table. The team of ofrcers belonging to all ther three classes rrere on tbe whole, found to be enthusiastic about the duties .assigned to them.. ThiS donclusion is based on our field study
.and observatioo, In certain cases an individual ofrcial had, trowever, remained too long in his cadre for the next promotion, but such cases are not exceptidnal and do not contradict our .the course of discussions and interviens not borne out by .facts and statistics. The details of_ promotions
is
Morena and patiala working in the .development and non.development department will be seen from 'the following table.
mobility of the ofrcers
in
i.c.,
upward
TABLE
3.14
Morena
DevAop-
mental
m;<eva*
mental
29.2
33.3
Patiala
Deveioy
mental
56.6
n;;A*lopmental
18.2 27,3 54.5
l.
Nit
2. One 3. Two
.4. Three
Total
38.0 4.5
29.2
8.3
100.0
(N:64)
100.0
(N:24)
(N:113) (N:11)
100.0
100.0
Most ofthe interviewed o$cers of the development depart'ments of Madhya Pradesh and Puojab were comparatively -young and did not receivc any promotion till the time of the .survey. Thc perccntages wefe 69 and 57 in the two States. Theirs w*s the first app.iatmctrt. Twenty-five pcr cent and 38 pcr ccnt of the officers ia thc ttcvelopment departmcnts of 'Madhya Pradcsh aod Patiala rcceived one promotion. This rindioercd 6omc alvancement in thcir gflcial positions on tho tpart of a good number of offic,crs. Four and five ofroers rcs-
.tO
pectively
the governments of Madhya Pradesh and Punjab were beneficiaries of two promotiotrs as well.In the non-develop mental department of Revenue of both the State Govcrnmentg' the officers were comparatively aged, and were bentificiaries of
of
were working in their initial scale of appointment. Two officers of the Revenue Department of' M"anya Pradesh even stated to have received three promotions and more than half of such officers in Patiala received two
promotions. In-servlce Tralning The Civil Engineers of the Irrigation Departments and Electrical Engineers of State Electricity Boards in Class II service have to ooi"rgo training after they .are recruited. But no training is proviJed for the Executive Engneers in Class I after their
.:
subingiaeets/ovetseerslline supervisors/line superintendents in Class IIi servico have. to,undergo Jhree .months'---training. after - their
of
appointment. But no trainidg is given 'io the promotees in Class- III from the posts ofi Jinesmen. ' The officers of the Revenue Departments in Class I and Class II services are kept on probation for two years aftor recruitment. This period is taken for rraining the officers in revenus laws, rules, procedures, etc. .Tehsildars apd Naib Tehsildars are in subirrdinatg executiie service .who also bebome familiar with rules and iegulalions during their career and 50% of them q9 eveqtulllv plgmoted to the State junior civil services.
coufso Thus,.
lob
Satisfactlon
7l'
tfation. 'The Canal Departmonts have their own Patwaris for looking 'to irrigation facilities and ccllecting revenues. A Ziladar (Canal Patwari) in Punjab is of the ranlc of a Deputy Collector witb powers of prosecution and stoppage of irrigation in tbe follow' ing scason in case of the non'payment of caoal ducs for the previous season, The State Electricity Board collects ellectricity dues from private parties through their own collecting agcncies, In Punjab, overdues are not a big problem. But in Madhya Pradcsh, prob;cutions are yet to be made for non-pay' ment of canal and irrigation dues, although irdgation and power suppties are being made in Morena during the last 7/8 years. {t can be said that the stoppage'of power or irriga. tion faoilities for non'payment of dues is no doubt detrimental to the development efforts in the region. But this is one anea where rules have to be followod in a more stringent
manner.
Professional Intercst
ssional society. 'fhe answer was invariably 'No.' Koeping in touch with new dcvelopments through professional journale or membership of a professional body'could give an indication about their professional itterest and furtherance of profesfional knowledge. Th nbgative rsponse in this rcspect indicateg an apathetio attitudo on the part of the officials to develop thcir capacitios further. This is probably beeause of the lack of any motivation to sustain their profossional interests. In fact, .rnost of tbe staff seemed to be ignorant of the name of any professional journal or association in their own fields .of
activities. Job Satisfctction of Offictals
wero asked a question, whether in the professional duties thev could find tioc to read midst of their tome professional journats or were they mernbers of a profe'
in the efforts to
'72
indentify factors that directly or indirectly shape the behavrour of civil servants in a govcrnmental organisation. One set of such factors that had interestd tho researchers relates to the family origin, background, sttd educational attainments of thE civil servants *hich greatly influence their soiialisation process and which have been discussed so far. The behaviour of the
officials is found to be further influenced by the kind of satisfaction they derive on the job and whether or not they have a feelingl that their qualifications and training are being properly utilizcd" In other words, the officials'own perception about their capabi lities to perform the assigncd tasks has a considerable bearing on their behavioural pattern. Here we propose to analyse the officials' perceptioD about thcir job satisfaction and their capabilities to cope up with the environmental situations.
and is comof various component elements. The interest of the incumbent in the assigned job brings in him a feeling of initiative and responsibility. Even though an incumbent may be an insignificant part of the organisation he can make significant contribution if he finds interest in his assigned work. The efficient performance of the officials depends on the intere$t
Job satisfaction of the ofrcials has many facets
posed
Another factor that is important is the job requirements and the related qualifications that lhe incumbent posscsss for discharging efrciently his official responsibilities. The full utilisation of the incumbent's qualifications and capabilities not only bring greater productivity but also make him more wedded to his work. kiconsistency in these may bring a senso of helplessness and frustration amongst the ofrciirls, In order to determine purpose of evaluating the officials' feeling of job satisfaction we put a set of four questions to our respondents -(i) is the work you ar doing interesting; (ii) when you do good work, is it appreciated by your superior ofrcers (appreciation by senior ofrcers boosts up the mcrale and spirit of thc incumbent); (iii) how good are your chances of promotion in your department; and (iv) a negatively framed question-would you
A Study in Profile
like
aqd
fob Satisfaction
73
to
change over
to atrother officeidepartment, if
given a
and
are
abofi 2l-27 pr cent of the officers in the dislricts of Patiala and Morena found the work interesting. The pattern of job satisfaction is more or less similar in the two States and in the three departments. Broadly spcaking a quarter o[ the respondent officcrs had found their work interesting. The officials in the higher scales ofthe departmetrts
On the whole
engaged in developmental tasks usually expressed their satisfaction over the work they were performing. In th Departmentg of Revenue of both the State Goveroments some officors in tho highor s4lary scales, who were on deputation from their original postings rportd tbat they had to 8uffcr in. their carcer ultimately on account of their deputation as on completion of their assignment they had to revert to their origioal posts as they were not allowed to have benefits on both the counts.. They could not be promoted to higher class posts in thu Revenue Service from their deputation posts as a result of which they had somc setbacks. This dwarfed their initiativc and impeded their progress in the departments. 8o far os departmonts engaged in developmental activities arc concerned, the officcrs were mostly technical and they had a chance to rise to highcr posts through seniority and chan records. There was thus much loss frustration among those ofrcers. Tbe progress of development in the State was perhaps rapid because of the
.intergst of these
Between 37 -47 per cent of ofrcers, however, thought that they found fheir work interesting only sometimes. And about onethird of tho ofrcers, on an average, fcund thcir work seldom. interesting. The absence of ample scope of promotions, small incremerts, particularly in the lower scales of pay, absnce of cheap housing facilities, etc. addcd to the lack of interest by the eoployees in thcir assigned work. This is true of ofrcers of all the tbree departments of the two State Governmnts.
74
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Study in Prafile
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Job Sattuf.tction
75
The appreciation by the senior officers of tbe work done by .junior officers also showed mot or less the same trend. A little lhighei percentage of officers, varying from 27 to 35 reported thet their work was well appreciated by the senior officers. This is in Tespect of the oftwrs in all the three departments of the two 'State Goveroments. The percentage was somewhat lower in nen-developmental department of Revenue compared especially 'to those of developmental departmont of Irrigation in both the
sornctimss appreeiated by their senior ofrcers was found to be .somewhat higher in Punjab than in Madhya Pradcsh. The lack
of ofrcers
of appreciation of the juniors' work by the sniors dwarfed, in turn, the initiative and interest of the officers in the assigned work. The percentage of officers who felt that their work was not appreciated by the senior officers rangod from 15 to 24 only. One possible explanation for the nbn'appreciation of the
irrork done by thc officials in respect of both development and non-tlevclopmcnt progtammes could be that thc respondents' standards ofl self'waluation is based very much on their own subjective criterion rather than on an objective one.
'
{ntcresting, the valucs for Patiala and Momna wore' 0.93 and 2.t8 (d. f.+4) respectively, which arc vcry insignificant at 5 per ocnt level of probability. It means that the perception of ,the officials in ths. three departments of the two State Goverrments.aboirt interest in their work was not correlated end had no similarity.
Applying the
'
,('
test
on whether
the
work performcd
wa$
The I'z values of work-apprecialion by senior officers of Patiala. and Morena werc 3.96 and I .17 respectively for 4 .degrees of freedom and these are again statistically insignificant. Tbe appreciation of the work of the junior' officers of botb the Stato Goveruments was, tirerefore, not correlated' Th appleciation of work was independent of dePartments in which tho olficials worked.
'rd
milestone in the not only brings in him self.confidence to cope with new environn,ents and respon,ibilities butalso the necessary job satisfaction. In the contcxt of develop-
Promotion
in
the service
lt
is an imoortant
mental activities tinely prorrotions in the career of a developmert administrator bring in him new confidence in the achievemont of the prescribed goals. Two questions-ti) How good, wcre the chances of pro'rotion in the depaftmcnt; atrd (ii) if given a chance to do the same work iq another olfice/department, would you like to switch over (a negatively framed, qucstion) were put to the respondent officials. The replies were tabulated and summarised iu Tabte 3.16 on pagc ??.
dull and uninteresting, a good output of work cannot be expcted from these large number of officers especially in regard to, developmental activities. One explanation of low chances of promotion can be that at thc time of initial recruitment, those who are at the top of the seniority list tako less time for a promotion but officers very much below thc list of seniority tako much. longer time although inirially all of them might have been, recruited in the same batch. It croates frustration. However, there is no alternative in the present situatlon as thc promotional opportunities are not so froquent. Thus because of thc dpmoralisation process that sets in, the quality of the performance of the oficers ultimately suffers,
The lowest perccntage of officers viz l8 and l7 respectively who reportcd good chances of promotion in their service careen bolonged to the non-development departments of the Govern* ments of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh. Similar perceotages in the dcvelopmeni departments of the two State Governments varied between 2l and 28 which were also verv small. Fair chances of promotions were reported by 36-47 per cent offioer$ and poor cbances were reported by 3l-46 per c.cnt officers. IL can well be imaginod that if more than oao-third of tho officials on the whole flnd bleak chances of promotion in their departmeots and if similar number of officers find their work
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-78
Bureaucratic Vaiues
in
Development
The 12 values for the chances of promotion were calculated ''and wcre found to be 3.?4 for 4 dcgress of freedorh for both ?atiala and Morena, which is very insignificant. Replies on the -chaocs of promotion did not show wide diversiiy iq all the 'three departments of the two State Governments, fh"t war, 'no significant variation/difference in thc chances of promotion . of officers of the developmental and non-developmenial idepart, ments of the two State Gove rnme nts, Whatever good, fair or poor chanccs of promotion exist, they hold good ior all sections of officers and are independent of the departments in wbich
.tbey work.
be 5.46 and 4.24 respectively for 4 degress of:frcedom, which '.were statistically insignificant. Thus the perceptions of the -ofrcers of both the development and non-development; depart-
to
The X,2 values for offering to switch over to other dcpartments 'in the Government of Punjab and Madhya pradesh were found
"prospects of promotion, This is also reinforce d bv ithe fact 'that only a smaller percentage of officers of the Revenue.Departments of the two State GoVernmonts showed their willinlness to 'switch over to another department.
i
ments about the avenues of promotions seed to suggest that .tbey do not think that any other departments hold out better
'
.olternative oftce/department for doing similar duties wcre 'reporred to vary between 38 and 53, Thus dbout half of the 'officers were found to be willing to chauge ovor, It, therefore, seemed that the ofrc.ers ongaged in developmentql tasks were not very happy with their work, Development admi_ ,xistration needs very highly devoted civil servants with a zeal for "quick development wbich seemed to be lacking in ther present 'eet of officials. The satisfaction of the officials deriyed fronr their rvork is a very important index of their commitment to their organisational goals and achievements, A higher job ,satisfaqtion helps in building high morale leading to better performanco dnd higber productivity. Only 60-70 per cent of 4he officers bf the three departmints of.ihe two State govern_
However, on thc other hand, the percentage of officers in the '.development departments who were willing to switch ovAr to an
.7v
ments thought that their work was always interestiog or occa-sionally interesting while the perceptions of the remaining officersreflected that the prevailing mood in their work environment: was unsatisfactory. These perceptions prevailed even when a greater appreoiation of work of the junior officers by their senior offioers (80 per cent of the ofrcers being either always or occasionally appreciated) ought to have given them better job' satisfaction. This natural.ly meant that 30'40 per cent of the, 'officers whether engaged in developmental and or non'develop'' mental tasks, were feeling . frustrated and losing confidence in, their capabilities to cope up withr the .assigned responsibilities' A feeling of being an insignificant member in a big governmental' apparatup';and th-e. so-called u-r1pf-estigious nature of the officials' 'job were stated to be responsible forrthe kind of dis's4tisfaction .that has Qropt in the officials' attitudes towards their organisa-' oational goelqri .Furtter, on. sulsequent questioning the same percentage ofli,pfi,icors of the two development,departmeots bf .,both tha Stateq r,eportod poor clances of promotipn in their owo departments.r d,fegling of stagnatioo and the absenoe of further' scope of promolion in near future made them lose their initiative and interest in their present work. They were even eager to move' to other departmonts if theyr were.'given the chance to do so. The officers'of the. 4qn;developmnt departorcnt of the two' .State governmen-tsi on lhe other hand, who ssfferd set' .backs in deputal.ipn prorlotions earlier, did not show their willingness to aovg to other departorents ' even though their ,chances of promotion in their Qwn department were limitod. What should then be done to boost the morale of the3e . o$icers ? Would frequent merit'based promotions enhance -their ctranoes of .fulfilment of the organisational goals ? The. . problem is not only thq ,availability of opportunities but also thc way the morit cdterion is to be assessed' A sound pro' motional policy linked with greater productivrty/performance ,in the developrnental projects may help in obtaining ,some inprove ment in the existing situation.
. .
'80 Utllisatlon
. Officials:
Bureaacratlc Values
in
Development
of
The problem of tho preparedness of the officials for developmental tasks is intimately connected with their educational , achievements, training and experience. This aspect was also ' examined for offiers of both the development dpartments and " compared to those of the non-developmental departments in 'the two States, For this purpose a question was canvassed 'whether they thought that in their present post their education, training and experience were fully or moderately utilised or " no{ utilised at all. We have already noted that so far ar the two developrnental departmonts wfc concerncd thc officials wcre 'technically qualified, and trained after recruitment and had gained considerablc experience during the course ofthe day_to_ " day work, The officials betonging to the non.developrnental - department aho had the requisite background of good general . educatiron, training and work cxperience ovct a number of . years, The rcplies are sumuarised in Table 3.17 on p. gl as
"
''bclow.
"
'.reflected
officers were of the view that their and experience were fully utilised in the work that they did. The identiat type of replies are also
There is hardly any difference in the replies ofthe ofrcers bclonging to tho throe departrnents of tbe two State Govern-
ments. Half of
the
in
ments. Onc+hirds of the officers were of the view that their background achievements werc only moderatcly utilised. The r remaining ono-sixth of the officcrs were of the view that there i attainments and talents wcre trot utilised properly. There was , hardly any sigoificant diflerenco in the fattirn of replies r received from the three sets of officcrs of the two State Governments. If thc perception, as reported by 15-20 per cent - omcrs, that their background eduoation and experience werc being utilised properly is accepted, it may suggest that _not rthoir work cnvironmeot was not conducive to enable them rto put their best in tbcir jobs.
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82
positions. Another one-thirds of the officers said that their education, training and experience were moderatcly utilised leaving only one'sixth of the respondnts to say that their capabilities were not being fully utilised. If this finding is considored with the earlier finding that about a third of. respondent officials were willing to switch over to other office/ department and that about another half of officials misht also like to chango over, therc seems to be sometbing wrJng in the working environmentfconditions of the offioials that needs to be examined in depth. Further it also suggests that seemingly high level of the job: Satisfaction of officials conseals their considerable dissatisfaction with thb organisations they,
work for. They feel that their departments have doue precious little for them to iecognise aod appreciatc tbeir potentialities.
From our analysis we.find that half of the number ofi officials seemed to be highty satisfied that their qualifications, training and experience were being fully utilised in thoir present
As far as their perceptions of full, moderate and poor utilisation of ,.their 'edudation, training and cxpdrience in the jobs are. concerned the X2 values for 4 degrees of freedom for officers of the Punjab and Madhya Pradesh Clovernments were as low and insignificant as. l.7l and 2,59 respectively. The educational qualifications, training prescribed and experience undergone for various. types of devclopmental and non.developmental positions.
thus seem to have beeg prescribed quite in conformity with the job requirements, of the pbsition in the two State Governments. Only 15-20 per cent of the officers of both the development and non-developmeot depaltrlents of the two. State governmohts dr:d not feel that their sducatioh, training.
and work were trot utilised properly. Capabilities to cope up with Envlronment
queslion about ths capabilities of officials to cope up with environmeqt situation was canvassed to respondenis. perceptions wcrc reeo.f.nj arc summarised in Tabte 3,lg on p. 83"
"i_O
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83
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84
mental situation. The percentage of officers in the State Electficity Boards was somewhat higher in this respect as compared to the percentages of officers in the Revenue departments while the percentage of the officials from tbe Depaitmen( of Irrigation was slightly higher than the Department of Revenue. Similarly, about a third of officers in all the departments of the two Governments were of the opinion that their capabilities enabled them fairly to push through the dovelopmental and noo-developmental activities with whicb they were concerned. Thus. five.sixths of the officers could be said 1o be fully and fairly confident about their perception of their own capabilities. On the whole it could bo said that the officers of both the developmental and non-developmental departmnts of the two State Governments haC adequate self.gonfidcnce to cope up with new situations. That is probably the rason why.the role performance of the majority of officers of the two State Governments
had been satisfactory which is borne
About half of the interviewed officials in the three depar! ments of the two State Governments were of the opinion that their capabilities were quite high to cope up with the environ-
in the power and irrigation sectors. It has been verv encouraging in both the State Governments. This has been also possible by dedicated assistance and cooperation simultaneously rendered by the team of officers of the non_developmontal Department of Revenue to the developmental activities of the other Departments in the two States, Thus the bureaucratic response to development has been somewhat satisfactory in both the State Governments..
out by the
achievements
The I'?values of self confidence ofthe officers whoso capa_ bilities suited their work environment and enabled them to cope up with the situation for the officcrs of the Governments of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh wero 7.59 and 3,3i respectively for 4 degtecs of freedom. These are statistically insignificant even at 5 per cent level of probability. The ofrcers of the Revenue departments of the two State Governments, drawD somo times from different departments wcre found to have somewhat larger mean-square deviations of their perceptions about capabilities to cope up with environmental situations.
85
Nevortheless they were not of much consequen@. The difference in personal capabilities being very small, it was noticed that all tho officers of the three departments of the two State Governments, on the wholc, bad the required skill and capabilitics to cope up with the new situations that arose during the course of developmental and non-developmental work and their confidence in their capabilities enabled the State Govcrnments to utilise their talents somewhar adequately,
SUMMARY
The foregoing analysis of the personal characteristics of the 124 o6cials of the Government of Punjab in Patiala district and the 88 officials of Madhya Pradesh in Morena distriot, belonging to lrigation Dcpartmcnt, State Electlicity Board and Revenue Department studisd iu tbe survey leads to the following profilc of developmental and non-developmental personnel. The developmental officials in Patiala and Morcna working in
salvices, not to speak of Class III employees, Class I and Class are comparatively young in age. More than half and about one-third of them belonged to the age-groups, 26-35 years and 36-45 yaars'reapctively,
ll
it
was found that the officers with the big town/urban background having spent upto the first 20 years of their lines in a town with population between 10,000 and 1,00,000 were predominantly occupying Classs I and Class II posts in Patiala and Morena. About one-third and one-fourth of such officials in Class III service were found to work for the developmental and !ondevelopmental departments of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh Governments respectively. The Class III servicds, however, drew recruits from the villages, big towns and cities in considerable numbers,
So far as parentat occupations are concerned, persons whose parcots wore eithsr in agriculture or in servicc in general domi nated the burpaucratic universc of the officials studied. Persors
86
Ettrea*crat
ic
Values in Diveloomenl
with parental occupation of service formed more tban half (52 per cent) of the people serving in Class II service of the State Governments of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh while 42 pr cent of Class III service personnel came frcrn the agriculturist families. Even 32 per cent of Class I oficers and 3l per cent of Class III service ofrccrs carne frorn tbmilies with 'seivice'
'occupations. The economic class to which the surveyed officers belonged is of Rs. 251 to Rs. 750 p.m. The percentages of Class I, Class II and Class III ofrcers with fathers/ guardians belonging to the above income iange varied betwen 52 and 55. About 42 per cent and 39 per cent of the Class I and Class I[ ofrcers respectively, in addition, had their parents/ guardians income between Rs. 751 to Rs. 1500 p.m. The second highest income group that the parents/guardian s of Class III officers belonged to was Rs. 101 to Rs. 250 p,m.
pared to 7 per cent in Patiala. Regarding their dependency ratio, 49 per cent of the officers in Patiala and 4l per cent of the officers in Morena had to support 3-4 persons ; 25 per cent in Patiala and 30 per cent omcers in Morena had to maintain 5-6 persons, About 19 per cent and 16 per cent of officers had to maintain only 1-2 persons in Patiala and Morena respectively. The Government servants under study were normally aware of the small family nornrs,
Eiamining the marital status, we find that about 9l per cent of the ofrcers of Patiala and 8l per cent of the officers of Morena district were married and a little bigher pcrcentage of ofrcers, namely 13 pcr cent, were unmarried in Morcna com-
As tbe study mainly related to enginee rs/sub-engineers along with a few officers of the Revenue department, the most predo. minent educational level was that of technical/professional qualifications after high school or higher secondary levels. The
officers. 'lhe post-graduate and the graduate levels of education were, however, iroticed most in case of the Revenue Department
oflcers.
percentege varied between 6'1 and 74 among the three classcs
of
Study
Satisfaction
8?
was rported The chief eriterion for promotion of the oflcials of service' Merit (r'rhich was to be seniority witb good record be consiOitn.uft to define), hard and good work also came to made him eligibh for Jur"a oteo the scniority of an incumbent promotion.
of the One important finding of the study is that 68 per cent promotion' officers in Class I service were beneficiaries of orre per followed by 2l per cnt getting two promotions, while 49 jobs cenl and OO'per cent of officcrs in Class II and Class III respectively were direct recruits. However, 37 per cent- of officers in blass II and 26 per cent of officers in Class III respectively received one promotion only. AII officers' whcthsr
promoted, were, however, found to work in good spirif and the incidence of stagnation in the service was very smali, which wa-s contrary to our earlier expectation' promoted or
lot
The training period ofthe officials immediately after recruitment varied from two to three years for revenue and engioeer officers and from one year to 3 months for iunior irrigation and electricity staff.
make use of professional journals professional bodies in order to and to become members .nhrn". their tchnical oompctence and increase their 'professional skill'
to
of
The profile of the bureaucracy that merges from our study ' of is not very much different from the findings of the study seems that althougb Pai Panandiker and others.s It, therefore, n", been a lot of discussions about the socialisation and
il"r" i."i"i"g
processes of thc offrcials at the grass-root level' adequaie aotion has not been taken in this respect'
The analysis of job satisf)ction of officials reveals that about Morena 2l-27 per clnt of officers in the dishicts of Patiala and per cent ofrcors foundiheir work quite interesting, whilo 37-47
iound their work only occasionally interesting' About one' seldom third of the officers, on an avorage, found their work
88
intcresting. The pattern of pcrception was similar for all the three departments of the two Stat Governments.
The appreciation of the work ol the junior ofrcer by their senior officers also showed more or less the same trend, About 27-35 per cent of officers reported that their work was appre. ciated well by their se nior officers. This percentage was somewhat lower in the Revenuo Department. This is ihe pattern in both tbe State Governments and all the three departments. The
percentage of officers whose work was appreciated only ogcasionally was somewbat higher in punjab than in Madhya Pradesh. Only 15-24 per cent officers felt that their work was not appreciatod by their senior ofrcers and thoy were just carrying on their duties somehow, There was not much of variation in.the levels of appreciation of the work of thc junior officers by their senior officers in various departments.
of promotion in their own department while thE corres_ ponding percentages were higher at 2l-2g in thc development departments of the two State Governments, Some fair cbanoes of promotion were reported by 36_49 per cent of ofrcers of the two State Governments white 3l-46 per cent officers complained ofpoor chances of promotion. This type of perceptions by more than one-third of officers. was perhaps due to some stag. oation as a result of low seniority arisini out oi tl, Uutt fecruitment that is periodically made. The chancos of promotion were quite_ similar in development and non-development dopart. ments of the two State Governments.
chances
Regarding the chances of promotion in ono,s own department, about 18 and 17 per cent rcspectively of the officers belonging to the Departments of Revenue of both the goveroments of Punjab and Madbya pradesh thought that theie were
good
If given a chance to work in anothsr office/department the sam percentage of oiicers belonging development departments showed their reluctance wi iigness a change ofoffice. The officers of thc Revenu" Oipurtoruot of the two States revealed that a smaller p".""otug, of ii.ortuot, were prepared for a change. They were ,uprrtad
for
tr-n"*r"
lob Satislactlon
89
100/' or Rs' 150/' p.m. for working in other departments. The percentage of ofrcers in the Department of Revonue willing to join an alter' nativc ofrce/departmeqt for doing similar work were found to vary betweon 38 and 53. Thus only about half the omceis were somewhat, but not fully, inclined to chango over.
Thus, on the whole, 60-70 per cent of the officers by apd large thought that they wore either fully or moderately satisfieil with their job, while 30-40 per cent of the officers engaged in both developmental and non developmental activities seemed to be feeling frustrated and dissatisfie<i with their present job situations. A feeling of insigni0oant existence and non-prestigious nature of duties were stated to be the reason for such dissatisfaction whioh ultimately affected their achievements in their sphere of activities.
of
their cducation, training and experience were properly utilised. Only one-sixth of the officers thought that their educational
facts 'fe considered along wrth the larger percentage of officers willing for a change of office/department, it naturally
,r
achievements and expcrience were not utilised properly, The pattern of perception was similar for officers belonging to the these diiferent departments of the two State Governments'
If
considerable real dissatisfaction situations in the organisations they were working for' Obviously' however, only 15 20 per cnt of the officers of both the develop' nrent and non'dovelopment departments of the two State Govern' ments did not somehow feel that their oducation, training and work experience were utilised properly' Regarding the capabilitics
to
90
the environments. On the wholo a large majority of oflcers reported that they had adequate self.confidence to tackle any now situations that were likely to deveiop in the course of their work. There was not much difference in thc perceptions of the officers of developmontal and non-developmental departments of tho two State Governmentg in this respect.
with
situations about half of the officers were confident that they could moet the challonging situations of new environments while a third of them thought that they were fairly capable to oope up
NOTES
V.A. Pai Panandiker and S.S. Kshirsagar, Burcaucrac! and Development Administration (Bombay 1978), p. 34.
Response
p, 24' 3 H,R. Chaturvdi, Burea:ucracy and Local Community : Dynamico of Rural Development, (Delhi, 1977), p, 54, 4 V. Subramaniam, "Hindu Values and Administrative Behaviour',,
Indlan Journal
1967),
to
pp.
695-701.
rcaucracy and Society in Modern Egypt, (princeton : University, 1957). 6 Munecr Ahmed, The Civtl Servants ln pakistan, (rondon, Oxford University Press, 1964) p. 64. 7 R.K. Kelsall, Iltgher Civil Senants in Britain, (London, Routledg and Kegan Paul, 1955) pp. 198-200, 8 Panandikcr and Kshirsagar, n. 1., Mathur, n.2, aod Chaturvdi, n. 3.
5 Morroe Berger, B
of investigation for the studi' As outlined in Chapter I, the focus tho grass-root l'evel il;; ,he uulo, ,y.** of the bureaucracy atanalysis of the value the in India. This Chapter deals with of of the ofdcials on the structural characteristics
"tf*,"ii"" it', id'n is to analvse their responses as to tbe ;;;;;;;;;.v' structural ffi;;;;i;.t they attached to some of the selected The characteristicc of a bureaucratic system. of Rules' "'iui"a*ri.ri", iiera'"hv, nivision ol Labour' Svstem weberian il;-;;" of thc sJ;;;"" rrlorit ana lmpelsonality-sorne The analysis of organisatson.
features found in o uor.uo.iuirc
feature would itlir- r.rpoot"s on each of the characteristic officials them' which the tt to establish th extcnt to "-"Jftvalue thcse structural characteristics of bureaucracy and selves
correlation with their pcrwhether their value systrm has any formance in devotoPmontal work'
to ascrtain A set of five questions was put to the -officials prevailed in that tn"ir notfoot on the degree of hierarchy question-s' (a) whether
guided bv his senior officers. fortakios aqv production or ' revenue O."i*ioo on incrcasing agricultural be rated high ancl (b) whethe-r the ofrcer would ;;;;" throush ;;;;-"ifi*tt Li tut som status' if in tbe areahis efforts increased' colleotion "itrc,irt*"r-p;;duction/rtvonuo
;;s
92 were positively
scoring were marked h.igh, Eoderatc a11d low and are summar ised by departments and districts in Table 4.1 on p. 93,
framed, Thre of the queetions were negatively elicit spontaneous replies from the respondents. Thesd werc (i) whether the respondent could take action at hig discretio in the best interest or bettr performance of agricultural production/revenue administration (ii) whether the respondent hari a chance to take a decision on his own with regard to day-to.day work without consulting his senior officers and (iii) whether the respondent had to do certain things which were performed by his superior officers. The results of
framed
to
The division of respondents into high, moderate and low groups along the structural characteristic of hierachy showed that a high degree of valuc was attached to .hierachy in all the three departmonts of tho two State Governmets. In Patiala the highest scores were given by the Irrigation Engineers (58 per cent), and more than balf of the officers of the Punjab Electricity Board (51 per cent) showed bigh score to the value of hierachy. Curiously enough in the non_dpve. fopmental department of Revenue only 42 per cent officers
gave high score. to
high and moderate value scores on hierarchy, the percentagc of officers of all the departments in patiala varied betweea 83 per cent and 80 per sent. Thus the officials of all the three departments scored high in their values to hierarchy. The low values to the characteristic of hierarchy wero shown by only l6 and 20 per cent officials. In Morena the offlcials' attachment to the value of hierarchy was on a lower scale. As in patiala the highest perccntage of high value scores was noticed io tho lrrigation Diparrment (46 per cenr) followed by th Elctricity departmsot. (44 pr cent) both of which are classificd as devetopment departmeots while in the non-developmootal department of Revcnue, onty 39 per cent of the officials gavc high seor to the value sf hierarcby. 8o far as the modcrato scores were concerned, the officials of the Departmcnt of Irrigation rgcording it were 40 per cent, the
fhe
Structural Values
93
oSrl
3
{)
i-l
o o q
ot)
t
F(
{b'l
cri
cl
d.o -l
HC{
<rE
trl rt cn Fi F{ _(D
$E SE
E
$t
.90
.t oo
ll lo
I
qq ral
F
tl\ I
an
q)
flr frlE
I
.F lg
.
t
l'
qq
;a!
.i
\o
(|)
lgo rE-
-.: t.i
63= 0<a
.Jjb
94
officials ofthe Electricity Department 36 per cent and the offi_ cials from the Revenue Departoent 27 per cefi. Considering tbe high and moderato values together we find that the percen.
tage
departments conres to 80 per cent, 76 per cent and 77 per cent respectively which are more or less in descending order of their
Revenue
attacbment to the value of hierarchy in a bursaucratic system. The position is illustrated by Bar Diagrams No. I on p. 95.
A comparative analysis of the above score in the two Stats is an indication of tbe fact that the principle of hierarchy has been less rigidly observed in the dishict of Morena than in Patiala. It seoms that all the departments of Madhya pradesh Government in this region did takc decisions on their own on a comparatively larger number of cases in their day-to-day work. It was so because the officials in this region secmed to have been committed to bring about a quicker pace of
development, Because of certain other considerations, particularly arising out of the lanrpant dacoity menace, thcy had to adopt a less rigid degree o[ hierarchy in their work
procedures.
are uniformly
Assuming that all the depsrtments of the punjab Government and highly hierarchic in their structure, we apply
small as 5.55 which is very insignificant at 5 per cent level of probability for 4 degrees of freedom (2 degrees of freerlon for three departments and 2 degrees of freedom for three scales of values). Thus it can be concluded that there is no significant association to the value of the hierarchy as a bureaucratic characteristic between the developmental and regulatory departments in the State of punjab, The groups of officers in ahe three departments of Government of punjab have secured more or less similar scores to the value of hierarchv. therebv demonstrating that the rigidity of hierarchy may not necessarily affect the accomplishment of development goals.
is
found
to
be
as
the
Similarly in the case of the officials of the Morena districts, Ir (chi-square) value is onty 1.98 which is very insignifi-
95
BAR OIAGRAM
HIERARCHY
\g' I
PATIALA OISTRIST
High
Mod e rote
E
lectriciiY DePortmrnl
Low
High
Moderote Low
High Mo'derole Low
trrigotion
DePor
lmenl
Revenue Deportnent
lligh
Mo dero
le
ElectricilY DePortrcnt
Low
High Mo det ote
Revenue Degortment
Low Parcento9e
96
Bureaucratic Values
in Doelopment
oUr"rning t.s, rigidity in the bureaucratic characteristic d;;;;; secure a quicker-pace of developmenl there is ,"t"f.;;h;#;rence in tte officials'outlook towards hierarchy the fact whether they are ,ogug.d- io arurfoprloiu]-'turt, of ", " ;;i;, ;rr;ecrive o,
regulatory tasks. Division
variation arnong the officials of different departments is only marginal. tt c"an it J.rfore, tre observed that notwithstanding the .need, for
reinforces the conclusion arrived at "f .a.tiu in ine lase of the State of Punjab. In fact the scores of the three sets of officers of the (iovernment in Madbya- pradesh on tne Jue of hierarchy
cant for 4 degrees of free dom. Thus there is not much of association betwesn the scores to the value of hierarcby rn the three departments in the Government frA"if,y"'pr"Oesh This
of
of Laboar
burealcratic organisation. Two direct questions--ielating a to the division of duties among the senior and luoioioinclut, unA a third related question whether the seni,or officers liked to assume responsibility for the acts of commissions or ommissions of the junior officers were put to the respondents. The two ngatively framed questions whether the officers hacr to perform the- duties normally done by. senior officers (vertical Oivision) and whether thc officers had to do ,ort Aon, by their colleagues at the same lever (horizontar aivisiooiw"r" asked to elicit cross replies in respect of division ui fulou.. The existence of vertical aud horizontal division ;;; amongst the officials obvlously gave some idea of "f the prevalenr structture of official responsibilities in the departm"nt. it were tabulated and are presented in a summarised" ,.pti.* form in Table 4.2 on page 97.
The division of respondent officials securing high, modcrate and-tow value scores in respecr of division ;ai";;:r; is sbsws by the Bar Diagram No. 2
Division of duties aod the assigamont of 0xed responsi bilities amoDgst its members is an important characteristic
of
97
3.sS'T
3
I\ aa qo9 $(a
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oo $v
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= \l
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t-.
u)
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O\ ri
od
"t .P9
oI
\c)
=c) '5o
AA
98
Moderolc Low
High
Mo
derole
trrigolion Oepqrlmrnl
Low High
Mo
derdle
Revenue Deporlmrnl
I,IORENA DISTRIC?
Low
High Moderole
Low High
Eleciricily Dcportment
Moderote
Low High
M
lrrigolion Deportmcnl
dero ie
Low
The Struaural
Values
99t
In Punjab the pero.ntage of officers with high value scores on thc oharactoristic of Division of Labour was maximum in the Electricity Board and the Revenue Departmeot (about 5l per cent each) followed by the officers in thi lrrigation department (48 per cent). Tbe percentage of ofrcers with moderate scoro was the highest in the Revenue department (44 per cent) followed by 40 per cent in the Irrigation departRevenue department with 95 per cent scores gave a high consideration to tho value of the division of duties leaving. hardly 5 per cont officials who attached a low value to this. characteristic. Within the development departments the irriga* tion engineers indicating 88 per cent score followod by g7 per cent of the officers of the punjab Electricity Board attachcd either high or moderate values to the characteristic of division of labour. But the x2 (chi-square) value, being as insignificant as 4.07 for 4 degfces of frcedom, indicated thai so for as thoir attitude to the characteristic of the division of duties was
ment,and 36 per cent in the Electricity department. Clubbing together tho high and moderate values, the officials of the-
aqd Class
accordance
concertred, oo the whole there was not much of correlation amongst thc oftcials of three departments in the State ofpunjab_ It was, however, noticed that the Class I ofrcers worked under a less rigid system of the division of duties while the Class
III
Il
of
did
not
The same pattern also emerges in Madhya pradesh. The percentage of officers in the Revenue department indicating high values to the division of labour was marginally higher at 48 per cent compared to 46 per cent of the,Irrijation deparrmeutTbe percentage of such officers in the M.p. Electricity Boardr was, however, 46. The' percntag of officers ia the two develop:. ment departments with moderate ocorcs was, however, as high,, as 38 per,cent.and 35 per cent io the Departments of Electricity, and Irrigition r.cspCctivclyr against 29 .per cent ia the ,non-dow-.: lopmental f)cpartment of Revenue. The Xs (chi-square) value. in this caqg,ie alsq aslowas, a83:for.;4 degrees of froedon.-
100
Thus thcre was not much of inter'departhental corre'latioxship in the application of the principle of division of labour arDongst the officiats of the thrce dopartments. This also proves that the Division of Labour was ao cssential characteristic of any
organisation engaged in aoy kind of aotivity obstacle in the process of development.
System
an
of
Rules
A prcscription of elaborate rules and procedures govetns the operations of offices in any system of government. This is an essontial leature of bureaucratic organisation as rights and duties of incumbents holding various ofrcial positions are
derived from the sYstem of rules. Tbe system of rules not only graots the ofrcial powers but also limits their jurisdictions' Howcver, the same characteristic becomes dysfunbtional when the rules are observed literally to responprevent or obstruct action. A sizeable proportion
of
on tbe characteristic of'system of Rulest, a set of five questions was put to them-three of them were postively keyed questions-' (i) whether tbere were adequate rules and regulations to guide them in their work, (ii) whether the officer went strictly by . rules which meant more paper work and delay in the implementation of devclopment programme/revenuc administration, and (iii) whether the superior ofrcers would reprimand, if the rules were bypassed. The two were negatively keyed qucstions: (i) 'whethcr the omcer was in favour of changing the existing rules in th interest of development/revenue collection and (ii) whether the ofrcer could cut short the systom of rules and iake porsonal interest for expediting the availability of water/ power and postpooing revtruo colleotion. The replies as {abulsted aro pmocatcd in Tablc 4.3 on pagc l0l.
dent officials, both in Patiala and Morena, obscrved that their responsibilities and powers were highly codified and their work was rnore or less governed by elaborate prescribed rules' ln ordcr to measure the valuc scales of the respondent ofrcials
tho
l0t
O\ .a \o oo o\ e.l rN Or <i
s:T
lr
l*t
(')
-l:
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-:
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8S
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ctP
.,
q)
E3
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'91
,clF lq
ao ol ci .f c\ \o
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o
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s
E
o
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-1,
t{
l.go
lc
.s
.3
-E $g
02
the Department
-State
officials of
officers of the Punjab were ofthe opinion that their duties were highly governed by the 'system of rules.' These high percentages of high value scores were on account of the fact that tho officials rigidly
of lrrigation, 73 per cent of the of Revenue and 64 per cent of Electricity Board in the Government of
followed the prescribed irrigation, electricity and revenue codes. This was so evcn in those cases where a Minister or a Member of Parliambot or State Legislature wished to havo an irrigation outlet at a place where his supporters wanted to have it, The officers would always look into such cases according to their
merits and in accordance with the procedures proscribed in thE related codes as also on the basii of the technical feasibilities.. Considering thc bigh and moderate value scores together, wc find that about 93 per cent of the officers of the Irrigation and Revenue departments preferrcd to rigidly stick to rules. The attitude of the officers of the Electricity, Board did not significantly differ. They also closely followed their counterparts in other departments and the percentage of officials having high and moderate scores on this value was 84,
In Morena also the pattern was the same, but the percentages of offrcials having high value scores were only somewhat lowor' than in Patiala. High values were scored by 64 per cent, 57 per cent and 55 per cent erfficers of the Revonue, Irrigation and, Electricity departments respectively. Moderale value score, were given by 32 per cent, 28 pr cent and 22 per cent officials in the Electricity, Irrigation and Revcnue dcpartments respectively. The low value scores in the two development departments were hardly different from those in tho RevenuE department which were given by 14 per oent officials only. Tbua it seems that the officers of Madhya Pradesh Government in all
the departments, developmental or non-developmental, observed the sanctity of rules and procedures for their day.to-day work, even though they were conscious that this often led to avoidable delays in thcir performance. Dospito this, howcver, they felt it necessary t6 stick to rules !g protect themselves against any possible frivolous complaint.by any prson. The position is illustrated by Bhr Eiagram No;.,3 on page 103.
103
.
SYSTEM
gAR DIAGRAM
NO.3
DTSTRTCT
OgRULES
PATTALA
'Modero{e
'High
tow
'High
Electricily Deporlment
Moderote Low
lrrigoiion Deporlmenl
'fiigh Moderole
,Low
:High Moderole
.
Electrici
ty Oepoilment
Low
rHigh
.Mo
derole
Irrigotion Oeporlment
iLow
High
lMo
deroie
Fer ce nloge
Reven ue Dep or
tnent
!!-ow
104 of
The X2-(chi-sguare) value for officers in Patiala which is 9,69' slightly exceeds 9.488, thg critical value for probability level of'
.05 for 4 degrees freedom. Observations are thus clearly opposed to the hypothesis that the perc'eptions of officials areindependent of departments. seems tbat the observance of
It
of the
State
adherence to rules and procedures in tbe development depart' ments in conformity with the practice in the Revenue Department has not bindered development in Punjab.
of
Punjab
is
significantly correlated.
strict
The I'?-(chi-square) value for scores on system of rules in Morena on tbe other hand is 2.83 which is insignificant at 5 per
cent level of probability, system of rules is more or
It suggests that the observance of ths less independent of the developmentand non-devetopment character of the departments in Madhya Pradeeh, A comparative analysis of the scales of values on this characteristic shows that the progress in the electrification and irrigation projects in Punjab has in p actice been possibla even when there was rigid emphasis on thc observance of system" of rules. Thus in developmental work functionality does not seem to be affected by a rigid application of the rules an&
procedures, Selection on Merit
Thc usual selection procedures of officers in the State services. of Punjab and Madbya Pradesh are through (i) competitive tests and interview, (ii) interview only, (iii) references by the employment exchange with final interview by a Selection Board of' the Department/Subordinate Service Commission and (iv) pro-. motion from lowor category posts.
In Patiala it was found that 87 per cent of the officers of tho' Electricity Board were selected either by the Punjab Public Service Commission or by the Special Selection Board, a. procedure which is adopted to eosure setection on merit. The officers of Class II service are directly recruited by the Public
State
The Structaral
Values
105
Servicc Commission or the Special Selection Board from amongst the first class engineering graduates who alone are callecl for interview. After selection and training on probation they are posted as Assistant Engineers in various ofiic-es' Execcutiv" Bngineers are usually promotees fron Assistant Eniinocrs with good record of service and seniority'
tho Department of Irrigation are engineers per cent from amongst also recruited on a quota basis-(i) junior those having AMtE degree; (ii) 10 per cent from amongst engineers holding diplomas; (iii) l2'5 per cent from non'diploma holder engineers; and (iv) 5 per cent from the drawing and design staff. The rest are directly recruited from amongst the civil engineers holding graduate degree. To ensure selection on merit, the recruitnrent is done by the State Public Service ComThe Class
I[
in
l0
only called lbr interview, Only 65 per cent of posts in Class II service of the State Electrioity Board are ditect recruits while 35 per
cent of the posts are filled through
promotion from Class III posts is dont 9n a quota (i) 34 per cent are recruited directly; (ii) 33 per cent 6asis; through promotion from amongst the diploma'holder linesmen; and (iii) 33 per cent through promotion frorn amongst the oondiploma holder linesmen' who belong to Class IV service' To ensure selection on merit, the screening is done by a special Selection Board constituted for the purpos.
III
officers are selected on the basis of merit by the the time of our inSetvice Selection Board. Subordinate
The Class
III
At
The Punjab Public Service Commission recruits officers in senior and junior class II service for the Department of Revenue' The Deputy Collectors either get into the I.A.S. in tho pro* motion quota of State Civil Service or get a selection Grade on the basis of seniority and good record of service. The junior
106
officers of the Revenue Department usually come eirher directly or from various categories of State services. Only 1g per cent of the respondent officers of the Department of Revenue were found in our survey to be promotees and the rest were directlv recruited.
requirement being 8 years. During the survey, about 92 per cent of the respondent officers were found to be selected through
neers holding diplomas and 5 per cent from amongst the drawing and designing staff. The executive engineers are Class I officers promoted from Class II, the minimrrm experience interriew and 8 per cenl were found to be prornotees.
In Madhya Pradesh the pattern of service personnel in all the three departments resembles the pattern obtaining in punjab. Recruitnent to Class Il posts of the Madhya pradesh State Electricity Board is made both by direct selection and also through promotion. The quota for direct selection is 75 per cent while 20 per cent are rccruiteci from amongst the sub-engi
the institution of State public Service Board. About 8l per cent of the respondent officers were found to hav been
is ensured through
In the Irrigation Departmcnt of Madhya pradesh the Canal Deputy Collectors and Irrigation Inspectors are of the grade of a Tehsildar or a Naib Tebsildar respectively. The selection on
nerit
In the Department of Revenue, Deputy Collectors who are senior State Civil Service Offcers .."ruitrd by the Madhya Pradesh Public Service Commission, are eligible for promotion into the I.A.S. after 8 years of meritorious service on a 33 per cent quota basis. Besides this, l0 per cent of the Deputy Collectors can also get into the selection grade. promotion of various junior grade service personnel is also allowed in the tcrvices of the Department of Revenue. Even the Class III officers including Naib Tehsildars are composed of various persons coming from other departments, Only g per cent of the officers in this Department were found to be promotees and
'.:The Sfiuctural
Values
lg7
30 per cent wer selected directly through interview and tests .and the remainder through 'interview only.
A negatively keyod question whether there was a feeling that was difficult to get a government job without usiog some kiud . -of influence was put the fespondents. About 84 per cent respondents in the ReveDue Department of the Punjab Government shared with the fceling partly, while only 16 per cent of-
it
to
'the respondents
"'case of the
officers of the Department of lrrigation shared it partly while 'only 10 prr cent shared it fully. The remaining 8 per ccnt did not agree at The position was more or less the same in the
fully
shared
it.
of
the
respondents from tbe Punjab State Electricity Board where 57 per cent ofthe officers shared the feeling partly
all.
and 3l per cent shared fully with the premise. Only 12 per cent of the respondents did not share the feeling at all. The scores .on this value are shown in Table 4.4 on page 108.
In the case of the district of Morena in Madhya Pradeslr, an -overwhelming 75 per cent of officers of the Department of Irrigation sirared the feeling partly while 12 percent shared "such a feeling fully and ths rest of the 13 per cent did not share the feeling at all. In tho Department of Revenue about 71 per -cent of tho respondents agreed partly with the idea while only 17 per ceot shared the feeling fully and the remaining t2 per .cent did not agree with it at all, In the case of Madbya Pradesh Electrioity Board, 62 per cent of the officers partly shard the 'feeling with only 8 per cent believing in it fully. The, remaining 30 per cont did not believe it at all' The above findings clearly indicate that a majority of the respondents have at least a 'partial feeling that the selections are not always made on merit. It seems also clear that even in a bureaucratic system the actual perception of the ofrcials about an essential Weberian characte-ristic sho a lot of divergence. The creeping up of a feeling .that the selertions to official positions are not always made on 'merit, howsoever vague or biased, hamper the performance of .individual offioials as thy tend to be less motivated in their work performance. It also indirectly casts reflections on the rimpartiality of the duly constituted Boards for the purpose of
"vs
108
in
Develop ment
6l
a s
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':
109.
selection of officials, This may also present some obstacles ip the accomplishment of developmental activities. Such-a v4lue perception of the officials needs to be remoulded for rcposing,: ing their confidence ioto the system.
To carry it a little farther the-respondents were asked a question about thc main criterion of selection and advancement. Here, of course 87, 90 and 100 per cent respondents belonging.: to the Departments of Electricity, Irrigation and Revenuo res'' peotively of the State- of Punjab said that seniority in the' government sorvice either in their own or other departments was.. the sole criterion of promotion provided their confidential'r records were good. Merit was said to be either immeasurable' or exprossed in terms of the subjective assessments of their'' senior officers and had littlo importance for promotion. Some' officers did maintain that good and bard work was of some ' consequence in promotion. At the same time, however, accord'' ing to them promotions on tho basis of certain extraneoqs con' siderations did not amount to more than 10 per cent ofthe '
cases.
in Madhya Pradesh was somewhat different''Against a high response of the officials in the State of Punjab only 63 to 67 per cent officers of all the three departments in." Madhya Pradesh found that seniority in service eitherinthe' parent or other departments was the main criterion for' promotion and advancement of career' At the same timeTho position
the officers of the three departments ' maintained that hard and good work di<i merit promotions' Extraneous considerations or inffuence was oot of any major
about 26 to 3l per cent of
consequence.
In view ofthe above findings, it seems to be surprising tbat' officials in both the States should share a feeling that the' recruitmont and promotions in government scrvices are not based on merit. An overwhelming majority of cfficers ' partly carried that feeling and a good number of officers even ' fully shared the feeling without any factual basis' Officials'' tend to have the feeling that in majority of cases, employment
"1
l0
"or promotion in the government servioe, irrespective of the ;departmeirt . is based on consideration other tfian merit. ,Although the olficials could not substantiate their views in this regard, with concrete instances, but the very fact that they share this sort of value perception shows a disturbing trend in the accomplishmeot of their prescribed responsibilities. The .existence of such values amongst the officials tend to demoralise them and comes directly in the way of their work performance irrespcctive of the fact whether the task was regulatory or 'developmental. It is, therefore, necessary that such feelings among the officials are mitigated. This would lead to bettir functioning of the officials by boosting up their morale for
developmental and non-developmental work. Impersonality
their requests which were at times unreasonable and impinged of bureaucratic behaviour. "kaving aside the replies to these questions on the clopeness to "tho people (Seo Appcndix II) for the time being, replies in
'in their dealings with various officials. ln such conditions it was really very difficult for the officials to refuse to entortain
One of the structural characteristics of a bureaucratic system is ',impersonality observed by the officials in their official dealirgs, We tried to examine the extent to which this characteristic was ,upheld by the officials in the three departments of the two "State Governments. In the section of .Impersonality, we put six different questions as shown in the officials' Schedule at Appendix IL Two of the questions related to the respondents' 'tendency to become closer and friendly to the people in the .course of their official dealings. In our field investigations, we were told by the various officers that a large nrajority of the .Government officers did not have the facility of housing and as ..a result they had to seek the help of private landlords not only . at the district/sub-divisional headquarters, but also at the block headquarters where there was acute shortage of reasonably good .accommodation, The landlords very often preforred to have "officials as their tenants for they thought that they wre not .only good pay masters but were also in a positiob to help them
The Structural Values fespect of other four questions were analysed Table 4.5 on page I l2 gives the findings.
1l
Pr
and tabulated,.
It will
department of Revenue
in their official dealings in as much as 93 per cent omcers said that they followed this principle scrupulously with only 7 per cent observing it moderately and none against it. The f)epartment of Irrigation' of the Government of Punjab was the next in order. About: 34 per cent offrcers had high scales of values for impersonality followed by 14 per cent omcers with moderate scale of values and 2 per cent respondents with low value scales. The same trend was more or less noticdd among the officers of the Punjab' State Electricity Board where 72 per cent officials attached high values to impersonatity. Only 25 per cent officers of the Board said that they were following it moderately and 2 per cent officers attached low values to this characteristic. The same trend is noticed among the officers of the Government of Madhya Pradesh. About ?l per.cent officers. of the Department of Revenue attached bigh values to the impersonal ways of worlcing, and only 22 per cent officers
attached moderate scales
of the
in the
of values to impersonality' The of the Dopartment of Revenue according low values to' officers impersonality formed only 7 per cent. The trend is similar in, case of ofrcers of the Department of lrrigation where about. 56 per cent respondents attached high values to impersonality' followed by 35 per oont observing moderate values' Theofficcrs attaching low valucs were less than 10 per cent. In case of officers of the Madhya Pradesh Electricity Board' 5'l per cent attached high values and 23 per cent each attached moderate and low values to impersonality. The Bar Diagram No. 4' on page I 13 cleatly iilustrates the comparison of thc values.
The X2-(chi-square) value of observations at Patiala for four' degrees offreedoin was foundlto be very high at 15.13. This was due to very s'ide variations in the high, moderate and low values of porception " .of,all otiEcers especially the officers of the
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PATIALA OISTRICT Electrici ly OePor tmcnt
IMPERSONALITY
orv
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tricilY DePortment
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114
Department of Revenue. The distribution of opinion scales of officers of the State Electricity Board and the Department of Irrigation was also very skew, an overwhelmingly large percentage officlrs indicating in favour of high values ior imper_ -of sonality. The valuc of Xr.(chi-square) is very significant for
such a skew
offlcere
Dpartments of Irrigation and power also closely follow the officials of tbe Department of Revenue in the observance of impersonal dealings with the bencficiaries. Officers of both the. developmcnt and non-development departments of punjab show highly simitar attitudes in dealing with their clientele on an impersonal basis, Such impersonal attituds on the part of the officials does not seem to have hampered the pace oi develop* ment in Punjab.
The-X, (chi-square) value for your degrees of freedom for the officers in tho Morena district was found to be still higher at. 41.34 which is very significant at any level of probability. Here day dealings. But as compared to the officials in patiala they. rigid. More than a quarter (27 per cent) of officers hers attach moderate scale of value to impersonal dealings with public. Low values are attached to impersonality -by onty the. 13 per cent officers, More than half of the officers in the Electricity and Irrigatioo Dcpartments of the Government of Madhya _ Pradesh are also very impersonal in their day-to-day dealings. The officials of the power Board have modlrate and low per. ception about impersonality in 23 per @nt cass each. Aboutj 35 and 9 pex cent officers respectively of thc Department of lrrigation attach moderate and low perceptions to this character-, istic. Thc tendency to observe impersonalily in deating with.
are less again we find that the officials of the Departoent of Revenue. strictly follow tho principles of impersonality in tbeir day.to-
Punjab observe impersonality in their official behaviour as the sine.qua-non for all official dealings. The officials of the.
distribution. It can
safely be concluded
that the
of,
'
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seems
to be deeply imbibed by the officials in all thc different departments in both the States. At least this is what many of these officiats publicly admit. However, as observed earlier mrny of the officials do become friendly and closet to some people during the course of their official work and this fact does affect their:attitudes and actions toward s ti.em. This is clear from Table No, 4.6 on page l15, based on the officials' replies to the question relating to their becoming friendly to the people in course oftheir ofEcial dealings. flowever, tbo above findings do not explicitly indicatc whether such a tendency on tho part of the officials affect the developmental activities, and if so, in what mann_er and to what consequences. Presumably, in real lifc situations, non-observance of this bureaucratic characteristic by the officials in some cases helps them to oblige certain of their acquaintaoces or friends in expediting official actions but doss not have major consequences on the achievemonts of large'
scale developmental goals.
SUMMARY
characteristics
of
bureaucracy namely
tested slatistically in the light of replies given by the officials belonging to the three departments of the two State Governments under study. The findings discussed above explain the extent to which tl'e officials in the different bureaucratic set-ups in India share thesc values. The study shows that the characteristics exist predominantly in the nondevelopmental departnrent of revenue administration as also to somewhat lesser extent in the developmental departments of both the States. A comparison of the percentages of high, moderate and low values attached by the officers of the parallel departments in Punjdb and Madhya Pradesh brings to light some discernible trends. The comparativ analysis of such values amongst the officials of the State Elcctricity Boatd in both Purjab and Madbya Pradesh has been summarised ln Table 4.7 on p. I l?.
tt7
Characterlstlcs
Patlalu High
of Bureaucracy
Mode- Low
rale
High
Morena Mode.
Low
fate
18.6
l.
t 35.9 13.0
3. System of 4. Impersonality
63.5 20.3 16.2 54.6 31.6 72.3 25.3 2.4 53.9 23.1
23.0
Amongst the officers ofthe Governoent of Punjab, out of the characteristics studied, impersonality shows the bighest score (72 per cent), followed by the system of rulos (64 per ocnt), and the division of labour and hierarchy (jl per cent each). Moderate scale of perceptions is also very bigh among these officers. This means that despite development activities, the officials of the State Electricity Board in punjab value tbe bureaucratic characteristics in the order of impersonality, system of rules, hierarchy and division of labour.
labour (46 per cent) and hierarchy (44 per ccnt). It thus seems thlt somewhat more flexible attitude has been observed by the officials to the characteristics of hierarchy and division of labour, whioh secm to have led to increase in the tempo of developnreut in the initial.stages.
Regarding the officials engaged in another developmental activity -that ofthe lrrigation Department, it cnn be seen from Table No. 4.8 on page ll8 that officials of both the punjab
More than half of the officers of the Madhya pradesh State Electricity Board attach high importance to the system of rulcs and impersonality (54 per cent each), followed by division of
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I 19
and Madhya Pradesh Government (84 and 56 per cent respectively) give the highest importance to impersonal doalings towards the beneficiaries followed by the observance of rules (79 and 5? per cent respectively) as given in their irrigation codes. The difference is however of degree in both the cases. It will be further observed that wbile the officers of the Government of Punjab are very rigid in the observance of these two values, the majority of officers of the Government of Madhya Pradesh also attach high values to these character-
of division of labour. Madhya Pradesh the number of officials attaching high values given to the division of labour and hicrarcby vary between 4l per cent to 46 per cent. Nonetheless they conform to the essential oharacteristics of buroaucracy. The lowsr percentages of low values given to theso two characteristics in Morena may be due to the fact that during the short period of developinent (7-8 years) of Chambal irrigation network, the department could not afford to be very rigid in the
Punjab is somewhat flexible io the case
concerned,
in
new tasks of extending irrigation command areas. Howver, a slightly different pattern emerges in the case of non-deveiopmental department of Revonuo Administration in
the two States as shown in Table 4.9 on page 120. The inpersonality and system of rules are the most importaDt guiding principles for rwenue administration in Punjab as revealed by our respondents while the observance of the division of labour and hierarchy seems to be somewhat flexible, as only 42-51 per cent of the officials have scored high on these.
values,
The charactristics of impersonality and system ofrules are also highly valued in the Department of Revenuc of the Government of 'Madhya Pradesh and emphasised by the. respondent oficials, but tbe extent of'scalo values was less than in Punjab. Compared to 93 per cent of officials attaching high values to impersonality in Puojab' the high value in Madhya Pradesh was scored by only 7l per cent' The high valBos of thc systom of rules was scored by 73 pcr cent officials
120
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Punjab agaiost 64 per cont io Madhya Pradesh. The division of labour and extent of hioraohy showed more flexibF lity in Madhya Pradosh than in Punjab.
It can tius be concluded'that by and large the administra. tiv6 system showed ao inclination to keep up the Weberian bureaucratic characteristics both in the devclopmcntal and non-developmental tasks. The element of deviation from the strict bureaucratic model was found to be somewhat greater in tho developoental activities in both tho States-morc in Ivladhya Pradesh than in Punjab, but the findings do not suggest that de-bureaucratization is essential for rapid develop ment. Even for affecting rapid development it was necessary
However, findings in the case of Madhya Pradesh do iudicate the need for flexibility in the system of rules and impersonality in the initial stages of developmeot. Once the organisation gets going, therc is a tendoocy to absorb more bureaucratio charactoristios in greater degrees'
characteristic of bureaucracy. This chapter is conoerned with an invostigation of somc of the socio'personal, scciocultural and socio.administrative valuos that the officidls observe or attach importance to in their official day to day dealings' The socio-personal values chosen for inquiry aro (a) the integrity of character and (b) the equality of individual, whilo the socio' cultural valuc investigated is (o) the officers' caste/class biases in their official dealings, and the socio'administrativc value enquircd relates to (d) the officials' status consciousness'
Tho post-Woberian titeraturo on 'bureaucracy' has abundaotly dcmonitrated the tendenoy of the ofrcials to deviate from their anticipated bureaucratio rational behaviour within the framt' work of their porsonal, social and cultural settings, In tbe Indian ocology enormous disparities arising out of caste and cksss structures cxist giving rise to a pattern of administrative oulture whicb is based on traditional norms and social pressures While it is generally agrecd that in practice suoh deviations have
was mado to examine the scales of valucs that the officials attach to some of the Weberian
adversc effect on the performance of any type of organisa" tional goals, it remains to be exmined whether such effcct is fclt moro in the field of dovelopmental activities than in the non-
an
dcvobpmc nt
al arcas'
t24
Socio-personal Values
Bur eau
cratic
Integrily of Characier
Two direct questions whether the officials agreod with (i) that no mattor how difficult the oircumstancs, the officials nust always romain above board and (ii) no official can be effective in his official performaaco, if he constantly tries to accommodate the requests and wishes of evcrybody were tested along with a nogatively framed quostion (iii) that administration being wbat it is, one has to compromiso with principles. The replies in res' pect of thesc qucstions relating to integrity of character were
analyscd and are presented in Teble 5,1 on page 125.
it
can be observed
ofricors of the Government of Punjab score high on the value of integrity of character. More than three-fourths of the officers of the Dopartments of Irrigation (78 per cenl) and Revenue (76 per cent) said that the integfity of character was a must for the efricient discharge of their duties. Two-thirds (67 per cent) of the officers of the Punjab State Electricity Board were also of the samo opinion. Thus, an over-wbelmingly high degree of consonsus about a high value to tho. integrity of charactor pre, vailcd amongrt th ofricers of the Governmont of Punjab.
Only 18, l7 and 13 por ceot officers of the Revenue, Elocfii. city and Irrigation dopartmolts gave modcrato values to this charactcristic. Low valuos to the integrity of character were
attachod
by
a 50
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126
the departments
of
Government of Punjab.
character. However, only 44 per cent officers of tbe Statc Etectricity Board were found to attach high values to integrity of character, Clubbing together high and moderate valuos we find that in all the three dcpartments, 80 par cent of the omcers attached high and moderate values to the integrity of character. Officials in thc developmental and non-developmental departmonts did not materially differ in their outlook towards the integrity of character. The Bar Diagram No. 5 on pago 127 showing the differing degress of values for this characteristic of bureaucracy in the two States illustrates the emphasis given by the officials to the principle of integrity of character,
In case of Madhya Pradesh the distribution of the value scales was also similar, but the existence of high values were somewhat less. About 60 per cent officers of the Departmenl of Revenue and 56 per cent officers of the Department of Irrigation were found to sharo high values for the integrity of
It will be seen that the pattern of values shared by officials iu the two states is similar, Only the percentages of moderate and low values for integrity of character in Morena have gained at the cost of high values. Nevertheless as many as 60 and 56 per cent offic:rs of the Dspartments of Rovenue and lrrigation cherised high values of integrity of character whereas 44 per cent office rs of the Madhya Pradesh State Electricity Boatd attached high values to this characteristic. The percentage of the officials in the Goverome nt of Madhya pradesh attaching moderate and low values to integrity of character varied between 18 and 6 per c!t.
In Punjab as many an 78 and ?6 per cent of officers of the Departments of lrrigation and Revenue respctively cherished high values to the integrity of character while the correspond. ing percentage of officials in the Electricity Department
67, The percentage of officcrs attaching moderate valuee to this charactertstic varied between 36 and 24, which were
was
Eleslricily
Oeportmgn t
Low
HiCl
Modero te
lfrigotion
eporl men I
Low
High
Mo
derote
Revenue Deportment.
MORENA DISTRICT
Low
High Mo drole
Low
Eleclricity Deportment
Irrigotion
Oeportment
logc
128
Bureauerat
ic
Volue s
in Development
of the ofrcials of
level of probability. It suggests that tbe value perceptioni of the o$cers of all the departments of the Governments of punjab and Madhya Pradesh are not interrelated. The extent of value perceptions among officers is independent of the departments in both the State Governments. All officerb of the punjab Government wcre reported to cherish high values for integrity ofcharacter as they thought it essential for development. The officers of the Government of Madhya Pradesh did also observe this characteristic of bureaucracy even amidst lot of conflicting and sustained pressures. There is only a slight difference in the extent of value perceptions among the officers of the two State Governments, The officers of the Governmcnt of punjab are overwhelmingly in favour of high values of integrity of
The l,-(chi-square) values for patiata and Morena in respect of integrity of character are 6.56 and 6.3? respectivcly for4 degrces of freedom each, which are insignificant at 5 per cent
character while thc officers in the Government of Madhya Pradesh are very close to their counterparts in punjab in following the principle. This difforence in inter-State variation seems to be due to a high degree of development being already achieved in Punjab, while Madhya Pradesh was strll in the threshold of development.
Equatity of I n ditt idu al s The practice of treating all citizns uniformly on equal basis not only prevents any arbitrarioess of behaviour on the part of administrators but also protects them against frivolous accusations of favouritisnr by certain aggrievod citizEns.
In order to elicit the offlcials' responses to this value a direct question whether equality of individuals should be observed while implemotrting a developnrent plan and two ncgatively keyed qucstions*(i) whether the proposals of leaders who enjoy some public support arc favourably considered, even though thcir proposals may be unsound and (ii) whcther the richer
farmers get all possible production aids while thc small farmers
tabulated according to scales of valucs for the two districts and are prcsonted in Table 5.2 on page 130. The differences in scales of values attached to the principle of equality of individuals by tbe officers of the three depart. ments are illustrated by Bar Diagram No. 6 on page l3l. The percentage of high values in respect of equality of indi-
viduals vary from 57 per cent in Irrigation Dcpartment of Punjab to 5l per cent in Electricity Department. But in the last case this percentage is followed by 43 per cent of moderate value whereas in the Electricity and lrrigation Department the percentages of moderate values are 40 and 35 respectively. When high and moderate values are considered together, tbe total pcrcentage varies between 92 and 88. Thus it can bo said that the principle that individuals should be treated equally is the uppermost consideration of officers of all ths three departments in the Government of Punjab. of Morena, the highest percentage of high values are officers of the MP State Electricity Board per cent High value prcentages in the lrrigation which is 49 and Revenue Departments are 44 and 38 respectively. But these percentages are followed by fairly high percentages of moderate scates of perceptions of the officers of the Revenue (31 per cent) and the Irrigation (28 per cent) departments respectively. In the Revenue and lrrigation departn;ents 3l per ceot and 28 per cent officers are found to attach low values to the principle of treating individuals on an equal basis' There is thus considerable difference in role perceptions of the officers of the Gov:rnment of Punjab and the Government of Madhya Pradesh. It was not clear, however, why about one-third of the officers of the Government of Madhya Pradesh attached low values to the principle of equality of individuals. May be this was due to the fact that the officials beilg constantly under all kinds of pressures felt that it was difficult for them to adhere to this principle in practice. In order to realise the obicctives some occasions for biased treatment of clicnts or
attached by the
In
case
130
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Soc
BAR
High
Mo
DIAGSAU--NO-g
derote
Electrici ty OePortm;tt
Low
High Moderote
Irigotion Oertortm:ot
[ow
High
Moderote
Low
Flevcnue Ocporttnant
MORENA OIS?RICT
High
Moderote
Low
Elcctricity Deporlment
High Moderote
Low
lmgofion Oeportmeot
High
Moderote Low
Percen to ge Reven
uc
Oeportment
t32
citizens might have arisen, and they had to unwillingly sacrifice this principle for the sake of expediency. There is also some difference in the pattern of their role perceptions. The X'z-(chi.square) value is as low as 3.12 for 4 degrees of freedom for Punjab whereas it is as bigh as 9.23 for Madhya Pradesh of6cers. The latter is, of course, just statistically insignificant at 5 per cent level of probability. The pat-
of individuals is, therefore, very muoh alike with the officers of all the three dcpartments of the Governments of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh, and the role perceptions in various departments of the two Statc Governments are not correlatcd. In Punjab the low value scales get reduced because the high value percentages are much higher. In Madhya Pradesh, however, the differences in percentages of low value scales and moderate value scales and even the high value scales are much less. Otherwise there is no porceptible difference amongst the development dpartments as compared to the non-developmental departments of either
tern of role perceptions about the equality
Government. Scoio-Cultural Values Amongst the many socio-cultural values which govern an official's behaviour, caste and class considerations were taken as the main indices for investigation. Normally the bureaucracy is supposed to be free from all caste, class and parochial considerations. But in a developing country like India disparities in caste or class structures are very diverse and varied, In various Five Year P.lans for socio.economic development, ways and means have been sought for ren;oval or mitigation of caste and class inequalities. Special provisions have been made for tho development of people belonging to backward classes/casts and communities. In many places minimum needs programmes have been provided for betterment and improvement of people belonging to the poorer sections of the society. Special provisions have been made in the Five Year Plans for the upliftment of the small and marginal farmers and the weaker sections of the society. The officials at various levels are, thereFore.
So c io'P
erc o na
t,
So c lo-C
wbether in respect of developmental work preference was given to different classes, especially the depressed ones in the society, wero put to the respondent offcers. The replies were analysed and are summarised in Table 5,3 on page l3l, The picture that emerges here in case of caste/ctass considerations is somewhat iomplex. The development departments of the Government of Punjab attach very low values to these considerations while the non-developmental departmcnt attaches some importance to these considerations. The officers of the Government of Madhya Pradesh in all the thre departmnts attach some consideration to these factors. The position is illustrated by Bar Diagram No. 7. on page 1 5.
So far as socio.cultural values are concerned, the of6cers of the Government of Punjab belonging to developmental and non-developmental departments show the samc pattern of bebaviour. An overwhelrning percentage of officers of the Electricity and lrrigation Deparments, viz 84 per cent each, and 60 per cent of the officers of the Revcnue department attach low values to caste and class considerations. In fact
classes/religious groups; (iii) ft'hether sites of development programmes were selected on caste/class considerations; (iv) wbether preferencc was given to small and marginal farmers
official's work areas; (ii) whether development plans and polito suit certain locally dominant castes/
entrusted with special responsibilities in respect of such develop_ ment programmes. It waS, therefore, thought desirabte to put a few questions to the officials about the natur oftheir duties. Five questions; (i) whether parochial and caste consideratiofs played an important role in development administration in tho
the small and marginal farmers and the weakor sections of the society cannot afford individually to own an elcctric or diesel
for augmenting the agricultural production. The State tubewells have to be constructed by th State Govcrnments frrr helping them in a collective way. Thc areas of tho district of Patiala surveyed by us did not bavc any state tubewell although thc watcr level is high in that rcgion,
pump
134
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PATIALA OISTRICT
High Moderote
Low
Electrisi tY DePortment
High Moderote
Low
trngotion DePorlrnent
High
Modaro te
Reven ue DePortment
High
Moderotr
LotY
High
trrigohon OePortmenf
Low Percentoge
136
Irrigation and Electricity Depart.mgnts attached moderate values to this characteristic. The corresponding percentages for low value perceptioos were very low.
In case ofirrigation, the network of canals in patiala, both lrigation Work Department and Bhakra-Nangal system are fairly old. The present irrigation activities are mostly in respect ofstrengthening these canals to bring in more water that is available from tbe Beas river. There is, hardly, any scop at'the present moment to give caste/cldss coqsiderations in thc availabrlity of water for irrigation, It was, thereforcn, Snnatural to apportion high valtis for them to theee cgbgidcfdtions. Thus 83 per cent of the officers of rhe lrrigaation department were stated to have attached low values followcd by 16 pr cent and only I por cent respectively for moderate and higb value to caste/class considerations.
belonging to
Thus the officers of the State Electricity Board did not havs much opportunity to give high considerations to caste or class factors. Only 27,16 and 14 per cent ofolficers of the Revenue,
officers belonging to non:devetopmental different, On account..of tbe constant bammering from the administration the prceotage of officials attaching low values to caste/class ,u, only 50, followed by 27, artd 13 for modorate and high "oorid.rurroo values
dopartment was somewhat
rospectively.
The position
of
drawn strictly according to poteotiality of agricultural production. In case of the Depaitment of irrigatiol tow scale valuess werc indicated by 4l per cent of the oftleis aeainst l+
In case of the Electricity Department the ieicentage of low values were held byas large as 5l per ceni offiicials. It was gathered during discussions. with the officials that the wiring of the transmission and distribution lines oilpower nad very littlc to do with weaker section. uoa tn" lines were
the percentage of officials attaching somewhat nigi values ; grete/class considerations.v1y betwien 15 to 2J pei cent only.
cent level of probability. Thus the value scales of the Govern' ment of Punjab in respect of caste/class considerations are not
independent
of
tho
officers of the development and non-development departments in Punjab are highly correlated so far as caste/class considera'
In Morena the ,(e-(chi'square) value is 4.57 which is very insignificant. 'It moans that considerations given to caste/class and weaker section of the society by the of(icers of the develop' ment departments are not inter-related though attachment of high, moderate and tow values to this characteristic by tho officers of the three departments of Madhya Pradesh Government
show some variations.
the two States, a very pertinent thcm rslated to the kind of attitude that the beneficiaries had of the official developmental prog' rammes. The other question prsed to the officials was whether thebetter off plople were willing to sacrifice for the upliftment of the pooror section of the community. The views of the officers of the Government of Punjab differed considerably' Onty eight per cent of the officers of the Punjab Statc Electricity Board thought that the rich beneficiaries were seldom or ncvr in favour of sacrificing for the pooi, while in the Irrilation and Revenue De partments, such a fceling was hold by 92 per cent and 56 per cent ofofficials respectively. However, 39 per cent of officials of the Revenue Department, l0 per ccnf ' ol officials of the Puojab State Electricity Board and 3 per cont
question that was asked
or
138
omcers of the Irrigation Departmont thought that the rich were preparod. to sacrifice for the benefit of the poor. The percentage varied differently in Madhya Pradesh. Only 62 per cent, 44 per cent and 58 per cent officers of the Electricity, Irrigation and Revenue Departments respectively were of the view that the rich were not sacrificing for the weaker sections of the society, while 38 per cent, 23 per cent and 6 per cent officers respectively of these departments were of the view that the rich were willing to sacrifice for the benefit of the poor. Thus, in the absence ofthe feeling of the willingness to sacrifice
on the part
of the privileged
classes
the inequalities
and
disparities between the richer and poorer sections of the society are likely to persist for times to come.
A quick paco of developmcnt can be achieved if both the offcials and beneficiaries of developmental tasks have a strong sense of conviction arrd are inspired by the high values of sacrifice, public service and dedication to the ideals of developmcnt. The administration cannot be biased in favour of one group or another but must resort to equitable distributioo ofthe benefits of development in the larger interest of the nation. Every citizen needs to be assured that the Government has to be fair to all sections of the community. If the officials are unable to deveiop unanimity of purpose and identity of goals, they are very ofte;r in trouble in their sphere of activities relating to the welfare of beneficiaries who are very often heterogeneous in composition and chalacter. The relationship between officials and citizens is thus, at times, marked with tensions, For instance, if the monsoon is scanty, there is a demand on thc part of some farmers who do not own pumps, for irrigation water and electricity for energising pumpsets to save the crops. In case the officials are not responsive to these demands and do not provide the necessary inputs in particular areas and are not cooperative with the public in meeting their demands, or aro biascd in their dealings with different sectioos of the society the tensions multiply and conflicts arise, Thus occasions may arise where the officials are faced with the problem of solving such sless-conflicts within tho community, i,e., to decidc. the
claims of the well-to'do section owning irrigation pumps against the genuine demands of the poor or dcpressed classes without irrigation pumps. Although majority of officials seem to bc freo from the class'bias in deciding these conflicting claims, yet even a significant minority showing such biases is disheartening.
So
Ttro officials' sense of status:consciousness, their allegedly maintaining of distanco from their junior officers and the kind of freedom that the subordinate officers enjoycd to discuss official and personal problems with senior officers were taken The as the indices reflecting the socio-administrat ive values' (a) are the senior officers two positive questions canvassed were ,onrriout of their status? and (b) do the senior officers maintain keyed distance from the junior officers? The one negatively officers question put to the respondents was whether thejunior of the aepartments had the freedom of discussion about their official aod personal problems with higher officials' The replies received wcre tabulated and are summarised in Table 5'4
on page 140'
The table olearly indicates that officers of all the three conscious a.fu.tro.nt. of both the governments are more or less from their junior officors' The oill.i, ,tuto, and keep distance the highest value officers of the Revenue Department have characteristics' About 64 per scales for the socio administrative of ,.nt offrrrrc of the Revenue Department of the Government of those in the Department poniuU.otputed to 47 ner cent of
values of ihe Madhva Pradesh Government attach high maintain distance from to status consciousness and consequently ii.iil"oi". officers. If we club together the high and moderate of Revenue values scores, the percentages in the Departments. of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh become as oi in" Cou.tomenis iisil", s+per ceot antl 88 per cnt respectively'. The extent' oi?ntot co-nsciousness is somiwhat less in the Electricity and ii.G"ii"t dePartmeots, in Punjab the percntages of officials iofiing higb values coming to 42 and 41 pe-r cent respoctively' ii upp.nt. that even in development departments a cloar
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only to a lesser extent stamp of status-consciousness prevails, in the Revenue depart' compared to the hard core bureaucracy ment.
The pattcrn in Moiena is also somewhat similar. In Madhya Pradesh the highest perceotage of thc officers who are status conscious to a high degre: is 47 in the Department of Revenue whicb, when clubbed with officers having moderate scale valucs, comcs to 83 per cent.. About 44 per cent each of the officers of thc development departments like Electricity and lrrigation have high values for this characteristic followed by 36 per cent and 35 per cent of officials oFthe respective Departments holding moderate values. Thus more than three'fourths of the offcers in these developmental departments do hnve the feeling of being status-conscious. Bar Diagram No. 8 on page 142 illustrates
if
the point.
The I2-(chi-square) value of variations in the distribution of bigh, moderate and low values in the district of Patiala is I9.95 for 4 degrees of freedom which is quite significant at one percent tevel of probability. The degree of variations in status conrciousness is significantly high in the Departmcnt of Reveuue of the f unjab Governmirnt compared to the Departments of Flectricity and lrrigation' The variations in these two developmental departmcnts are not very large. In other words the ofrcers of the Department of ElccFicity are equally status'conscious as the ' offioers of the lrrigation department, but aro less status conscious
Revenue' of the departments compared to those in the non-developdevelopmcnt ment department of the Government of Punjab. But on the whole this characteristic of bureaucracy has strong association
department
of
dePartments. status'consciousness
amongst the officers can bo traced to the working of the three departments under study. The centralised system of control prevatent in all the. I)epartments, even those of the departoental activities of rural electrification and supply of irrigation watel
r42
gectricity Deportmcnt
Irrigolion Deportmrn r
[ow
High Moderote
Lori,
High
Moderote
Low
Electricity
Dep
ortment
High
Moderote Low
High Moderote
Low
Reve n ue Depor
tment
Percentoge
of the work of revenue collection) gave enough discre' in theso depart' iioou.v po*.* to the various levels of officers 'g"to after the achievement of Independence' no signi'
ru"tt.
i'*"i "n".gt in the rules and regulations' devolution of powers p*.edures of these departments has occurred' The were ""J""it *oftot, erercisotl by the departments in the Headquarters
with the increasing ,"r"*i"ii.u.ictivc in nature. Moreover, th-e ofrcers beoame in developmental projects il;;;tpower and tbus conservative in the exorcise of -por..ful. .""ia"t has, thorefore,
Status consciousness ili. ffi;;;" ""a of the power and authoritv that thev had ;;il;;;;uct ."*1" irtii"v in the disbursement of various funds for develop'
ment at theit discretion'
the ofrcers of the Pradesh' 166 21'r-(chi'square) value of Madhva c;;;;"i these officials of foi variations in status-consciousness amongst Pradesh is only 3'86 which is in' ii" 4"".**."t of Madhya per cent' There is .l*lO.uot even at the proiability level of 5 pattein of status consciousncss of the ii"* ^" itr",r*ship in the nonomt.t. in the three dopartments' The officers of the arc Revenue in Madhya Pradesh dcvelopment Department of develop' ,orn.*hot more status-conscious than those of the whole the officers of the Govern' mentul depurttents. On the *r"i "f Madhya Pradesh are less status-conscious than those of Gove rnment of Punjab'
The position is somewhat diffcrent among
SUMMARY
the From the above analysis it is clear that comparatively depart' ofrcers of the Government of Punjab in all the three lents give very high values to the characteristic of integrity of character. The percentage of officers attaching high values in the varied between 67 per cent in the caso of the officers O.p".t-"ot of Eleciricity to 78 pcr cent in the Department of IttL"ti"o while the officers of the Department of Rcvenue fell in between. Thore is thus no signi0cant di$erence as amongst
these three categories
of officers so far as
perceptions about
integrity of
character is conccrned.
-t44
The offcers of the Government of Madhya pradesh also attached high values t,r integrity of character. The extctrt of high values was, however. somewhat less than those of tbe officers of the Government of punjab. ln tr,taOfrya fradesh the highest percentage of officers in ihe Departm#-or Revenuc, namely 60 per cent, attached very high values to integrity of character followed by 56 per cent officers of the Department
olicers attached high values to it. On inter_departmental ""o, comparison we find some insignificant differenccs among the tbree sets of departmental offcers. The perccntage oi oftcers attaching low importance to this socio personal value differed from department to department. "Ihis percentage was 36, 25 and 2O respectively for officers of tbe Electricity, Revenue and Irrigation departments. On the whole, it can safely be concluded that all the three departmental officers of the Government of Madhya Pradesh were also keen like those of the punjab Governoent to observe integrity of character. The difference in inter-State variations in.the scales of values attached to the integrity of character is somewhat marginal.
The officers of the Government of punjab value the principle of equality of individuals as a very important eleme nt in their performance. The lrrigation, Electricity and Revenue department officers (with 57, 5t and 45 per cent respectively) attached high values to adhering the principle of the equality of indi viduals in the discharge of thsir functions. Altltough the valuo differences did not signi0cantly vary from departmeot to departmen., officers of the Revcnue department attached somewhat low values to this characteristic. High, mocjerate and low values were almost equally shared by ttrem- The offfcers attaching moderate and low values were aboiit 50 per cent of the total number of the officers.
ai p.,
of
In Madhya Pradesh the pattern was somewhat d ifferent. The percentage of ofricers attaching high, moderate and low values differed from ctepartment to department, The hetrogeneity or
found to be comparativoly of differcnt dimensions in the three departments varying from l3 to 3l pcr cont. The comparatively low percentages of officers attaching high importance to equality of individuals indicates their in' capability to absorb the due or undue pressures that they might havo felt from different quarters in the discharge of their
scale values were also
functions. Regarding socio'cultural values, castes/class considrations did not piay any hindrance in the effective discharge of duties in tho deveiopmental as well as non'developmental departments of the
Government of Punjab. The percentage of officers, however, attachiog low valucs to caste/class considerations was as bigh and lcrigation, wbite it was only 60 per cent in case ofnon' prio' developmentai departlrent of Revenue' On account of rities givcn latcty io the developmcnt of the weaker sections of the ,oiiety and small and marginal farmers, the Governmcnt is itself encouraging prefercntial treatment to these classes and the policies Dopartment of R"n.oo. is likewise also shaping the new for development. lt is, therefore, somewhat natural that in the
as 84 and 83
in the developrnental
departments of Electricity
Dcpartment of Revenue, the government will ..bo the first amongst the agencies to initiate somewhat discriminatory sections. This was very much visible in Patiala, but the installation of electric lines and the irrigation networks in Punjab did not discriminate between the rich and the poor'
socio-oultural values in Madhya Pradesh is of all the three somewhat different. The percentage of officers gi:r,ing low values to caste/class conciderations is depurtments
Thc pattern
of
The extent of values, are howcvet' low to those of the officers of the Government of Punjab' of "oipn.tA The low percentages were 5l and 4l for the Departments Revenuo and onty 4l per cent for tho Electricity and Oep rtment of Irrigatioo. Io the Department of lrrigation (41) and modc' t#percentages of officials sharing high values than the perccntagc of low valtes iuir'nutu", (il) were lo*er depariocots. Any way the caste/class considoraliong ii
large ancl
onifot..
"tl"t
146
between the adherence caste/class. considerations in the development and non-development departments of the Govern_ ment of Madhya Pradesh. To the question whether the bettcr-off people in the community were willing to sacrifice fot the poor, the replies differed. Aboui 92 per cent, 78 per cent and 56 per cent respectively of the officers of the Punjab lrrigation, Electricity and Revenue depart_
had less impact in Madhya pradesh as the l2.value was stati. stically insigniflcant. The ofrcers of the Department oi Revenue indicated extreme cases with 28 per cent for high vatues and 44 per cent for low value. There was however, no relationshio
to
ments made the observation that the rich beneficiaries of development work were not in favour of making sacrificos for the poor. Only 39 per cent, l0 per cent and 3 per cent officers respectively of the departments of Revenue, Electricity and Irrigation of the Goveroment of puujab thought that the rich were vzilring to make adjustments for the weaker sections
society.
ofthe
brethren.
The percentages varied in case of the officers of tbe Madhya Pradesb. Only 62 per cent, 50 per cent and 44 per ient officers respectively of the Electricity, Revenue. and Irrigation departments opined that the rich were not willing to saciifice in favour of the poor, while 38 per cent, 23 per cent and 6 per cent officcrs respectively of the. Etectricity, Irrigation und R"u.ou, department officers thought that the spirit or sacrince did exist, The conclusion was not, therefore, very different from that of the officials ofthe Government ofpunjab, except thJ majority of officials tberedid not feel.that a greater proportion of the bettcr off population was wilting to tretp tneir t'.r, i.orp.rou,
So far as the socio-administrative values are concerned, status consciousness, maintenance of distance fro, ,ufoiJio"ie officers aod the cxtent of freedom enjoyed by junior oin".r, Oircur, freoly office and personal mattrrs with senior officers were taken -
io
in paiiala.
Socio:Pe rson
topped the perceptions of status conciousness aud as much as 64 per eent offlcem maintained high values towards status'con$' ciousness. But in ths Departments of Electricity and Irrigation the prccption of status consciousness was low' Only 42 per cent and 4l per cent of the officcrs respoctively showed a high degree of status consciousness' The percentages of ofrcers with moderate and low perceptions ofthe charatcristic wore much lower, Tho chi-square value being high, thore is thue significant association noticed among the officers of the threc dcpartments of the Government of Punjab,relating to the valu
of status oonsciousness.
The reason for high levels of status consciousness amongst the officors was traced to tho working of the departments. A remote and rcstrictive centralised control of the departmental authority and availability of large developmental funds at their disposal gave enough discretionery powrs to tho officcrs. Their status-consciousness was the result of this power and authority that they thus came to wield.
In
noticed in all the three departments but to a lcsser cxtent. Thc high values varied amongst 44 aad 47 por cent of the officers. Moderate values varied in 35 to 4l per cent of officcrs,
If wc club together high and moderato values, the psroontages are 84 and 88 respcctively in the Dopartments of Revenue in both ths State Governments which show that status-consciousness in developmental departments of both the govornments is
lower than what it obtains in the non-developmental departments. On tho whole, status conciousness was independent of thc departments for which the officers worked as revoalod by ths low value of ohi'squarc.
Tho findings in this chaptor clearly dcmonstrate thst despitc of development in both the States, the achievement of development performance is independent of the soci.ological-pereonal and socio-administrative values of the of6cials engaged io their tasks. As-thore is little correlationthe cmphasis
148
of the offioials
of
the deve-
lopmental and non-developmental departmonts except in caste/ class consciousness and socio-administrative values in Punjab, a couclusion can be drawn that the cbanges in existing sociologica! and socio-administrativo values may not be easily affected to bring about tho desired lcvel of performance in the Punjab had been a byproduct of the power and authority that the officers had enjoyed for a long time and because of various historical factors. As the development activities get established and ingrained, the offcials become mor statusconscious than they were in thc beginning.
development
tasks.
of
the
is also taken as an important criterion in carryiog out thc developmeotal tasks which sometimes may not be achieved on the basis of rational decision-making, Thus in actual work and field situations, the of0cials may be very often obliged to dcviate from tho strict norms of rational deoision-making.
behavioural charaoteristics of bureaucracy cngaged in devclop. mcntal and non devclopmental activities in the two districts of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh, The strict Weberian modol of bureaucracy envisages a rational behaviour on the part of the mombers of an organisation. lfowever, in aotual practice, because of the various socio-economic or psychological factors such ratiooality of behaviour is not always possiblo to maintain. More so is thc situatioo io the contaxt of developmcntal activitieg where decision in regard to developmental programmes may not always be based on ratioual considerations but on cxpediency or feasibility. Hence in our study it was thought desirable to examino the extent to which our respondents adhered to the priociples of rationality in their behaviour. In a developmental system,.as. the changes in the economic and sdcial fields have to be brought about quickly, the administrator's performance is most ofteo evaluated on the basis of the targets/rsults acbieved. The satisfaction of the citizens
.
some
150
The purpose of the chapter is, therefore, to analyse some of the behavioural characteristics of the officials cmerging out of the Weberian notion of a rational authority system. The deviations sought to be investigated are in respect of, rationality,, exercisc of aut[ority, the extent of officials' change/result - orientation and their attitude to collective decGiinrqiaking is officjal ' activities. A comparison of the values of the officials in developmental and non-developmental departments is made in these respects in order to enable us to examine if the nature of activities performed by officials makes
any difference in thoir attitudes and value systems. Ratlonality
Thrls.
as decision makers are able to reconcile with the different typer of pressure affecting their rational behaviour. The Weberian model of bureaucracy assumes decision making by
officials on a basis ofstrict rationality but as the writings of most post-Weberian scholars on bureaucracy have demonstrated, this is more of a theoretical assumption than a practical reality, The issue of'rationality' was examined through the answers
received to a set of four questions, posed to the respondent officials. These were (i) whether they would like appointing a known person who is good at work and is readily availablc, even though it may mean deviation from the existing rules of
recruitment; (ii) would they be influenced by tho pressure groups and adjust particular programme of action against thc set rulis and prccedetrts; (iii) would they liketo go out of the normally prescribed proccdures and take initiative iF they were convinctd of the right cause of the case, and (iv) whether they woiild consider any popular public demands even ifthey rnight not stand favourably the test of rationality.
The scores of the respondents on lhese questions wer tabulatcd and the analysis of the high, moderate and low values
l5l
6'l
on
p.
t52.
to
I
Table
nui*, of
officers' of all tbe three departments of both the The highest State Governments are more or less similai' favour of compromising nutUtt of officers who are neither in favour with political leaders and pressure groups and- are not.in demands of the of accetling to the pr$suros and non'rational
From
the
it will
political I'eaders and idterest groups to satisfy them is noticed in the Irrigation departments of both the State Governnrentsjip., cent rospectively in Punjab and Madhya Pradesh' -ie l"J il"il;g.t; alignmeoL oi irrigation channels or- even opening groups oorir, at a piint exclusively at the request of certain of elevation' "" p.opt. ani not on scientific considerations of There is no rfop., *., &re very often not feasible at all' moderate and variation in fhe percentages of officers allocating -""i*t iu case of those . belonging to irinit ' r"r' rationality punjab, while such iriin"tioo department of the Governmont of ;;;;ii;"t itr case of Madbva Pradesb are considerable'
l
in favour of making The next dighest petcentages of opinion are notioed in the other development t.f"""ti"" per cent "qideviaiions Orort*."" of both the gove(nmentst Alout 46Electricity and Madhya fr.a!e1f t-"J*"dt"" pf both the Punjab
pressure
il"liJ. o" nbt favour makiog compromises wirh the rational ir*pVp"fi,rc"f leaders and deviate from usual bv the The remaining percentages ird :#lili"b;t' ^shared this.class iigi ""0 low values attached by less in the of officers of both samq proportions'
,tl
Revenue of both In the non-developmental department of percentages of officials th;-i;; Govdrnments, the largest i-*iiJ utt lower than their counterparts in: the two deve' per cent respec' iopt.o,ut departments) i e' 4l and 36 These officers rationality' tioety nan" low perceptions about pressures io favoui of making doviations as a rEsult of percontages of officerr "r" "ot soufcos. Thi remaining ir",
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The reason for high percontage of offlcerslof both the State Governments having such values for rationality' partioularly
in the devolopment
assessed the
feasibility and potential of rural olocrification in particular diroction or of flow of irrigation water according 'to ievels and fertility of soil, there was hardly'any further scope of ohoosing an alternative alignment as a result of pressures or courpromises. The scopo of change was, in fact, vely limited in the development departments whereas the officials of the revenue department had some discretion to depart from the established norms of revenue collection in cases of low agricul'' tural productions because of natural calamities or other
ciroumstancog'
departments is obvious.
After
having
The perceptions of offrocrs of tho various State Govornments and d-partments on rationality are illustrated by the- Bar Diagram No. 9 on P. 154.
The ?(2'(chisquare) values for variations in the pattern of perceptions of officers of the three departments of the Punjab and Madhya Pradesh Governments in iespect of rationality per come fo 5.3 and 5.8 respectively, which are insigriifi'ant at 5 that there is no significant ' cent level of prabability' This means comelation in the perceptions of of0cers of the developmental and non'devclopmental departments of the Punjab and Madhya piuaesft Governments so far as the observance of rationality in values of the deoision'making process is concerned' The scale departments' The be' rationatity aro thuJ independent of the havioural pattorn of all officers in the two State Governments they are are more or less similar irrespective of the fact whether activities' engagsd in devolopmcntal or non-developmental
Authorlty Apart froo the structural factors the performance of -of0cos is of relationisjfluenced by tbc authority they enjoy and the kind
154
BAR DIAGRAM
RATIO NALITY
NO. 9 OISTRICT
PATIALA
High
Modero te
Low
|ligh
M o
derot?
Irrigotion
0e
por tment
Low
High Moderole
Low
Revenue 0eportment
MORENA DISTRICT
High
Modero te
Low
High
M
oderote
Low
High
',
ti
trrigotion Deportfient
Modero
Low
155
junior ship that consequently follows between the senior and the noc8sary to offcers in the samo deparfment. It is, therefore, evaluate the rolationship between the diffsrent strata of officers as an index of the total efficioncy of thc organisation as also thc prevailing authority system. In order to get their perceptions in this respect a number of questions were asked to the respon' dent offictis of tho concerned depattments. Whether there did exist a feeling of superiority/inferiority complex in the government hierarohy; what was the attitude of senior officcrs towards
their subordinates; whether the senior officers liked to meet their subordinates; and whether enough authority was delgated negativcly by the senior officcrs to their subordinates (which is a formed the nucleus of sucb evaluation' The iramed question) rtctiuta were analysed and are presented in Table 6'2 on
,.ptiet p. 156.,
complex The pattern of authority and superiority/inferiority non-dcvelopment departments of obtuining in development and value percep' the GovJrnment of Punjab is uniform with high
the develop' iioos utongrt 63 and 62 prcentages of officials in and 57 per cent ment departments of lrrigation and Electricity perceptions vary in the Revenue department, The moderatc Taking high and amongst 30 to 39 per cent officials only' moder-ate vatue perceptions together we 6nd the -percntage 7 and 4 per cent varying betweeo bl und 96 per cont leaving of bureauc' onty for low value perceptions. Thus the degree of an authoratisetion so far as is evid6nt through the existence the
IntbocaseofMadhyaPradosh,thehighvalueporceptionsin Al per cent tn, O."efopttnt depariments vary betwcen l] anA cnt of half per .f*iog to less than 50
of offioials_the average officers in all the three of the respondents, The other h-alf of the i.p"il.itt tuare their perceptions more towards modorate authority ,system' Thc values than towards' low uutu"* oo the greatly vary from department to i"i,ti" "f perceptions does not t-" periiitv / inferioritv complcx in in. r..ri"e oi Patiala' It in Morena is tiss tuan what optains in
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thus sems that thc officers in thc Govornment of Punjab display a greatef buroaucratic authority than their gounterpafts in Madhya Pradesh, Bar diagram No. l0 on p. 158 illustrates the position. However
an authority system is not the close pteserve of a particular department in a particular placc, The general characteristic and pattorn are similar both for the development and non-development departments in both the govornments. The little variations that are observed may reflect the differing attitudes of the officials to the nature of work performed. The development departments in Madhya Pradesh being new and in a state of
growth,'show less tendency towards bureaucratisation. But as the oxample of Punjab illustrates, this trend is likely to pick up once the things get settled on the gr6rind. 169 1l(chFsquare) values of the characteristics of perceptions of the officials in Punjab aod Madhya Pradesh are found to bc ouly 2.26 and 3.?7 respectively which are insignificant at 5 per cent levcl of probability. There is, therefore, not much of diffcrenoe in the existence of the authority system either in tbo dovelopmental or non-developmental departments of Punjab or Madhya Pradesh. Only the percentag of officials giving low values to this characteristic in Madhya Pradesh is slightly higher than their counterparts in the Puojab in all the threc depart'
ments.
In order to evaluate as to what the officers thought about tho attitudes .of the public and their clientelo towards them aod their work, two questions, wbether the citizens who came to seo the officers for tbeir work were respectful in thoir behaviour while making demands and whether the visitors were uonocessarily apprehensive of the officers' attitude and dealings were sim' ultaneously put to tho respondents. Value scales were attached to the possible degree of replies, whethor the visitors were highly
158
PATIALA DISTRICT
High
M
dero te
Low
Electr
igity Dtpqrlment
High
Modro te
LOW
Low igh
Mo dero te Low
Electrici ty Deportinent
High
M0dero te Low
High
Moderote
Low
Oftcials' Petception
of
Behalioural Values
159
respectful and whether they officials' or somewhat or not apprehensive of the were tabulated and oiiained "* The porceptions of the resprndents given in Table 6'3 on p' 160' t. ate
respectful
ot not
**f
The pattern of response is depattments in the two States' ,rtJ lini..t Ur"oging to different -ma;ority of visitors showed gr,eater respect to il r*;',h;i a were also apprehensive to meet the officers and at the same time Stato governof the various departments of the two
different amongst
;;; ;il;;t;
ttir'tt*ti and in order to .il ii;;**.t;:ecking favourrirom the officiats argue or annov done thev ;;;;; -; 'p.i*n' should notunnecessarily respectful to *t'o could afford to be less .ii..ttl' inJ the upper of the officers g:neralll belonged,to l, the visitors *as uiso this category
"*'i."""fr"iJ ^of strata of the clientele' ft informal level as ili;; contact with ihe officials at ancategorv is rather il; of tle ctientete in this
#;.-'il"
;;;portion small'Thefindings,r'o**"',doinawuyindicate.thepersis. uulot' of th: colonial times when tence of the old lraditionui not as dispensers of favours and the officers were mostly tookJ
the servants of the Public'
of visitors was more or less similar The pattern of the attitude irrespec' the Governm:::jj-1""'ib towards all the officers in 40 to -ofthe department' .About tive of the neture of the work of Punjab the Governnont' of
l;";;;;;-;iit"
uri""
to 33 Per to have hardly developed any to 29 per c:nt officials ttpoii"J them' informal relationshiP with
Pradesh Government'
i;',
rnt pt*entage of officers.who said that *rpectful varied between 33 the visitors were olly tn:."ri.iy
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to 39 per cent. Only 8 per cent of the officers by the Eleotricity Department in the district of Morena felt that the visitors held low respect for them.
attitude and behaviour of visitors coming to meet the ofticers of the three departments of the two Stato Governments and the pattern was more or less similar, but it appears that the visitors' uttitod" towards the officials was governed by their own socio' cconomic brickground as also by the amount of authority weilded bY the officials.
Officials' Anitude s towards
C lient ele
in
the
present study, whether involved in developmental or non'developmental tasks had frequent contacts with the citizens, The citizens visited officials with innumerable complaints, problems and requests. In order to examine the clientele' orientation ofthe officials, a set of few questions was
put to the respondent officials of thc three dcpartmcnts of thc iwo 'State Governments about thc fre quency of their meetings with the members ol the public. An inquiry -was also made whether the meetings were superfluous so far as the performance of the officials was concerned, and whether the officials thought that they had been hetpful to the visitors' The replies
wcre tabluated and are presented in Table 6.4 on
p'
162'
From the Tablo it will be clear that in the State of Punjab a targer percentage of officials felt that the citizens did come to
the officials with regard to their problems' Tho combined peroeotage for the offroials who felt that such meetings were very Lften and occasional came to 92 with respect to electricity deplrtments against 95 of the irrigation department and 82 of
revenuo department. The corresponding perccntages Pradesh werc 77,71 and 79,
in
Madhya
As regards the question whether thc meetings were superflous the corresponding figures of the officials' perception were 95, 87 and ?8 in the State of Funjab and 71, ?7 and 80 in Madhya'
162
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164
. ,,. .
Pradesh, These figurbs indicate that the majority of of6cials felt that the meetings with the clido,tele were largely unproductive. HoweVer, when tbe officials were confronted with the questions whether they thought that they had been helpful to rhe visitors, a majority of them _had indicated that they had been cither very often ol occasionally helpful to the visitors. This is indicated by the corresponding official percentages of 96, 95 and 82 respectively in the three departments of punjab and g5, 73 lnd 87 in Madhya Pradesh - who ttiought that way. In the case of Punjab the Xz.test gave significant results, which is indicative of the faot that the attitude of helpfulness of tho officials was correlaled and thc officials, whether they belonged to the developmental or non-developmental department, held tho same ataitude towards their visitols. This was not the case in Madhya Pradesh where the l2.value was insignificant.
of the citizens with the officers of the State Electricity Board tnostly related to the issue of Dower
The meetings
for lighting, energising agricul:ural pumps and for other industrial uses, reported over-charging in the bills, unauthorised conneptions, misuse of tbe power points, disconnections
connections and restoration of electric. connections which were discounted in accordaace with rules. In case of irrigdtion' water,
water. The ofrcers,, on their part were of the opinion that the fields were irrigated and the beneficiaries denied having received any irrigation water supplies. : Irrigation dues were lcvied on all the beneficiaries simultaneously when water was released for the fields" These disputes wEre very often reported to us during the field enquiry. In caie of the departmeot of Revenue, although primarily assumed as a noudevelopmental department, their officers had to certify the ownersbip'oF land for evcry kind of
fertiliiers, pesticides,.. agricultural loans, benefi ts to small and marginal farmers,:1oins, from land mortgagc banks for agricultural pumps,., machineries, etc. Very often the citizens were found to be moving after the revenue ofrcials for all types of assistanca in their developmental programmes. The cliontele of course. oxpccted the officials of the rovenuc
assistance, like
Oficials'
of Behavioural
Values
r16J
be helpful to them in all the cases. But the officials bound as they were by thsit rulos and reguiations could.not 4lways be fully helptul to the citizens. Howdver, by and large-iin cases where there was some scope of flexibility, thc officers in thc Dopartment of Revenue did adopt a postur of. help.towards their clientele.
dcpartment to
If
I aving more tims for the officers to attend to their work in all the three dbpartments of the two State Governments. However, it is doubtfol whether such an action on the paft of the' officials may imbibe a snse.of confidence. in the cliontelc that their problems were being looked into and would keep.them satisfied. Sometsort of public relations work then
booomes neoessary at this: level.'
between,thc m and th clientele were superfluous is acceprei, it sems,that a.majority of .the meetings ea4 be done away with
The potceptions about the: frequencies of meetings between thc officials and pitizerts, tfreir.. su.perfluousness or necessity and helpfulness werr used as indices forexarnining the extent to which peoples' grievances wsfe removed. The relationship between the administration and citizens in development and non-developrr,e nt administration of thc two States over .a numbar of issues discussed .in such meetings revealed the weakness of the inherited systern of administration. In 40 to 50 por cent cases of disputes in,Punjab and 50 to 60 per cent cascsin Madhya Pradesh t-te .grievances of citizens could be removed by such rirectings. In the remaining cases disputes or problems could not be solved to the satisfaction of the eitizens.
This was because of the number of references or cross references that had to be made by the ofrcials and the painfully slow process of the:-systgm of accounting and auditing. Proliferation
of a large number..of governmental agencies also in some ways cogtributed, to coofusion among the clientele. Lack of cootdiartidn bctwres these agencies was often responsible for delays and frurtratibn of citizens.
166
Officiatd
In a
developing society, it is essential that the o$ciali in the taslc of rapid socio'economic transformation shoukl develop the necessary orientation for change. In tbc context of tho present study it was, therefore' coosidered necessary to put a few questions to the respondents to analyse their outlook towards chauge. In addition to the officials of thc departments engagod in the developmental tasks, evbn the officiats of the so'called non'developrnental deoartments aro also required to work for new targets of ,"u"oo" collection for frnancing the functions of thc State Cou.romrnt. As such thosc ofrcials also nee d to have new outtoot towards their dutics and responsibility' Thereforc both the categorles a set of qustions was posed to officials of questions in oldepartments in the two aelected States' Six himself with ihis se.tion : (i) whether the official is coucerned potentially good ionoro.ing the attitudes of unwilling but devtlopment ,i r"pr"o*r. for achicving high targets for achieving plan; -of initiative and pursuasion iiii *t.trr., his his work ; (iii) whether inru.t* it any indcx of thc officiency of ,i""u.t i.u.t"nt of targets/resultc was considered, important mean deviation from in nir J.ou.rtent ovcn though it might them ; (iv) would he be rated high .ri*i"g rules of achieving -"tftitoea tbe dcsircd targcts/results for which he was if i. set'up a governmebt ,LrpooriUte; (v) whsther in tho existing in helping oitizens to achieve the ,.rir"i,."( much interest (vi) whother he considored his ri..rn.a resultsftatgets ; and whom ho dealt'. ware put rJsoonsititity to guide the people with The respcnses wsrc tabulated and under study' i""it. "mtitit presented in Tablc 6'5, on P' 167'
engaged
it is noticed that thc prcentagcs of high ;;; ;i";; to ch-angc/target orientation bv the oftcers of three 48' Onlv iri"uit."" in the two States vary between 41 andof Madhya development departmcnts i" Ii. *t" of the two just lcss than l0 pcr 'Fnt;. i;r"A..n the valr.res are 48 per cent i..' vary bctitecn 4t aad 45' This small ;ilt*it. the values about targets variation may be due to an absenoe of clarity
Curiously enough
Values
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168
developme nt/revdnue collection .and difrculties faced in achieving them, The perfornianc qf an individual official depends upon the clarity of understanding of the organisational goals, not only collectively but also for individual work areas so that enofgies are fully diregted towards realjsation or achieve_ ment of the desired goals. Withdut clarity of goals the organisations may be in confusion and the iodividual role incumbent may be in darkness. It may he that the targets for an electr! fication/irigation zone may bave clarity at a highor level, but it might not have been broken up for smalter zoies over whioh the lower level officialb have their jurisdictions. Moreovcr agricultural production prograpnres are the direct responsibitity of the agricultural and extenslon staff in rural areas. power and irrrgation are th only supporting inputs foi achieving tho defined targets of agricultural production. Similarly Revenue ofrcials are also given certain. targets, but litigation, court intrference and other difrculties often impede the achievement of
of
such targets.
Another feature of the data in the Table is the uniformity in the distribution o' moderate and low values of perccptions towards the change/result orientation. Tbe middle ievel scores range between 3l and 37 per cent while the tow scores vary between 19 to 24 per cent among the three sets of ocfrials ia the two States, During our discussions, quite a number of ofrcers connected with agrioultural development stated that they did not feel it their duty to inffuence the attitudes of iire people and that they were not concerned to pursue their clicnteL to cffect the desired changes in the agricultural pattern, Such an attitudo was also reflective of the fact that the promotion in the service was determined mostly by seniority and not by the results/targets achieved by the.officers. In fact helping a citizen in development activities was nbt an item on whigh aoy scores was to os rcorded in the character role or service record of the officials. ,The development programmes werc mostly in tho nature of dictates from above, and the officials had only to comply with the instructions given to them. It was, ther(fore, natural to expct a middle level score from the respondent officials of our studv. Change and rosult oricntation of the o$cials which ir an impor.
1'&i
tant charateristic af developmental bureaucracy for bringing about successes in development performanco, does not sem to to be deeply ingrained among the officers of the three departments of the two StatCi as the highest a:nd moderate values noticod are only to thd extent of the average of 43, per cent and 34 per cent respectivgly. Thus the oommitmeot to the developmental work of rhe ofrcers of the development departments thpt. we hpv.e stu{ied, was found to be only partial. Bar Diagram No. tl oh p. 170 illustrates the position,
For the range of variations of higb, moderate and low value peroeptions of the officers of the three departments of tbe two State'r', Golertirnents, .1'-(ehi-square) vatues for-. Patiala and Morena werc insignificant at 0.67 and 1.49 respectl_vely. Therc was not, therefore, much difference amongst the scale values of
preceptions amongst
the officials of both developmental and, non-developmental departments towards change orientation.. which was independent of the naturo of the departmental work,
Participative Decision M aktng
to be nearet to the citizens and have, . therefore,. a continuing responsibility to acquaint the higherro$cials about the problemi at thqir levelg, sinqe they have to initirte policy actions abou{ the over-all assessment of the needs of the people. In the development context, therefore, frequent consultations aud
Most of the development_ plans in a society have to be sitizFnorienfcdj as it is the citizen who ultimately derives the benefit of development, The ofrcials working in thE fields are supposed
participative decisions between higherand- lower levels of ofrcials are ioevitable, The administratign dees.well in taking participatiyc deuisi6ns where the lower level offcials have the opportunity of bringing to the notice of higher officials thb desires of a common man. The pay ofl from participative , decisions may, at times, bring about improved performance of ' activities neant to ensure lhe maximum good f,or the maxirnum 'number of persons.
Howovor, many a timo
thr
t70
&neas$atic
Values in Development
@
Higf.
Modero
te
fo*
High
Modero te
Elcclricity Oeporlrncnl
Irrigoiion Dcportmrnt
Low
High
Modero t
LOW
High MOderote
Lo rv
Elec?fici
ty
Deportmsrf
Hrbh
Modero
L0w
Hrph
Moderota
Low
Ofraiatr' Pe?csplioil
of
Behavioura!
Values
l?I
they think to take policy decisions on their own initiative as and can not be taken iiJt".'n o.iitions are highly techuical to them by oo tt. busi* of what the people desire as conveyed supposing that the highi"*.t-tt-t"" of officials. Forinstance, pulses are to yi.iOiog programmeo of paddy, wheat, oilseed.s or officials of the Power Patiala oi Morena, the l. "J"i,LJt"t lrrigation Department may have the feeling that or the Boards programmes to see it is for them to decide and to challa out are available for implewhether more power oi water inputs There. is no forrnal montitrg the schemes at appropriate times' freld officcrs or others involved in the r""i"-." to consult is tittle tendency towards decision making process. Thus there amongst the officials of thc various purti"ip"tio. Oecision making
dpPartments
The incidencc and frequency of partioipative decision-making To the question' abongst tho officials were thus investigated' taking any participative lb* o-ft.o do the officers Deet for are decision, the replies that were reoeived from the respondents srrrmmarised in Table 6 6 on P' 172'
From the Table it oan seen that only about 20 per cent of the offioials in the two developmant departrnents of the Government
of Punjab felt that meetings for participative de-cision'making offioials of tho took piaco occasionally while 16 per ceat of the perception' The percentage Revenue department had similar of offioors who observed that meetings for partioipative decisionmaking were rarely held 'varied from 74 in the Irrigation departlent and 69 in the Electricity department to 55 in the
Revenue department'
In the case of Madhya Pradesh the percentage of ofrcers' occa' sional meetings for participative decision'making who thought that thcso were important was somewhat larger than in Punjab' This peroentagc ranged between 38 to 4l while about half of tho ofrceis belongiog to both the development and non'dovelopmcnt departments said that meetings for participative dccision' making wcre rarc.
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This uttimately'means, that littl6 .importbnc rh given to tlG holdingof meetings for participltive decision'making in Punjab wbileitisprevalenttoasmallextentinMadhyaPradesh.
Ir we 6nd tbat it is insignificant for both Pradesh and Punjab. rThe process of participative Marthya declsion-making is thus independent of developmental and non' develop.nentril activitios that the officials are engaged in.
On calculation of
A factor which is conducive to good relations betwecn the senior and tbe junior officers as well as of better role perfor: mance of the subordinate is the extent to which members of the. organisation participate in the decision making process. The tendency towards divorcing field experience from the deci' slon-mdking authority lends unreality to decisions. Such a situatio.n can be avoided by encouraging participative decisions in consultation with the .persons who possess expericnce and knowledge of the ficld situations simultaneously. But this bas not been the caso in the Govcrnments of Putrjab and Madhyb Pradesh, especially in the Electricity and lrrigation departments of the Government of Punjab.
l"l4
to be ingrained in the dcvelopmental activities of tho two States. For quickeniog the pace of development it is ncccssary that plrticipativo decision-making should be encouragod by the offfcials io both the States.
SUMMARY
The findings of this chapter clearly in.licate
bureaucratic model
made
by
decieion-making process. Thus behavioural cbaracteristios revolve around <iecisional and operational situations. Change orieotation' and result-orientation in the development process have prosumably necesssitated wide dopartures from structural characteristics. The question as to what extent the officials are able to adhere to the principle of ratiooality without su@umbing to situational pressures has been examined. Behavioural values of officers of all the three departments of both the State Governments have been found to be similar, The highest prcentage of of6csrs who aro trot in favour of compromising with political leaders and pressure groups and mlking deviations from existing ruies and procedures is found in the lrrilation departments which is 56 aod 5l respectively in punjab and Madhya Pradesh Governments, There is not much difference in the prcentages of moderate and high values towards rationality,
with tho tlemands various pressure groups and other institurions on the
is at times in conflict
that the
classical
About 46 per cent respondent offcsrs of the punjab and Electricity Boards arc not tn favour Y.lalf ;-.:tsh tnro rne demandc of pressure groups/political leaders and deviating from the usual rational pro.rrs. Thc remaining per_ shared by.high and low values attaehed by these T""",:l.-t. "::. orncers to this value, About 56 and 5l per cent rcspondents of the Irrigatiou Departments of punjab and M, p. Soara. not.in f.vour of making deviations from the ratioiat-tera*our "re under pressure
;i;t;;;
Is. coopromise on the par! of oftciars cssetrtiar for deverop. -;;biguous. Bcnt ? The answer to thc questioo scems d bc Dorclapmont ic orcentiaily cA""g*rirot6d.-
i;
;'dynamic
lfictals'
r?5
has to be situational situation of change ths decision-making of changing situations' Tho dcvelop ;;;;;;;"*it. tJ the needs service' **i"f Ltf. has to be accomplished with a senee.ofarisc thc may occasionally Thus in the percent eontext thore for n..a of flexiUility in the application of rules and- Procedures and adequate r"otA ilrl, of agriculturai proiluction through tlmely inputs of power and water rogourcs'
the of In the non-developmeotal Revenue departmext -both Pradesh' 56 and Madhya Stntr- Co"rrotents of Puojab and attach low values to ratiooal:' 5l por cent of officers respeclively
;;.*il;;
no significant association among non-development dopartoin.urc or the development as well as towards ;.",.;iil;oStaio Govetnme ts in thelr valucs all ssts of officers seem to bobavo independently
*nort tuttt is
pattcrn of the exercise of authority' again' tho of both of all offrcers in the three departments Compared to "f'l.;;;i;;; ti, li"r" g*..nments is uniform and similar' of officials and 62 por ;i;; ;"i"-. perccptions of 63 and Electricitycrrc departments of respEctively of the lrrrgation percentage in thc iorta"ri"dc";.rn..ot, int corresponding perceptions were moderatc The Revenue Department was 57'
.-"".r.1 ;;iflilt
thc percntage Uy 3O to 39 per cent officers while authority raoged *irtt to'" value perceptioos about from4toTonlY'
stalus hi;; ;;i;" perceptioos to authority and officcr-owith modcrate' '"g"i"tt the pcrcentag; of ;I""J';, wi'th percentage of -9nce11 only' values ranging from 26 to iq' fno 27 btt*o"l l9-* low porceptions to autioiiiv 'ooqtd department to depart' Lt The percepticns did not nu'y *o"n
ot-p"'"tptions of authoritv il;;;;i;;itt'n and ^ non'developmcnt similar for officers ot'atuifopttot "a'"p"ii*.i
howeveeo
*u'
is'
pr both th-state
-Governments'
{76
ltclues in Developrterrt
. The reason for this type of distribution of value scales to authority pari be traced to,the fact that massive .investments in
creatd oumerous new units at the fie{d tevel., agoncios"dealing with irrigation una
complexity ;and have carved Jot inriepcndent :11q of .and their operation. In the abscnce coordinatiou with other agencies, "f *"0., hofizontal the farmers huu, ,o ,uo about for the fulfilment of theirneedsiril'ooJo.pu.rran, :: an:the.r" Each department is an empire by itself and concentration of such authority within tt. obviously reflect the value -percept.", nigfr.,liu.f officials curing the field survey.
areas
r:rL
Decentralisatio.
fr
tbem white 30-33 per cenr visitors ,";;;il;;;ii and 22.28 per cenr visirors had d.;;;-;;;l contacts with the officials.
their perceptions of ths attitudes and behaviour of the beneficiaries who come and meet them- were also studied. ihe pattern seemed to be alike. About 40-44 per cent uirimru to U. offcials of Punjab Government were iiighly respectful towarrls.
of
officers,
oiil.
respectful
infor.oar
Madhya pradesh 50 and 5i per cent visitors to the officers in the Revenue and Etectriciry ;.0;;.;;;";r Morcna had highly respectable auitude ;"*"idr'il;;" *tit" onty 39 per cent of the visirors ro, the Irrigation Oepariment fraa high respect for its officers, moderate respect for officars Ih" il;;"";"J" o'r""rilrro,, for tnu-1.U.Jr"ir,of ofn".o "irn varied between 33 to 39 ot "ff . ui,ito,s wrtn #"' lt":';ff ::rr:f ff 'of Etectrical Engineois of the district .f M.;;.-
In
ll; ;**;;
#:l;,
:-:Jj
visitors to th three departments of two State Gcvernments uncler study were fouad to be 'iJrcentages moderately respectful ,o offi.ers." il. -Cou.rni."ii, . :h.. of citizens meeting the officials io tt. -';;;;,. ,oo;ub varying between 38 to 40,, were hidt only
the
_.
About one.tbird
of the
Values
r77
26.ts 29 per cent of the vidtors to the. ofrcials in Punjab showed lcss respect towards them against 15 to 20 per c(nt of Madfrya Pradesh. It sems that the porcntagos of visitors attaching hi!h, modium ot less degrees of respect for the o$cials was in coirespbndenco
.with the p;rcentages of the visitors who *ere and hiehly, moderatply and less apprehcnsive of the 4ttitude of the two State governments towaids beiaviour of tne officers thom. On tho whole there was no significant inter'departmgntal aimur"o*, in thc attitude and behaviour of the visitors coming io meet the officers of the two State Governments in tho threa
departments under studY.
In all. the three departments, the citizeo'clientele had often to Put$ab visit the officials for their problems' On an average io ofrcials of the 64-69 per cent of visitors came to meet tbe percentags development department while the corresponding ;;;i.dl;**" 46 and 39 in case of Madhva Pradesh' About developmeot depa ments Si-OZ p"t centof the officials of the of Punjab thought that thy^were occasion' of "i,t*'C"o.toment aifv'iJprui to their clientele nhile in the Governmeftl i,flaftv" Pradesh 45-50 per cent ofrcers tho-lclt- that'fhey *".. 'o""rtionally helpful to them' About 27'36 per cent and 3l'33 per cent officers of the Govetnment of Punjab Madhya Pradesh felt that visitors officets of the Government of ,". in.m very often while only a small percentage of ""r.'i, thought that the clientele seldom visited them' About ;ffi;i"it to the the officials thousht thev were helprul ;;:;;il;;, belonging to tbe "f them very often' Dersons who visited -Officers of tbe Government of Punjab' in their^ attitude of helphowever, showed greater diversity of helpfulness with officers' fulness. There wis sttong association departmetrts aI LJn the development and non-developmentso in Madhva it was not whilo ;i;; c;"tent of Punjabtest of significance' revealed by the Xe as
;.fiil;'a'ip*,t*"
il"J"tn
It
per cent and 46'6.2 pcr cent of the visitott very often and.occasiontllv that could bc done "d;;;;;;t-ttr! ifr...;ri"gt were superfluous' li tbese meetings
was also felt by 26'39
l?8
work. Regarding the offcials' orientation towards change/or achieving targets, the highest percentage of officers belonged to the two development departments of Madhya pradesh who gave high scores to this characteristic (48 per cent). Ia case of Punjab, the pcrcen tage ofthe officers working in thc develop. ment dcpartments giving high values to this charactcristic varied between 4l and 45, This small variation, was, .at times, found to be due to the absence of clarity amongst them about the targets of development/revenue collcctiou and practical difrcul-
production, such an orientation, does not seem to have percolated down to the lower level officers. Similarly many difficulties like litigation and court interference, ctc. have impeded the achievdment of new targets laid for the Departmenr of Revenue.
achieviog these targets. While tbe targets for the electrification and irrigation programme may have been drawn up at a higher level in consultation with the Agriculture Departmcnt, which is responsiblc for inoeasing agricultural
ties
id
A sort. of uniformity in the distribution of moderate and low values of perceptions about change/result oriqntation hAs been noticed in the case of ofrcers under study. The middle level scores range between 3l and 3? per cent, while the low scores vary between 19 and 24 per cent among all the officials of the three types of Departments in the two States. euite a number of officers were of the opinion that they had nothing to do with changing the attitudes of the people,and pursuading lhem to change the pattern of agricultural practices wasnot their responsibility. They placed it squarely on the omcials responsi_ ble for integrated agricultural proiluction programmes. A possible reason why the officials did not develop a right attitude towards change oricntation was due to the lack of motivation as their promotion in service was largely .governed by the principle of seniority. Some officers were even of the opinion that their role was only to carry out orders lrom the above and it was not for them to pursuade tho peoplo in adopting
Values
179
new methods of agricultral prod.uction. Tbere was, however,not much difference amongst the officers belonging to dcvelopment or non-development departments as is characterised by the low and insignificant values of X,s. This is true both for Punjab and
Madhya Pradesh. In fact the developmental activities in rural electrification and irrigatiol works seemed to bavc been carried on without the involvement of the people. Tho traditional administrative cfforts to provide necssary support to developmett of agriculture codtioue to function.
Whether the officials believed in participative decisionmaking was the other aspect of bureaucratic behaviour that was examined. It was found that the iocidence of the meotings of thc ofrcials taking place very often for participative dccisions werc thc lowest and varied botween 5 and 12 percent only. Occasional mectings were reported only by 20 per cent of thc ofrcers of thc development departmcnts of the Punjab Govcrnment and 39-41 pr cent of the officials of dcri'elopmcnt
departments of the Madhya Pradesh Govcrnment, and 36 per ccnt of ths non-development department of Punjab. In good majority of cases, meetings wcre seldom held in the dcpartmants
making process
Rural and agricultural development is essentially an iutegratod process of change. It is a cooperative ventute between the people desiring change and the members of the official machi.
judge of
who bear the responsibility to briog about change. A healthy relationship between the people and the ofrcials is thus necessary for ojrtimum returns in the developmental activities. As it is ultimately the peopte who are in th.e true sense the
nery
the
performance
administration, it was considered neccssary to ask the benefciaries about their perceptions of the officials' actipns, thsir role performance and capabilities. For this purpose, in each of the tbree blocks, three villages were selected, and interviews an{ ,discussions on these issuos were held with the people including beneficiaries and r on-beneficiaries (but knowledgeable persong Iike teachers, traders, gram panchayat officers, office.bearers of the co-operative societies etc.). Structured questionnaires and unstructured questions were used in the field survey for noting their reactions about the process of development thtough the
governmental set up.
The Gbnerat Problems of the Villagers
of
the offcials in
development
It will, however, be appropriate to first look at some gcneral ptoblems of the villagers in the areas of our study in the
182
two states, Thc main problem in the irrigated villages where programmes of high-yielding wheat and rice, oilseeds and pulses and sugarcane have bcen taken up rvas thc seepage of irrigatioc water and waterlogging, which tended to damage the crop on both sides of the canals. Thus considerable areas were lost for
to
In Patiaia a new boom in agricultural producrion was in evidence. Programmes of .high yielding varieties of wheat, paddy, cotton (long and medium staple) groundnut, sugarcane (moetly for loc4l consumption of gur), maize, bajra, gram and oilseeds were intensively operated which brought all round prosperity to the farmers. The scramble for land ovcn at tho exhorbitant prices intensified quarrels in the families and created. disparities in the incomes of land-owners and landless cultivators. The canals in this area supplied water for 8 days at a stretch and irrigation was allowed upto 110 days in a year. A farmer had to take his weekly turn in 168 hours of watering at a stretch, The easy availability of agricultural loans, mechanisation of oultivation and harvesting, strong marketing and warehousing arrangements, etc. have all oontributed to the, spectacular growth of agricultural production. Although about 80 per cent of the water pumps were reported to be diosel operated, which in a way increased thc input cost of agricul-
Performance
183
mado substantial
having 65,000 ntembers in 140 cooporative socioties and 8 marketing societies had its problem of recoveries which was as high as 52 per oent. In spite of the lead bank (Central Bank of India) advanccs and public financing societies having programmes of Rs. 44.5 crores, private money lenders werc having good lending business, financing mostly oilseeds and pulses of the srnall producers, while the Food Corporation of India was found to be mostly dealing with the large and medium farm'
producers.
in Morena, on the other hand, the ptogrammes for paddy development had not taken roots and people were thinking of alternative Kharif crops like jowar, maize and bajra. Groundnut cultivation was not popular and sugarcane production was only picking up in Jaura Block. The only sugar mill in the coopcrative sector at Jaura had its own problems relatiDg to production, marketing and prices. In the Rabi sowing season Mexican wheat was irrigated thrice, mustard and gram crops wcrc irrigated twice and once respectively. Arhar was widely grown in unirrigated areas, and available pesticides were trct applied to mustard crop unless it was badly damaged. The warehousing and marketing organisations were weak to meet the needs of tho farmers. The Central Cooperativc Bank
The innovative outlook reflecting the farmer's readiness to treat agriculture as a commercial enterprise and their preparedness to evaluate relative costs and benefrts of alternative
outputs constituted the in Madhya Pradesb. The willingness of farmers to conduct practical experiments and take risks for arriving at a better combination, of inputs was noticed more in Punjab than in Madhya Pradesh. The scarcity of capital, information gap in agricultural production and host of other factors did not altow the farmers in Madhya Pradesh to be as progressive as the farmers in Punjab. Only a minori8 of farmers in Madhya Pradesh were progressive enough to accept changes in agricultural production technology' Thus the
most important variables in Punjab but not
of different
184
development offioials in
requisito
various agricultural inputs in addition to the performance of their normdl revenue duties. Some of the beneficiaries of the canal water irrigation system in the selected nine villages each in Punjab and Madhya Pradesh were canvassed three q-uestions in respect ofthe water input, They were: (i) whether the people were able to get timely supply of water from the canals; (ii) whether the canals had adequate supply of water when irrigation was needed; and (iii) how well were the canals main. tained. It may, however, be noted that the villages with poor performance did not have any canal system and the villages with medium performanco had usually the benefit of irrigation canals only in certain peripheral corners of the viilages which meant only partial benefit to them from irrigation. The villages at the tail end of the canals did not havc adequate supply of irrigatlon water as the supply depended on enough availability of water. Villages with good performance that were selected had usually the benefit of canal water irrigation. The replies about the availability of water for irrigation purposes ,.r. tubulut.d and are shown in Table Z.l on p. 185.
Tho replies are highly corrlated. About 45 per cent of tho _ villagers in Patiala seemed to have the f;ling thal they teceived timely supply of water and the samo percentage of peoplo said that the canal system bad adequate water when irigation was oeded, while a little bigher percentage of people (54) said that the canals were well-maintained. About 37 per cent of the people held the other extreme view that rhc
electrification and canal irrigation while the offcials engaged in non-developmdntal tasks related to the Department- of Revenue, which in many ways assisted tbe citizens lor securing
The performance of the officials engaged in the developmental tasks in the present study related mainly to thc sectors of rural
185
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Bureau$atic Values
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for irrigation. A little lower pcrcentage of people, viz., 28 pcr cont ob,served that the canals were poorly maintained, Thus one thing seemed certain, that if the canals had adequate watr, the supply was regular. In the years of the scarcity of rainfall, the engiueers of the Department o[ Irrigation admitted that
the supply of water was inadequate and very little could be done about it. In the district of Patiala 54 pcrcent ofthe villager respondents were of the opinion that canals wcre wellmaintained, In Punjab the current i igation programoes consisted of strengthening the prosent canal system so that with the availability of more water from the Beas, the avail- . ability and water discharge oight be furtbcr augmented. In Morena the situation was not very much different. A
slightly higher percentage of people viz., 50 and 58 per c.ent of the villagers respectively were of the bpinion that they rcceived timely supply of water and that the canals were wellmaintained; but only 44 per cent peoptc thought tbat the canals
had adequate supply of water. The Madhya pradesh Government was trying to make more water available from the Chambal to people. About 26.27 per cont of the respondents -the
in
the canals werc poorly meintained. This extromo view was held consistently by 26-27 per cetrt of the respondcnts. A middle view that canals generally supplied enough water, and had adequate irrigation watei and that the canals were adequately maintained was shared by 22,29, & lTper cent of the peoplc respectively. But the trend of replies in this area closely resembled thc pattern noticed in Patiala,
State Governments were found to be satisfied with
Morena district thought thet the canils hardly gavc timely supply of water as they did not .have enough water and that
The engineers
of the
Department of Irrigation
systems. But they had to worlc under certain limitations. Firstly, the availability of water in the canals varicd from year to year. Thus io some years tbey coutd not satisfy the beneficiaries fully. Secondly, the fields situated further away from tho canale and distributaries naturally
of the canal
to
the
Affeials' Performance
r87
canals/distributaries could receive. These factors werc reported to be responsible for the wide fluctuations iu the pcrceptions
performaoce
of
the officials of
the
Almost similar questions were put to the villagcr respondents regarding the supply of power and its interruption and utilisatioln for- development of agriculture. Replies to the thrte questions: (i) whether the supply of electricity -was regular; ('ii) wtrether'there were frequent interruptions in the- supply of (iii) whether po*". wu. utilised by the farmers for po*rr; "oO ioti#J"gii"ultural production as it should be, wcre analysed and are presented in Table 7.2 on p. 188' per cent Patiala than in Morena. About 46 per cent and 26 ofthe villagers had the two extreme perceptions of the supply u.G..goiu. and irregular respectivly wnite l+ per cent and of the villagcrs of Mot"ou respectively said that +O p"tt "iotsupply was regutar and irregular. The power supply the power Morena' was, however, fourd to be somewhat more irregular in
Three processes-the generation oi electricity, its transmission and distiibution are involved before thc supply reachs tbe uillug.rr. The greater the distance of the power transmitted' the gr""i"t *ut thJ transmission loss'and more was the interruption in transmission on account of the rains, storms' etc' Thus' thc ' the availability of power was more continuous in the villages- of ,district oaPatiolu tuuo in thc villages of thc district of Morena'
It
seemod
in the supply of power 5l and the 24 per cent rcspeotively of tbe villagers io Patiala gave .impression that the power supply was often and rarelY erratic' while the corresponding percentages of villagers holditig
Regarding the interruption
eively. On the
Morena were 36 and 44 resPecwhole, the supply of power was more regular
of
188
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Performance
in
Morena.
189
in
for agricultural production wa$ in Morena. In Patiala multiple cropping praetices had already taken roots. Thcrefore, tho land was never allowed to remain fallow. In Patiala 5l
The utilisation
power
more popular in Patiala than pr cnt of half the respondent villagers used power for agricul' tural production while it Morena only 29 per cent or a little
of
mole than a quarter of villagers utilised power for increased agricultural production. However, 38 per cent of the villager iespo4dcnts in Patiala and 45 per cent of the villaget respon' dents in Morena thought that power supply was not being properly utilised, as it sbruld be for increased agricultural production. This made considerable differences in the perceptions of the villagers of the two States about the performance
of the officials.
Villagers' Percbptions rabout the Copabilities of the Oficials stimulating developmbntal efforts in the fictd are on trial today. The obligation of the officials to serve and not to rule has by necessity brougbt them closer to the people and has broken the past traditional isolation of the ruling class. An attempt was, tberefore, made to find out the perceptions of the benefr' ciaries about tbe working of the officials both in the policy' making areas and the day-to-day administration.
officials, both in developmental
energizing and
The perceptions of villagers about the functioning of the and non'developmental depart' ments . of the State Governmentd of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh were recorded duting our field visits to the villages' The answers to negatively keyed questions like (i) do you agree that the, planners and policy-makers wcre not well' informed about the real probiems in villages and set unrealistic targets; (ii) do you agree whether there is delay in the decisionmaking at highet lcvels; and (iii) whether it was true that thc offcials were not well-trained for developmental activities were
190
tabulated and are presented in Table 7,3 on p. l9l. The negatively toned queetions were put to the villagers because it was thought that they came nearer to the impressions of illiterato and semiliterate villagers.
From Table 17.3 it will bc seen tbat about 40.42 per cent of villagers thought that the planners and policy makers were well'informed about their real problems and the targets aimad at were not all that unrealistic. Such perception about the officials prevailed both in Punjab and Madhya Pradesh. About 35 and 38 per cent villagers thought that the planners and policy makers of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh rospoctively were ignoraot oftbe problemc that the villagers faced and set deve. lopmental targets. Only 20-25 per cent respondents took the middle course by saying that the statement was only sometimes true. There was practically no large difrerence in the perccptions about the officers of the two State Governments. Of course a large majority of the villagers were themselves ignorant about the kind of education, training and experience of the officials that werc required of the developmeotat ofrcials.
Regarding perceptions about delay in decision-making at higher levels, 55 per cnt of the villagers in puojab and 49 per cent of the villagers in Madhya pradesh thought that there was avoidable delay in taking decision. For. instance they mentioned that on occasions where there was no fain aod the crops were in need of irrigation water there was considerable delay in the decision to release the water in canals. In sucb cases the villagers had to approach the local politicians for putting pressure on the officials to have the irrigation water
released
-both in Punjab and Madhya Pradesh reported oceasional delays in taking such decisions. Only 18 per cent of thc
villagers of Punjab and 24 per cent ofthe villagers of Madhya Pradesh believed that ofrcers did not delay in taking decisions. Thus it would be seen that only a quarter of the respondents had good perceptions about the ofrcials so far as the decision-
of the
villagers
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making was concerned, had no grievance against them and thought that there was no delay on their part in taking
decisions,
wa"s *ori Urtt., the perceptions of the officers thems;ru., Jool ,h"i, tnuo o*o decision-making
u'no inoolr,t ;ha;;le ;fficers did not delay in taking decisions. Thus the iifl"g".r, about the officers in respect of decision.mating "piri"n
process.
viltagers
olten taken quickly after due consultations. This was against 18. per cent ofthe villagers in punjab and 24 per cent of
(Tables 66 in Chapter VI); we find that ooly g unJ-:l per cent of the oftcers (on an average belonging to tfr. a.u.foprnent and non-development departments) of the Governinents of e,foluU Pradesh respectivety felt that decisions were very 1,11_YI,OO*
If this perception of vilagers about the officiars is read with the perceptiou of the officers on participative
decision_making
in Madhya pridesh
the
techniques of cjtivation, y"i tl.y many probtims and rhe ,oa;Liiiy of them "r" sult dtsplay an element of distrust againsi -administrators. The perceptions of vilragers about the odciars' education and might,have grown out of the general distrust they lt:,totT nold towards the oftcials, The conflict between the,slow bureaucratic pr.ocess and the rapid requirement of development might have also distressed the viflagers anO iuir.a-aooUt, uOoot their.administrative competenco and capabilities. Neverthersss rt seemed that the full utilisation of education, training and experience of the ofrciat, *... il ;;;1il ;rceptibte of punjab and .1 lh", ljl]f"rs^ villagers about Madhya pradssh.' A gap in rne perception of . officials and the latterns,own perceptions was, therefore, found to cxist.
besieged
receptive
with ,
to modern
The Behaviour
of the Officials
We have already examinod the perception of fhe ofrcials on the attitude and behaviour of the clientele towards Chapter VI (vide Table No. 6.3). Thsir peroeptions them in whether
Performance
:l'93
they were apprehensive of the officials behaviour bave also been discussed in this Chapter.
officials. To know the perceptions of the villagers about the behaviour and helpfulness of the ofrcials, we put two simple questions to the respondent villagers. They wero (i) did the Government servants behave with beneficiarics and non-bene' ficiaries politely and (ii) were the officials belpful to them? The replies were analysed acd are presented in Table 1.4 onp, 194'
It will be deshable at this stage to examine the reciprocal expectations of the villagers about the behaviour of the
that only about 13 and 14 per ceut of the villagers in Punjab and Madhya Pradesh respectively thought that the ofrcials behaved impolitely with beneficiaries and non' bene0oiaries. About 4l per cent of the villagers in Punjab and 45 per cent in Madhya Pradesh stated that tho officials bohaved politely with villagers while 46 per cent and 41 per.cent of tbe villagers of Punjab and Madbya Pradesh respectively were r"poited to have said that the ofrcials behaved indifferently with them. There was, therefore, not much difrerenoe in the behavioural pattern of tho officers of the two States'in the eyes of the villagers' Let us now examine the reciprocal state' ment of the ofrcials about villager's behaviour which was given in Table 6.3 of Chapter VI. Hero it was noticed that about 24 per cent olEcials iu Punjab stated that tho villagers wre flot respectful to them. This was against l3 per ocnt of the villagers'
It
is siguificant
impolite perceptions about the officers of the Punjab Government' perceptions wcre not, therefore, exactly reciprocal. There were also some gaps in the reciprocal perceptions of villagers and officials so far as the middle values were concerned. As against 32 per cent of the officials in Punjab claiming moderate levels of respect from visitors, 46 per cent of villagers found indiffe' rent levcls of behaviour from the ofrcials. Here again the villa' gers suffered from reciprocal treatment' The unhealthy citizen'
The
relationship
in a
of perceptions and diference in the reciprocal perception levels of tho higher values. Against 42 per cont of the ofrcials of the
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Ofictals' Performance
t95
-from
Governmcnt of Punjab who thought that they got high respects the visitors; 4l per cent ofthe villagcrs in Punjab thought that the officers were polite aod reccptive in dealing with them. On the wholc however this did not point to good communityadministrator relationship, in the absence of which the devolop. meotal work is likely to sufer.
14
per cent
of tho
vitlagcrs felt
that tho officers whom they approacbed were impolite, 15 per cent of omcers felt that villagers were not respectful. Here the absence of courtesy at both ends neutralised each othar. Against the 4l per cent of villagers flnding tbe ofrcials indifferent, 37 per oent of officials found the villagers moderately rospectful., There is not much differcnce in the reciprocal percoptioos. Against 45 per cent of the villagcrs in Madhya Pradesh who found the officers polite in their dealirgs, 48 per cent of the ofrcials founrl that thcir visitors wero respectful. So in Madhya Pradesh, it was generally a case of the same reciprocal percep tions between tho villagers and the ofrcials. Yet another aspoct of the villagers' outlook of the ofrcials' bohaviour $tudied was the pefception they held about their being helpful to them. Reciprocal perceptions of both the clientele and the officials \ were obtaioed. Acoording to th statements of the ofrcert thsmselves (see Table 6.4, Chapter VI) in tbe Department of Rcvenue in the Government of Punjab, l8 per cent of the officers Tesre stated to be seldom helpful to the people, while only 4.5 per cent ofroers ofthe dovelopment departments were seldom helpful. The average of the three percentages was 10. Against these 10 per cen! average of the officers in Punjab that thcy could not be helpful to the villagers as their requests were very ofteo uoroasonable, 34 per cent of villagers maintained that tho officcre wero unhelpful. Thus there seemed to be a big gap in tho porceptions of ofrcers and the villagers in this regard.
Against an average ofl 54 per cent of the officers in Punjab saying that they oould be helpful to the people only occasionally, 38 per ceot of the villagers in Punjab found the officers sometimes helpful. Ilere again, a large gap existed between thc perceptions of the officers and the villagers. Such weak
196
linkages impede the goal achievements and ,ol" prrfortuuc" of various incumbents engaged in developmental work. [low' ever in Punjab 37 per cent of the officials considered that they were often helpful to the people while 29 per ceut of thc people thought that the officers werc 'often' he'lpful. Here again, a small gap existed in the perceptions of the officials and their
.
clientelc. Madhya Fradesh on the other hand, 18 per cent of the officers, on an average, thought that they could not bo helpful to the people who scught their help, but 24 per cent people thought thal the officers were rarely helpful. There is, thus, a confidencc gap of 6 per cent" Similarly, 44 per ccut of the officers in Madhya Pradesh, on an average, thought that they were sometimes helpful to their clientele, while 38 per cent of the people found them neither helpful nor unhelpful. Here' again, there was a confidence gap of 6 per cent, but this was
In
a confidence gap in the reverse direction. While 35 per cent ofrcers, on an avetage, considered themselves helpful to the people, 39 per cot of people thought that the offioials wer helpful. These cross tabulations of perception reveal considorable gap in the relationship of the officials and tho poople. But tho gap is narrower io Madhya Pradosh compared to that
in Punjab.
Thc existence of such a confdencc gap could possibly be explained by the fact that in order to be belpful,.the officials had to distinguish between the just and legitimato demands of the viilagers from their unjust and illegitimate demands. Ever while meeting their genuine and legitimate demands, the officials .had to follow a certain set of rules and procedures, which often led to dolays, thus giviog the impression in the minds of tbc villagers that the officials wrc not doliberatoly helpful towards
them.
for
Development
t97
their wlrk. [t was considered necessary to know from the villagcrs as to h)w they felt about ths aptitude of the officials for doveloprnent work. There is no doubt that the structura-l omponents of bureaucracy considerably shaped the nature of aptitude for development work. How far the old attitude of maintaining the statu$ qdo has given place to the lotion of service to the people was investigated and assossed by a sirrple questioo put to the villagers-do the ofrcials in your opinion have the aptitude for development work? The replies are presented in the following table,
TABLE
Questions
7.5
(Percentage)
Patiala
Morenu
times ly
lly
times ly
35.6
Do the officials,
.in your opinion, have the aptitude for development work?
Aicording to the percEptions of the beneficiaries about thc aptitude of the officials towards development work, only about 30 per cent of them in Madhya Praclesh felt that the oftcials usually had such an aptitude as against 26 per cent in punjab, tlowever, the perceotage of beneficiaries who did not think that the officials had that aptitude was 36 in Madhya Pradesh as agarnst 42 per cent in. Punjab. Thus the perception of the villagers in Punjab was at divergence with that of the beneficiaries in Madhya Pradesh, although the stage of developmeot was much higher in Punjab thao that in Madhya Pradesh. Was it due to the lack of oommunioation between the ofrcials and tho villagers or due to some othr reasons? This can partly be explainod by the fact that after an initial success, the developmental work in Punjab has lost some momentum. It may also be duo to the fact that io Punjab many of the farmers were not
198
eloctricity
of the ofrcials in relation to or water supprles' Being somewhat well off and
needs could acquiie a pump set to serve their own
tU.t"iot., wiihout riason that the farmers o-rr*otioo, about the development aptitude of the officials to what obtained in Madhya Pradesh' "otpar.C
The Villagers, the Officials and the Political Leaders'
"ir".Jin"v ;;;;;i;;ptnding on the official obligation' It was not' in Punjab had low
as
villagersl held belief that the officials were indifferent towards the over toem needs, and the kind of pressures they could exercise through the local political leaders'
officials' After having analysed the villagers' perception of the, was thought proper perfor.anc!, behaviour and capabilities,'it to' io investigate another aspect of theii outlook and attitude perceptions about the warCs tne'officiats' This related to their *-Lp.rutioo that they rendered to tho officials, their commonly
in energising and directing developan effective cooperative participation ment programmes require of the beienciaries in the effotts of the bureaucracy' A rapport between the officials and the benefioiaries has thus to be created for securing good performance on tho devevelopmental front'
Institutional arrangements
effoits.
not generally cooperative with the offcials in theirde volopmcntal The negatively framed question was asked because the oflcials of th? Irrigatiqn Department generatly found the benefioiaries whose fields were situated near the distributory canals drawing more water for their fields before the fields situated at a distance could be irrigated. The officers of th Department
Failure to foresee the needs of the people not only has adverse effect on administrator'clientele relationship' but also causes set'back in the achievements of developmental targets, 0fficials often complain that they do not get ready coJperation of the people iu their developmental efforts' In ordir to test the validity of this outlook of the ofrcials a ques-. tion was put to tho villagers whethsr they felt. that they were
Performmce
199
Etectricity also found that many persons did not cooperate witb them to have the electricity poles for rural electrification installed in thcir fields' Thus thc negatively framed question was ,asked as some of the ofrcials reported that the people were not coop:rative. The replies, however, were as follows:
of
'
TABLE 7.6
Villagers' porception of their cooperarion with the officials
(Percentage) Question
Districts
Perceptions
Patiala
5.6
l.l
83.3
co-
Morena
4.6
4.6
90.8
The respoadents very often resented this question, They maintaincd that people were always prepared to oooperate atrd it was the officials themselves who were mostly indifrerent to th people. In Patiala 83por cent of the respondents said that it *ut oot true that the people were not cooperative' In Morena also 9l per cent of the respondents replied in the .same way' Only veiy small percentage of people of both the districts genorally and partly agreed with the statcment' Officials' Apathy
fllled througb the ofloial channels? Wer the ofrcials indifferent and cut off from the people and tbus igndred popular demandi? The replios received from the rcspondonts io this respoct aro tabulated below.
If it is assumed that th people were on the whole, co-operative, how was it that thy were not getting their legitimato needs ful-
200
TABLE 7.7
Aloofness of the Officials from the Villagers
(Percentage) Percepttons Question
District Yes
patiala
Morena
34.4
Perhaps
No
Do you feel that the offcials are cut off from the people and
ignore popular demands?
38.5
29.3
32.2
. It would be clear from the above Table that the perceotions of the villagers about the indifferent attitude of the oificers were almost equally divided among the three value scales in the districts ol Patiala. Tho picture of Morona was not also very much ditrerent, There was only a little weightage towards the first scale of value at the cost of the middle scale. The villagers felt that many ofrcers were inaccessible to them, According to them, the officials thought themselves to be different from the public whom they were actually supposed to serve. Even when they were on field visits in the villages to assess and uDderstand some Iocal problems they tried to maintain distance from tbe villagcrs and rcmained aloof. The pool section of the villagers could never mix with them. The officials were seen moving more with the ir own circlc of administrators either of equal or of higher ranks. In such cases the villagers thought that the general attitude of the officials towards them was one of indif-
Political Leaders and the Officials-Their Inter-relaiiont For studying the inter-retations betwcen the polltical leaders and tho officials we put a question to the offioials whether they felt that pressufe sas put to thom through the political leaders in the discharge of their duties. Thb rcplies as tabulated were as follows :
201
TABLE 7.8
Political Ptessure on Officials
(Percentage) Perce?tions Question
Do you feel that Poli' Patiala 8.5 tical leaders often Put pressures on you in the Morena 14.8
discharge duties?
50.9
46.1
39.I
of
1'our official
As is clear ltom the above table, only about 9 and 15 per cnt of the offieials in Patiala and Madhya Pradesh seemed to be of the opinion that pressure was brougbt upon them through the
political leaders in msst of the cases. This meant tlrat the offcials, on the whole, were not under great political pressure' But 4l and 39 per cent of the officials thought that political leaders did sometinres put pressure on them. Thus, about 5O per cent of the officials thought they were somewhat or fully pressurised to take decisions on tho basis of political considerations. In such cases very often the officials found themselves in a dilemma to distinguish betwcn the legitimate and the unjust demands accompanied by such pressures. The officials had to cope up with a difrcult situation where they had eithcr to face the wrath of the superior officiers if they took inappropriatc
decisions under political pressure or annoy the political Ieaders iF they bypassed tieir rcquests as being unsound and inapplicable tothe local situation, At least a section of the political leaders did cxpect the ofrcials to heed to their instructions and even
circumvsnt the usual norms, procedures and the supcrior officers' instructions in order to carry them out. Many a time this created difficulties and stalcmate in the implemeDtation of development policies' The only rcdeeming feature was that atleast 50 per cent of the officials thought that political leaders hardly dabbled io the administrative activities both in Punjab and Mddbya Pradesh.
2O2
of
of
of
Perceptions
Questions
often
times
51.0
l.
agricultural
officials
'
Do you have to take help of political leaders in meeting your demands for
needs
37.4
53.4
2. Do you find
leaders?
admini-
Patiata
12.8 4A.6
46.6
47
.l
demands for agricultur;i devolopmcnt needs fulfilled by the ofrcials and " (ii) Do ; you find that the administrators are morc accommodative to the political lcaders. The replios were expected to give the recipro. cal of people about thi influenie of political -perceptions leaders on the officials. The result of theso questions is shown in Tablc 7.9 above.
in getting their work done. Two questions were put to tho These were, (i) Do you have to take the help Itjlig-tT: or porrtrcal teaders in getting your
It was noticed that in both patiala and Morcna districts only a small percentage of the respondcnts, I I per cent and pei 9 cent respcctively felt that thcy had to take the help of political leaders to get thcir devclopmcntal needs fulfillcd, ibout g8 and.
)n7
37 por cent of the respoadents in Patiala and Morena further addod that th! peoplc had sometimss to takc holp of political leadcrs for mecting their needs for agricultural pfoduction ful' trlled through the o6cial chanoels. On the whole, in about 50 per ent oascs, the peoplc very often and sometimes ap'proachcd the political leadors with rcgard to the fulfilment of their needs and 'yet in thc other 50 per c:nt of cases the villagers did not necd to use political leverage to get their work done. This perception of lillagers was patallel to the pcrceptions of ofrcers towards their 'use of political in8uence in bcth the States. However, on the 'basis of p:rsonal discussions with the officials, it was noticed {hat a majority of them were negatively disposed towards them.
determino {o this context the natural follow.up was 'whether the adminietrators were rtrore a@ommodative to the
to
'carlier qucstions.
politieal leadcrs, Thc trend of perceptions was similar to ths About 13 and 17 per cent respectivoly of tbe ,rrillagers in Patiala and Morena thought that the officers were
,usually accoomodative to politioal leaders because they had the :apprehension that they migbt try to spoil their sorvicE records or
et them transferred through thoir influence with the Minister. This type of fear sooetimes compelled the oficrs to complying with thc requests of the villagers in Patiala and Morena political {eadors. It seems, as thc findings in Patiala and Morena reveal that only 13 and l? por ceot of the ofrcers felt it necessary to teep the potitical lcaders satisfied. The number of villagers who, believed that administrators werc sometimes favourably disposed to political leaders wsre only 4l and 36 per ceot ofthe total ,respondents in Patiala and Morena respectively' About half of the people, therefore, thought that the administrators were rarely ,.accommodativo to political leadsrs and acted on their own dismetion or in accordance with the guidelines of the rules and
were quite in agreement with the 'regulations. These observationg peiceptions of the officials as given out by them (vide Question No. 10.4 of ths Ofrcers' Schedule in Appsndix lI)-
SUMMARY
'This chapter has been coocernod
with
an
analysis
of
the
204
villagers' porception of the officials' performance, behaviours and capabilities aod their own cooperation with them. We have secn that villagers are generally faced with diflerent types of problems both deveiopmental as well as regulatory in relation to agriculturil production. Tbeir. response, to tho officials' behaviour are very much determined in the way they get these problems solved at the hands of the ofrcials. The two big problems for irrigation in both Patiala and Morena districts are the watdr-logging on account of seepage of canal water and high water level. Rice, pulses and groundnut are fast replacing bajra as the principal kharif crop. Nursery' raising and transplantation of paddy on staggering basis has helped production of paddy in both the districts. In Patiala the Food Corporation of India has an efficient organisation for lifting paddy and wheat while the marketing and warehousing arrangements for paddy are vcry weak in Morena. The marketing of ipulses an(l oilseeds are mostly in the bands of private traders, The price incentives have lately given a push
to the cultivation of crops in both the districts. Higb yielding wheat has made tremendous progress in both the dis' trics and as a consequence the farm growth rate has considerably risen. While the farrners in Punjab are very progressive with multiple cropping practices after evaluation of relativc costs and benefits of different crops, the scarcity of capital . and information gap in agricultural production has prevented the farmers in Madhya Pradesh from taking risks ' for better combination of inputs to yield greater outputs. Only a small section of the farmers of Madhya Pradesh has seen influence of the technological changes taking place in the country and is willing to experiment rvith new techniques of agricultural production with the help of the concerned officials.
The present study relates to the role of development officials belonging to the sectors of canal irrigation and power and the Revenue Departments of the Punjab and Madhya Pradesh Governments. Although the Revcnue department has been assumed to be non.developmcntal, it is significant that the offieers of this Department are also indirectly promoting develop-
Performance
205
ways. But for the cooperation rendered by the omcers of this supposedly non-developmental
department many developmental activities could
accomplished.
not have
been
In the district of Fatiala 45 per cent of the villagers maintained that canal water was available whenever irrigation was needed aod the canals were certainly well'maintained, But at the same time quite a good section of beneficiaries viz.,37 per cent of them held that water was not available to them in times
of their irrigation needs and the canals
supply of water. This difference in villagers' perceptions was on account of the fact that all 6elds could not be irrigated at the farthcst end of the canal system. This' was also admitted by the
irrigation ofrcers. Only l? pei cent of tho villagers took a middle stance that water was generally available ior irrigation
purposes.
In the district of Morena about half the villager respondents said that water was:ivailable for irrigation needs, alhough only 44 per ccnt ofl them held that adequate supply of water was available from the canals. The suptly of power was more regular in Patiala tban in Morena. About 46 per cent of the replies indicated that power supply was good although 5l per cent of the people held that there were interruptions when
power was needed. About 24-26 per cent people held the opposito view that power'supply was not available when they needed it and there were interruptions of power supply. Only
26-28 per cent replies followed the middle perceptions.
replios of respondents in Morena, About 44 per cent of the people said that power was not available when they needed it and 36 per cent peoplo said that interruption in power supply was frequent. Opposite views were also expressed by quite a good proportion of the people. Forty per cent and 44 per cen t of the people respectively said that power supply was not regu'
Irregularity
in
in
206
Tho middle course of perceptions was expressed per ceDt of the people.
by only l6-20
With regard to the perceptions of villagers of the officials' knowledge of developmental targets, about 40-42 per cent of ihern thought that the ptanners and policy-makers were not well-informed of the problems of villages and the targets aimcd at were not all realistic. Such a perception about the officials prevailed both in Punjab and Madhya Pradesh. About 35 and 38 per villagers in Punjab and Madhya pradesh respectively ,cent
were of
were
ignorant of the problems which the villagers faced and concequently set unroalistic targets of development. Only 20-25 per cent respondents took the middle course by saying that this
was only'sometimes' true. Thero Statc variation in this perception.
was practically
no
inter-
Regarding the villagers' perceptions about delay in decisionmaking at higher lovels, 55 per cent of the villagers in punjab and 49 per cent villagers of Madhya pradesh thought that there was def nite delay in taking decisiq$. Occasional dclay was reported by 27 pet cent villagers of both th States. Onty l8 and 24 per cent villagers respectivcly of punjab and Madhya Pradesh did not notice any delay in making decisions.- We havc already seen that only 8 and 9 per cent officers, on an average, in the Governmcnts of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh rcspectivaly met very often for taking participative.decisions. The divergence in the two sets of perceptions was considerable. That tbere was occasional delay io taking decisions at higher levels is clear from the fact that 20 and 29 per cent respectively of the officers in Punjab and Madhya Pradesh reported to have occasionally taken decisions individually without any consultation, agreeing more or less with 26 and 39 per cent of the officials of the two Statc Government who thought that decisions.were taken on participative basis. Thc perccption of villagers about the officers and those of the ofticers about lhemselves did not differ much. The villagers have a tendency to consider all their needs to bc
C I ient
207
of tho early fulfilment of thcir ofrcials' de-mands are belied by ihe delay on the part of the on they become restive. The dclays ocourred becauee the man the spot was unable to take decisions on his own initiative' Consultation witb the higher ofrcials involved delays' Even when thore was atr opportunity for the higher o{Fciale on visit
urgent.
to the field ofrces to iake on the spot decisions, there decisions were more frequently deferred. Thus the occurrence of delay' mainly on ur"ooot oi conceotration of decision'making at the highei levels had an adverse effect on the perceptior s oi the citizens about the bureaucratic method of work' possibly be fully. awalo of but in tho tu. lJo""ioo, trainiig and oxperience of the officers' ?0 per cent of the villagers ia oerception of about 80 and the oftce^rs wer not Foo;"U uoA Madhya Pradesh respectively work' However' 80 per cent of for the development "iiili*i*o r" roth the State Governments thought that irher iil'"in.r$ or iu.iiJor"tioo, trainiog and experience was fully utilised was a good gap between ooiv -oa.tutufy utilisetl. Thus there iu.i"" *.t. oiperceptions' The reason is not difrcult to find' industrious and il. i;;;;; io'uotn'tte states, in general' areThey have manv improve thoir economic conditions' ;;il;; expectationg ;;;il;;1$solved bv the officials' when their of distrust eleoent li. L.ftta, they develop anil display an
Although the villagers could
not
;;;;; ;i. ofror,. In the absenoe of anv closeness bctween ilu na*ioirr."tors aod their cliontela' the growing distrust about the education'
aioungst the latter raiscs tliubts thcir part ir"i"iii""O""perience of the officials' although on are not training thdk that their qualifications and il" seemingly "m""r"G ilJ"g-pt"p.irv utilise<t. The two perceptions ate. of the but uoless there is closer integration "o"tlilotiry,- organisation with tbe realisation and implement' this gap in "ati"ltit",iii ,ioo oi,n. devslopmental needs of the citizens' ilt *ttot of reciprooal prceptions will continue to exist' if
not exPand. With regard to thc villagers' perception- about the officials' tbat offieers behaviqur, 13-14 per cent of thc villagers thought
208
of the two State Governments behaved impolitely in their officials dealing with them against af af plr-".n, of ,1" villagers respectively punjab
in
that.ofrcials behaved politely
another
bebaved
.16
and
4l
i"
in
it.r, *u,
this respect.
irlu,
nurOty
some of the reasons for this imbaLnce in the *"ipi""ity- Luhaviorr.. There was, however, no appreciable aifere'oce "f iri tie reciprocal of the high order in runiaU wrrere 42 and 4l I1?,i"ltr::t per cent ofrcials and thc oeople respectively showed reciprocity of polite behaviour.
per cent of villagers found indifferent levets of behaviour from o6cials. Here again, the villagers suffered froni reciprocal treatment. The unhealthv citizen_administrator relationship, the inherited tegacy of the pasr administration,;;;il;.
villagers anC the officials. Against 3Z'p", 'cent of tn" of tfu officials in^Funjab claiming moderate r.rp."t'f-nr:uisitors, 46
.-About 24 per cent of ihe officials in punjab had stated that villagers were not rcspectful to then ug.i"riii.'lj per cent of the villagers' percep{ions of tbe omcers"", U.f"g irpJtt". The perceptions were not, therefore, reciprocal io-puriiaU. There was also some gap in the middle vah,es of perc.piion,
the
'againsl 15 per cent of the officers per. ^"1:y^.93r.1,Pradesh, that the vi[agers werc nor respectful, 14 pcr cent of ::1 omcers were rne 1"J: reported to be impolite by the villageis. There seems-t9. be some rcciprocity in this respect. Aiainst 4t per cent.of the villagers who-found ofrcials ioiin r"otliz per cent officials_found the villagers modcrately respe"ttut. wlich is not much of a difference in reciprocity. H";;;;;;'"fie 45 pcr cont of villagers in Madhya pradesh foundlle omcere ^the polite, 48 per cent of the ofrcials found the visitors respeotfut, In Madhya pradesh, therefore, the perceptions
were reciprocal.
cetrt
209
to be seldom helpfrrl to the people, while 4 to 5 per cnt of the officers of the development departments only were rcported to be unhelpful and 34 per cent of villagers held that the ofrcers were unhelpful, Thus tFere was a wide divergence in Punjab between thi two perceptions' llowever, agalnst 54 per cent of the omcers in Punjab reportiog that they could occasionally be helpful, 38 per cent of the villagcrs in Punjab found the offcers only sometimes helpful. Here again a large gap existed. Against 37 per cent of the officers considering themselves helpful to the people, only 29 per cent of the citizen respondents thought that they were helpful. . Such perceptions certainly weakened the relationship between the officials and the people. Although the findings on the whole do not support the hypothesis that the developmental bureauoracy is indifferent to the citizens' develop' mental needs butit clearly indicatos none too happy at citizenadministrator r'elationsbip lvhich results in an attitude of distruet towards the officers and produces unfavourable perceptions
amongst citizens about tho officers.
In Madhya Pradesh 18 per cent of the officers prceived tbat they werc helpful to the people' -but 24 per cent of the people thought that officers were rarely helpful' Similarly 44 per crnt of the officers of Madhya Pradesh Govornment' on aD averago' felt that they wcre helpful to the people occasionally while 3! per cent oi peoplo found them neither belpful nor unhelpful' There was, however, a small confrdence gap in tho roverso direction as 35 per cent ofrcers, on an averag, considered
themselvs helpful to the people, while 39 per cent of the people thought that the officials wcre hclpful.
Acoording to the porceptions of th e villagers in Madhya Pradesh, the percentage of thc officcrs who had aptitude for development work did not have aptitude and showed occasional aptitudc were divided in the ratio of one'third each' In Punjab 42 per cent officers were reported to have no aptitude
seemed
to
dovelopment work. One-third have showed their aptitudc of the officers, however, showed only occasional aptitude' Com' paring this with the capability (although aptituda and capability
tor
2lO
are not identicalt weifind a different pattern except in the middlc values of perceptions, tlalf of the officcrs in both the Governments of Punjab and Madhya pradesh thougLt tbat they had enough capabilities. This gives a divergent pattern in boih the extrem cases of good and poor capability.
In Punjab many citizens are not dependent on the governmenr for small favours wbile in Madhya pradesh the citizens cxpect the government to do everything for them and thus seem to be dependent on tbe govcrnment channels. ln punjab, if a few persons werc afruent enough to have their water-pumps, they were independent ofthe offcials ofthe Irrigation Department. It was not, therefore, unnatural for them to develop low perceptions about the aptitude and capabilities of the ofrcers who were generally taken to be apathetic to the needs of the people. The gap between the perciptions of tb citizens and the officials in Punjab was, therefore, wide. But it was not as wide as in Madhya Pradesh where they had to depend upon the officers for their developmental needs. In respect of the often repeated complaints of the officials people arc not generally cooperative, thc villagers both in Patiala and Morena did not admit that they were not cooperative with thc offioials in the developmental work, About 83 and 9l per cent of the villagers in patiala and Morena respectively werg of the opinion that the villagers were vcry cooperative while the administrators were indifferent. A very small percentage of villagers of the two States thought that thoy werc not generally or sometimes not cooperative. people in general seemed to be quite enthusiastic in development projects and were willing to cooperate with the offcials in these venturss. The perceptions of villagers in .patiala and Morena about the apathy of the officials werc eventually divided among thc valuo scales ofyes, probably and no. Thc isolation of the officials, they said, was responsibli for their incffective role pcrformanco in developmont work, Sincc the findines about thi villaeors, perception about the officials in both the States onc of whilh is developed and the other not-oo-dcvctoped are almost the same, it follows that tbc psychotogical hiatus betwecn tbc admiais-
that the
performance
Zll
trators and the citizens is very much present in both the States. There is, therefore, the nced for brushing up the image of the administration tbrough eliciting citizens' cioperation and conscious effort on the part of the officials towards enlightcoing the public on developmental programmes and their role and rnvolvemeDt in them.
fulfilled. This percepion of th vilageri agreed with tbe reciprocal perception oftho ofrcials regarding the-prcssures put by the political.lcadors for mecting iublic ueeds, The people in general believed that the officiali r,r,r.. ,or. accommo_ dative towards the of politicat leaders. In many cases _requests the officials were afraid to ignore the requests of the political leaders, because they were apprehonsive oi the punitive actions in the shape of transfers, etc. that might flow as a result of thc complaints, genuine or otherwise, *hi.h might bo made by the influential potitical leaders to the ministe-rs at the State
demands
leYcl,
tbe villagers' perceptions about the use of plolltlcal leaders for putting prssurcs on the officials for getting tnerr work done, it was observed that both in the districts of Patiala and Morona balf thc rerpood"otsiJraJti" officials had to be pressurised through political teaa"r, to grt tl.i, .iort
Regarding
The findings of the chapter arc important rn as much as tbe kind of perccptions that tho ofrcials hold about their performaoce and achievements in the developmontal activities and tho way they react with the peoplc. The rcciprocal percption of the viitagcrs towards their behaviour and capabilities shows the divergonce ic their own conception of tlo situation, These dcviations should be helpful in planning
these indicate
somc proposals
for
socuring
for
better performance in
devolopmcnt worh.
thc orientations of these ofrcials towards development. In particular w tried to discuss the extent to whioh tbo officials workiog in the different departmcnts wero motivated by the goals of dcvelopment as rcwaled thrqugb an analysis of their value systems and attitudes reflccted in .the answers to sone of the questions canvassed in this
respect.
In Chapters lV, V and VI, we examined th6 structural, sociopersonal, socio-administrativc and behavioural cbaractcristice of burcaucracy engaged in dovelopmental and non-devolop mental activities in th Statcs of Punjab and Madhya pradcsh with the hclp of data collected in eelected btocks of patiala and Morena districts respcctively. . In Chapter Vl wo also oxamincd
to
cstablish'a correlatioaship
in our frndings in Chapter VI witb the yarlous structural characteristics of the Weberian model of burcaucrary. Since in the findings of many of the earlier studies on thc subjcctn it has clcarly been established that the bureaucracy in India by and latge sharcs thc same Wcberian structural chargcteristiog it wquld be intercsting to note in tho prcsent contef,t as to the way cach.of thc charactcristics ir cqrrclatcd
between tho averagc composite attitudes of the ofrcials engoged in the devclopmcnt tasks towards their devclopment orientation
214
.',fuitn
-Irrigation Dcpartments (engagod develop('ental iatrd. thg Statos ,avhave. !ee4.wqtted out in the activitios) in the two tablcs outJined in Chaptet Vl of this study.
tn. officials' development orientations. Since in our study 'we have siade an assumption that the ofricials working in the Revenue departments in both the States are primarily engaged in non"developmental activities, we are at present only taking into consideration the results of the averages of the developmont orientation of the officials of the Stpte Electrlcity .Boards
-in
is proposed to test statbtically if the average perceptions of dovelopment pcrsonnel towards selocted bureaucratic characteri. estics and values in the two States is consistent with the averag percptions of development eipressed in terms of thelr change/ result/target orientations, Let us first examine the correlationship in between the offcial's perception of hierarchy and their devolopment orientation, Table 8ll oir page 215 gives the , oorresponding figurcs of the ofrcials'value scoro on hierarchy: as a characteristic of buroaucracy and their orientations towards devolopmont in the States of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh
It
.bcptions attached
Table 8.1 gives an' indication that high perby the officials to hierarchy as a bursCucratlc value in botb the states correspond to the higher development values of the ofrcials, the figures when plotted on a bar diagram give a differont correlationship especially in relation to the moderate and low values of perceltions of the
ofrcials.
:
Thile
is evidcnt that
'ofricials having higher scorc on thi value of hicrarchy in the State ofPunjab havc somewhat lower scores on their perctption about
devclopment, IVhilc the oficials having moderate and low scotcs on the same stfuc,tural valuc tend. ts havc higher scores 16f : +hir ,orientation towsrds developmcnt; ' it follows that .thixir officials wliro assftia' .a .big&el - +elild to hiorarehy mry
Orientation
att
Ir te
(D
ao
lD
-ll
ll\l
c.|ci C\N
' .,
'o
rs
a h
a)
Sls Ir:
<l{
st>
t.s lll.{
slB
3x
q9
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(ilo o
s$
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o.=
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ol
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tri:o
,r6
Hbrorchy
f=
Perecn iogc
0avcloprnenl
Mo
derole LoI
High
Modirote
T
Orientation
217
rtoaia behind their developmentel orientation than thosc who assign hierarchy a moderate or low perception score. From the corrclationship thus cstablished in Punjab, it may bc
ouggeetcd that too much altachment to hierarchy.as value acts as a ncgative factor in thc proccss of development. The same corrolationship is, however, marginally ofthc reverse ofder in
seems that the officials of bierarchy as a value have also larger orientations towards dcvelopmcnt while thc ofrcials having middle and low perceptions about hierarchy as a valuc correspondingly show less orieotation towards thc development goals. 'fhe divergence ia tbe fndings in the two States may ' possibly be cxplained by the fact that developmental activities bsing comparatively ncw in Madhya Pradesh, therc was moro initial enthusiasm amongst the officials towards dcvelopment goals despite their high attachment to hierarcby as a value. At the same timc the officials baving moderate and low score per' ceptions on hlerarchy did not seem to be much oriented towards dcvelopmont goals. To some extent this reflects the scepticism of the bfficials wbo dcspite their low attachment to the value of hicrarohy could not orient themselves to larger goals of development.
sh.
Here
it
The x2 values for Punjab and Madhya Pradesh for 2 degrees' of freedom are 2.56 and 0.20 respectively which are statistically insignifcant at 5 per cent level of probability. Tbus the scale' values of perceptions about hicrarchy arc indcp:ndent of-
thosc
delelopmental activities and there seems' to be of hierarchy and value orientation. towards devclopmcnt, But thc value system of the officials in. the State of Puojab clearly supports the view that in the long term developmcot&l goals, too much adherence to hierarchy may not bc a factor promoting development goals. It also shows that 'hierarchy'a$ a value cannot altogetbcr be done away with
of
of
another
"
218
itt
Developxent
cbaraoteristic of bureaucracy thcr.division of labour drr wsrk it rclation ro the development orisntation. Tabls g2 on pago 219
division gives the scalc vglues of Berceptions of the ofrciale about thc division of duties in the two Staets and tbeir devclopment oricntations. As the division of duties. among the ofrcials is an fmportant characteristic of any burcaucratic organisation, what
is proposed to bc examined in this con,text. is whether th Exisencodrrages
developr,nent
ting value system of the officiats to the division of duties or impedes the orientation of officials towards
in the two
States.
Here again it will be noticed that high perception ofthe officials on division of duties both in punjab and Madhya Pradesh are usually associated with reqpeotively high pcr. ceptions of deyelopment, and modcrate pcrccptions ofthe qfficials on division of duties are similarly associated with their moderate developmental orientations, However tow valuo scores of oflcials on the division . of duties are accompanied by greatr scores on developmental orientations. The trends of scores on division of duties and development seem to b alike both in Puajab and Madhya pradesh.
.high and low values to the division of duties show grearer orientation towards devcloparent. Whil those having moderate value ecores attach correspondingly lass value preference to development. The difforence is, howover, marginal only.
the bureaucratic characteristic of division of duties also have correspondingly high development orientations.' However those offcials who ascribe low values (only 12.4 per cent) havc still higher orientation towards developmcnt (22.0 per cent). In.Madhya Pradesh, however, the oftcials attaching both
From the Bar Diagram No. 13 on page 220 it is clear that in Punjab, oftcials who have high and moderato value soores on
The
I,
values
for
division
which are statistically insigdifieant at 5 per cent for two degrees of freedom, This means that thc officiols' scoree 60, divieioa of dutis aild dvetopmlr t
respectively
of
level of probability
&r''au&atk
Charaderistict &,Dettelopmental
Orientation
219
ra,
oio
o
c.l
!) tal
t t
s
oo
t
*
,P9
s vi
c'i
F\O t.;
s{tr
F-
,-!
(D
c.t a
od.9
.tl Ft{) t-l /l
0)
l=
i l
ls
so a.l
o
C.l
<!
.o
rt
n
'(L
Rl$ t.*
\o
oo
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(q
(a
tr
.tl
lo t* .30
I
\o O\
c.l
.o
r^
-(\
.99
=
ll
5q r\ E(I)
aE
ql
'.3
gr
220
6AR OIAGRAM
NO, 13
MAOHA PRAOESH
Pergentoge
High
Mo
derote
Low
High
Moderote
Orientation Z2l
oriontation aro trot correlated. However the percentage of ofrcials with low perceptions of division of dutics in tbc State of Punjab having a correspondingly bigher orientation towards dcvelopment is very small, giving an impression that once the dsvelopmetrt programmes have got rootod in the system, adherencc to tho division of duties becomes essential for their cootinuance and efrcient implementation. The high and low prceptions of such valucs in Madhya pradesb on division of duties with correspondingly higher orient. ation on development may be an indication of thc desire on the part of a larger number of offcials to achieve the dcvelopment targets without being muoh influenced by a rigid pattern of division of duties in the initial steps of tbe developmcnt work. It also follows that by and targe, on an average, adherencs to division of duties as a bureaucratic value is in correspondencc with dovelopmeot orientation in both tbe Staies. It is only when too inuch stress is laid or when there is no strss on this characteristic that developmental goals scem to suffer. It can also be inferred that a strict adherence to division of duties in dovelopment organisations in the initial stages may not be vcry feasiblo. Syuem of Rules and Development
A bureaucratic organisation depends upon an elaborate prescription of rules and proccdures. In both Punjab and Madhya Pradcsh the officials of the Electricity and lrrigation departments have been no exception to this principle. The activities oftho dcvelopmeotal ofrcials arE necessarity governed by laborate
codes which while' protecting them against criticism from arbitrary action simultaneously furnish them some guidclines to enable them discharge thcir development functions. Ih practice, howcver, the adherence to rulos often means frequent delays in
the accomplishment of goals, Table 8.3 on page 222 givesthe pcrccptions of officials engaged in devclopmental activities abo'irt the system of rules and their oricntation towards development. Tbc comparative figurcs gcet to establish a correlation betsrcen the bureaucratic
of
. The data indicates that the developmental offcials, particularly in Punjab observe very high values for systcm of rules. During .the field visits it has been observed that th ofrcers of the .higher levels were more rigid in the application of the rujes. They do not see the necessity to deviate frqm the codes which prescribe their methods of work. This higb.rigidity about following rules and procedures, frequently causing dolays
TABLE.8,3
to Development by
Punjab
States
(Percentage)
Characteristics
Higt-M;Aiate-nw
S1'stem of
Rules
1.2
16.3
Development
X,2-value
43,2
34.8
t4.4
20.0
(d.f.:2)
l6.l 5*x
bo very much ingrained in thc miadg of officers. Thus it can be construed that although the officials show a high value preference to the system of rules are not really development orientpd. This is very much clear frodr the Bar Diagram No. 14 on page 223. At the same tioe ofrcials who have moderate and low pelceptions on the system ofrules seem to be having correspondingly higher scores on Jevclopmnt. . Almost a similar situation obtains in Madhya Pradesh where ofrcials attaching higher values to systen of rules atc lesle development orientad, while those attaching moderate and low
in performance, seems to
m | |
Sysremot
ulci
Developmnl
Percentoge
Hgh $iodcrote
Lo*
Hign
Moderote
224
1n Puajab is 16.15 which is vcry significant even at one per ccnt lcvcl of probability for 2 dgro6 of freedom. Tbere is thus a good .association betwel thc values attached to the system of rules ae observed in punjab and thc orientation of the officiale. towards dcvelopmcnt. .ddherence to thc system of rules not only scem to protect tbe individual ofrcials agaiast uaduc criticism fiom the public quarters, but in punjab it does not secm to be ilconsistant with their development orientation.
oricntation
In case of Madhya Pradesh the difrerences in value scales of the two variablcs are very much less with the result that the It valuc of thc tcst of significance of the two variables is only 1.62 which is vcry insignificant at 5 per cent level of probability for 2 dcgrees of freedom. Thus thore is no correlation between the offiicale adbering to tbe systcm of rulcs and their devetopment
in
individual valuo system is the same both in punjab and Madhya Pradesh, but the low Xe value indicatqe that the ofrcials, development orientation is irrcspcctivc of their attitude to adherc to tho systcm of rulcs.
Impersonallty and Developmmt
1grc1 of devclopmcnt officials of both thc Staies of puojab and Madhya Pradesh oa both thesc valucs are given in ?ablc g.4 on pagc 225 and illuetrated tbrough thc Barbiogram No. 15 on p_age 226. From the bar diagram, it.may be ,roi th"t in casc of Punjab tlo perccntagc of ofroiats atticning iJg-l oJo. to i.pe-rcoqality in thcir dcaliogs seern to te oucn-niiler thatr thoe who tend to indicate tho samo lcvcl of oriontrtioi toryardr dcv+
For an ofrcial, one person is just more or less the sas :ul aoy other pcrson in his official dealings. The ofrcials are not undulv coaccrned about the satisfaction of their clientcle, if they havc obscrved the prescribed rulee and procedures and principlcs of impersonality in their dealings with thcm. Wc havs tricd to examinc the relationship of thc bureaucratic characteristic of impersonality and the ofrcials' oricntation towards develop ment in both the Statos of punjab and Madhya pradesh.
Thc
Ofientatton
225
lopmetrl. While the perccntagc of officials ehowing moderate and low value to imporsonality is vcry smallr the correspoading per' ccntagc of ofrcials sharing the same lcvels of values towerds dovolopment oricntation is much higher. It can, thorofore, bc infemed that observancc of a high degree of impersonality in thc bchaviour of ofrcialg ie not vcry much associated with devolop' ment odentatioo, while moderate and low degrces of values attacbcd to this characteristic may be associatcd with corres' pondilgly bigber orientation towards developmcnt. The pattern of perceptiors of tho officials in Madhya Pradeeh is similar' but with little variations in high, moderate and low value scores in contrast to Punjab where tho variations are high.
TABLB 8.4
Impcrsonality and Devetopment
by
States
(Percentage)
Pmjab c har
acter is t i
Madhya Pradesh
c fii-u
de- tow
tale
Ioprsonality
Development
x'z'value
16.1
20.1
('l'f':2)
2.48
Punjab is 30.42 which ir vcry significant satistically at one per ccnt level of probability for 2 dcgrees of freedom. It can thcrefore be concludcd that the scorcs on impersonality followcd by the ofrcials of the development dopartments of Punjab and tbcir dovolopmont orientation have high association.
In Punjrb the offcials connectcd with the developoental work had obrcrwd grestcr imporsonality in thcir bchaviour tow ds
BAR--
DIACRAM NO. 15
Percenicge
Moderote Low
High
Moderote
ation 2n
their clieotcle but this has not significantly hampered the progrrss of devclopmcnt.
The position is different in Madhya Pradesh where the high values given to imprsonality- ma-rgiqally xceed thosg given to dcvelopmcnt. .The moderate and low values given to imperso-
ratttrffirc.rEargtf'dlly fall short of the levels of their devetopment orientation. As the xe-value in Madhya Pradesh shows that there seems to be no association between the value of im: personality and officials' development orientation. It is possible that in Madhya Pradesb tbe observance of impersonality by the officials in their behaviour towards their clientele has boen conduciva to some progress in the field of developmental activities. 3ut,as-th ease of Punjab illuskates, the observence of imper' sonal behaviour of the officials has not produced the dcsired dovelopment orientations amongst the officials in the long run. Thus impersooality as a characteristic in the behavioural pattern of thc oficials may be hclpful to some cxtent, but a high degree of its observance may not always produce the desired resulte in developmental activities. In other words it follows that the developmental activities would have to be ultimately geared to tuit the Civcrsified rieeds of the heterogenous elements of the clientelo.
Relattonship of Offi.ctals' Combtned Perception of Stuctural Chalacte stics of Bureaucracy on their Orientation to Development
We have so far examined the relationship of offcials' orientation towards individual characteristics of bureaucracy like hierarchy, division of duties, impersonality and system of rules and their orientation towards devolopmontal activities in Punjab
and Madhya Pradesh, We now propose to examine the relationship betweeo thc ofrcials clubbed perception to the combined bureaucratic characteristic and their ofientation to development. Table 8.5 on page 228 gfues the figures relating to the officials' tot.rl si.:ore on their pcrception of hierarchy,
228
TABLE 8.5 Relationship of Officials' combincd pcrception of Structural Characteristics of Bureaucracy and their Development
orientation
bv
States.
Low
All Structural
oharacteristics
63.3 43.2
25.2
34.8
I 1.5 22.0
r8.O 20,0
'Oricntation
towards deve-
lopment
Xt value
(d.f.:2)
9.6*
0.15
divieion of duties, system of rules and impersonality orientation to developmont in the two Stats.
It will be seen from thc Bat Diagrau No. 16 on page 229 that the ofrcials in Punjab who have high perceptions about all structural charateristics of bureaucracy aro in higher percentage
than their corresponding pcrcentage with orientation to development while the pprcentage of the officials with moderate aod low prceptions towards the structural characteristics of bureaucracy fall short of the percontage of the ofrcials with similar orientations towards development.
The ?t2-value of .porcoptions of thc struotural characteristic of bureaucracy in Punjab vis-a-vis development is 8.6 for 2 degrees of freedom, It is significiant at 5 per csnt level of probability for 2 degrees of freedom. To sum up, the I'z-test sbows that the data would lead us to helieve that in Punjab there is good association betwoen the officials' perccption towards their clubbed values of bureaucratic characteristics and their orientation to
Orlentation
2Zg
gAR
DTAGRAM NO.16
MADHYA PRAOESH
Percenfoge
High
AU
Modro
C
ie
Low
High Moderote
Low
STRUCTURAL
2r0
development, and that the stractural charactoristics of bureaucracy in Punjab are not in dissonance with development'
of officials having high levels of perceptions about buroaucratic characteristics are marginally higher than the corresponding
percentage of officers
In Madhya
it i, .ruttt. in the case of moderate and low perceptions of the that two variables. The differences'in the variables are so little
ihe valuo of
1,2
is only 0'15 which is insignificant' Thus, it orientacan be concluded that in Madhya Pradesh, tho officials' no correlationship witb tion towards bureaucratic values has
their develoPment oricntation. Inter-State Variations
far as the structural characteristics of tbe bureaucracy in thc percep' two States are concerned, there is diversity in the value of Punjab Government attacb tions of the officials. The ofrcials than higher values to the structural characteristics of bureaucracy their counterparts in Madhya Pradesh'
So
On the whole, the above findings clearly indicate that the pace of development cannot be accelerated through a very rigid udhatao." to the Weberian bureaucratic oharactcristics; nor it seems possible for development to proceed in the organisations having iow values with regard to structural characteristics' Thus it may seem essential to consffuct a bureaucratic oraganisa' tion even for achievement of developmental goals but without also disproves making the organisation as an end in itself' This tho hypothesis that in India there is any significant difference in the value perceptions of the ofrcials whether belonging to devolopment or non'development departments towards thc
Weberian characteristics of bureauoracy'
S oclo - Per
The relative importance that tho officials attach to some socio-personal values deeply affocts thelr performance
of the in the
Orientation 23f-
:.
organisation. In ao earlier Chapter we examined the respcctive value perceptions of the development officials in Punjab and Madhya Pradesh towards two of such characteristics, namely, tbc integrity of charactor and the equality of individuals, In this section we propose to establish the correlationsbip between the official perception of such values and their devclopment orientation.
Integrity of Character
lntegrity of character is an essential socio-personal value which of all.Government officials. No ofrcial can be efiective in his activities if he succumbs to undue pressures of all kinds and begins to compromise the principle of integrity with expediency. As revealed through their statements, it has already been noticed that the ofrcials both in Punjab and Madhya Fradesh attach high values to the quality of integrity of character. Table 8.6 gives the comparative perceptions of the officials about intorgrity of character and its relationship to the developis *oquired
mental orientations.
TABLE 8.6 Relationship bctween Integrity of Character and Development Oricntation by Statos
(Percentage) Punjab
Madhya Pradesh
Low tate
12.6
22.O
49.5
30.0
32.4
20.5
Development
X?-Value
47.6
20.0
(d.f.:2)
;19**
0.r3
it will
b seon that
,,7',
Bweaucratic
Value s in Deveilopment
Integrlty of Chargstel
furcentogg
trbderote Low
HE[-
ModerG DEvErrRtENt
Orientation
233
'
thc ofrcials attaching high values to integrity of character in Punjab. seem to have a lower orientation towards development, whil those attaching moderate and low values seem to be having greater oricntatioo towards development. Thus in punjab ofrcials seem to have attached much higher emphasis to the intogrity of character than dgvelopment. About 72 per cent of thc officers ofPunjab government attached high importance to integrity of character while only 43 per cent of tbe respondent officers gave high values to development, Compared to 15 and 13 per cent of the officers attaching moderate aad low valus respectivoly to the iategrity of character, 34 and,22 per cent of the officers had moderate and low perceptions about developmont.
Thc Xs.value for perceptions of th integrity of character of the developmental bureaucracy in Punjab was very hrgh at 17.79 wnich is very significant statistically even at I per cent level of probability for 2 degrees of freedom. Thus, association. between prceptions of integritv of character and orientation towards development is significant. The two variablos are. interrelated in Punjab, suggesting tbat integrity of character is. fundamcntal for any program.of development.
In Madhya Pradesh it is observed (Bar Diagram No,l7) that: the percentage of officials attaching high values to the intcgrity of character is marginally higher than tbe correeponding percentage of ofrcials attaching the same value to developmentThe saEe observation can also be made in the case of ofrcials attaching low values to integrity of character and corresponding. low orientation to development. But the percentage of officials attaching modcrate valuc is marginally lowei than the officials having moderate orientation to development.
The Xr-value is only 0.13 which is very insignrficant statistically at 5 per osnt level of probability. Thero is thus no correla. tioo betwcn the two sete of valub scales. The aciherence to principles of the integrity of character and the progress of development soems to be indepcndent of each other. A comparison batwecn the scorcs of officials in Punjab and Madhya
234
Bureaucratic Valses
Devebpment
Pradesb officials' score on this value and their relstionsbip with development orientation, on the whole, gives an imprcssion that while there is .good association btween the prceptions on integrity of character and officials orientation to development in Punjab, there is no such relationship between the trryo in the caso of the officcrs in Madhya Pradesh.
TABLE
8.7
EtsE --M;A;---Low
rate
Punjab
Madhya Pradesh
EUE--MoA;---Xow
faI e
Equality of
Individuals
Development
53.9 43.2
'37.3 34 8
6.94"
8.8
46.4
22.0
47.6
33.3 32.4
0.04
20.3
20.0
I2-Values
(d.f.:2)
high valuos to this eharacteristic exceeds those who have high orientation to devclopment. Similar is the case with the officiale
attaching moderate value to
this
charaoteristic
dingly have moderate orientation to development. But the number of offcials attaching low value to this cbaracteristic, though very small, has corrcspoudingly larger percentago of officials having such orientation to devcloprnent. It, thereforo, follows that officials who nay not attaoh high value to equality of individual may stilt be oriented towardo development.
who
correspon-
&
Developpent
al
rientat
ion
235
In respect of Madhya Pradesh, there is no signifrcant diffe' retrce between the percentage of officials attaching high' moderate and low values to the cquality of individuals and their corres'
ponding orientation towards development. From the Bar Diagram No. 18 it may been seen that high and modorate values of perceptions of the offi:ials in Punjab Govern' meot in respect of equality of individuals exceeds their high and moderate orientation towards development. The low values attached to the equality of individual is very small compared to those of development.
which is significant at 5 per cent level of probability' Thus it soems tbat there is good association between the principle of 'equality of individuals and development orientation.
The X2-valuo of the charactristic of equal treatment of individuals vis-a-vis development performance of Punjab is 6'94
on the other hand, the percentage of 'officials with high value perceptions to the equality of indivi' duals is marginally lower lhan the peroentage of officials
In Madhya
Pradesh,
development. The percentage of offi,cers with moderate and low valus perceptions on equality of individuals are marginally higher than their correspondiug lpercentage of ofrcials having developmsnt orientation.
to
The X'z-valuo of equality of iodividuals vis'a-vis development 'is oniy 0,04 which is very insignlficant for 2 degreos of freedom at 5 per cent level of probability. Thus the principles ofequality of individuals followed by the officials engaged in developmen' 'tal activities in Madhya Pradesh is independent oftheir orienta'
towards develop;nent. The two perceptions are not correlatcd although the ofrcials whilo remaining conscious drwards dovelopment goals were also fouod to be inclined to observe the principle of equality in their doalings with their *tentele.
tion
236
.-
RNJAS
MADHYA PRAOSH
Fercen tgge
ttigh Moderorc
Low
237
In an carlicr Chapter, an examination was made about the prception of the ofrcials engaged in development tasks in both the States of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh with regard to their socio-administrative values. The socio.administrative value chosen was tho officials' status-consciousness along with their senior ofrcials' attitude of keepibg their junior officers as a distance and the extent of freedom enjoyed by the junior officers to discuss freely their official and persooal problems with tb6
senior ofrcers etc.
that exists
An attempt is being made here to determine any associatioo between these value perceptions and orientation TABLB 8.8
Socio- Administrative Values and Development by States
towards development.
__
Madhya Pradesh
High
Moderate Low
23.0
22.O
2t.0
20.0
(d.f.-2)
As can be seen from the Bar Diagram No. 19, tbat the pattern of association between thsse two values is similar itr both the States of Punjab and Madhya Pradesh. With regard to thc high value perceptions, the orientation towards development seem to be slightly higher than the high values on the socioadministrative axis, while for both the moderate and low values,
orientation towards development
238
EAR
AAGhMI NOl9
MAOHYA P.RADESH
v7-'
Soc
Develogrnenl Frrcenroge
Orientation
239
vis-a-vis The lC2-values for socio'administrative characteristics and Madhya Pradesh a.nJ"ptg"l u* verylow both for Punjab om;i;i" They are b.07 and 0'29 respoctivelv which. are verv per cent level of ;;;;i-6.""; for 2 degrces of" freedom at 5 valucs of the' otr"U"Lifiry. Thus the present socio'administrativo their orienta' with iil"l"itl" u*u the states are not correlated Bar Diagram No' the tion towards development' From both to be clear that there is a tendency 19 and Tablc 8.8 it seems about states ;;;;; il-;m;als in both theIloweverto be conscioustreither this factor has ln"i, .-ru*, as administrators' their orientation towards development' ntrpia 'il;;';;t ""t ioferred that officials whether engaged in deve,;;
ilffi;il
;;;;-;;t*t
non'dovelopmental, tasks share the socio'atlministrative values and type of perceptions towards the developmental activities does the fact that they are engaged in status ;-r';;;-;;v difference in their feeling about their
or
same
coosciousness'
P ers onal Combined C ort elations of Socio' Oientation tive Values with Duelapment
antl
Socio-Administr a-
-like.integrity Wehaveeraminedtheindividualrelationship...betweensocio-of peiceptions oersonal values of tn. om.iuts' of individuals and socio'administrative perfor""J.q*litv iit" .,*us consciousncss' etc' with development Let ue Pradesh' ""i,ir, .""""i",n. States of Punjab and Madhya values with thoir of those ."-t*. ,n combine'l relationship gives these valuo com' Tablo 8'9
ffi;il;
;:;il;
orieqtation'
parisons. values on association of sooio-personal and socio-administrative perceptions punjab only the high in From.the Bar Diagram
No'
20
iririlp*J
iiisclear that far excecds' uioot .o"io-p"rsonal and socio-administrative values the picturc is revcrse ;f" fiti fttitntions of development'whilo it seems possible to il;;;i."d.rate and low values' Thus of officials having infer that in Punjab although the pcrcentage
p"i*pai"ns of socio'-personal and - socio'adminidrative uof".t i. vory high, the percentagp of officials having correspon-
ilgi
Bureaucr
atic
Values in Development
TABLE
8.9
Hlgh Modcfare
Socio-persooal
Low
High
and socio.adm-
inistrative
values
Development
X'z
14.8 22,0
Value (d.f
:2)
3.s3
tions on.socio-pers6n2l nad sss;o.admioistiative ,.Jtl, ..., ,o be associated with a liute n:gle. perceni;g"li-.inliuj, ha";oe the same orientation towaras aevelop*."tl li ,Ii]'nn"r"rorr, be concluded that the existence of ievelopmentlrientation io individual offcial is more or .less pereonal to him and such a^n orientation is not. likely to be atrected Uy tne-Oidereo"", io socro-personal or socio-administrative values as thc officers on the whole tend to share thc same value percptions.
dingly high orientation to deveropment is srighdy lower while the percentage ofofrqials having moderate and low value perccp-
rn Madhya Pradesh high perceptions of socio_personat and so:io-administrative values margioalty falr Joii 'oi tnu nign pT:ellio,ns of development functions inif. ,n. f"r_* is marginally higher than its counterparts in casc of moderate and low values of development.
The X,2-values for thc two characteristics are 3.53 respectively for Punjab and Madbya pradcsh
cally insignificant at 5 per cent levil of proUabitity for 2 d"gr*u of freedom. Thus thcrj scems to be no signincaai
assooiation
Orlentation
241'
Soco
VOlues
F?rsonol
e Soco- o dminislraliw
OevelOgment
Percentogc
High
50c10
Modemie
PERSONAL ANO SOCIO AOMINTS1RATIVE VALUES AND OEVELOPMENT
212
i, .
'
'
between the combined socio-personal and rocioadministrative values ofthe administrators with thir development
oilrotufioo
Let us now examine the correlationship between thc value of rationality observed by the ofrcials both in punjab and Madhya P-radesh with respect to their dcvelopment o.i.*uiioo. Tablc No. 8.10 gives the statistical scores on both the dimensions.
TABLE 8.IO
Rationality and Development by States
(Percentage)
Characteristics
Fdf
Rationality
Development
tAA-a
rate
51.5
Punjab
Madhya Pradesh
Iqtsh-fr;Ae--Zow
rute
22.0
48.6
20.0
Iz-Value
(d.f.:2;
2[ prescnts a graphic illustration of the inter-relationship. It will bc noticod that in tbe State of Punjab the high and moderate scores on the observancc of rationality are given by 23 and, 26 per cent of ofrcers while more than half of the officers gave tow scores on the same characteristic. In Madhya pradcsh scores are similar to those in Punjab. On the other band, tho corresponding scores on development orientation at high lovols far exceed ih. ,"oru ut the same level in the same dimension both in punjab and Madhya Pradesh namely 43 and 48 per cont respectively. It can, therefore, bc scen that thc officials attaching low perception to observance of rationality in their doalings with the public and clientele and in discharge of thcir duties are. proportionally larger, but have lcss orientation towards dcvclopmcnt. At the
same
Orientafion
243
Rotionotity
furcen toge
Moderote
44 1.7)l
Lo$,
244
same time a larger percentage of officials may have higher orientation towards development but the samc numbet may not have higher perception about rationalitv in their behaviour.
lopment orientation which are as high and significant as 19.55 and 24.14 respectively in the two States however, show a great deal ofassociation between the two characteristics. lt canlhus be suggested that the officials engaged in development work in both the States would have to depict a greatei rationality in their behaviour if the goals of development are to be realized to the greatest extcnt. The present situation of somewbat low or moderate emphasis on rationality by the officials concerned might be a reason for a partial achievement in the realisation of developmental goals.
devo-
Authority and Development The second behavioural value that is sought to be corralated with development orientation of the officials is the authodty
exercise
that they
in the organlsational situation, This is the different Ievels of ihc officials that they work with. The value scores had alrcady been examined in an earlier Chapter. Table 8.ll and Bar
reflected in their behaviour towards
TABLE
8.1I
Madhya Pradesh
Mode;-
ristics
' rAle
Low
26.0 20.0
rate
5.8
Authority
Development
X,2-Value
22.0
(d.f.:2)
Bureawcratlc Chatacteristics
ZZ
rAuthoritY
Percentoge
lbderotq
Low
High
Moderote
246
reproduction of the correlationship of this value with devclooment orientation. From both the Table and the Bar Dagram, it wilt be observed that in Punjab, only a small proportion of the officials have low score on the behavioural value rclating to authority and the combined proportion of officials having high and mode rate valuos on this characteristic is-as high as 94 per cent. Ifowever the percentage of ofrcials havin! correspondingly high and moderate degree of orientation toward development is 78 per cent, while the low degree of orientation toward
is shared by correspondingly higher percsnmge of officials i.e. 22 per cent as against 6 per cent of thi officials attaching low value to the authority aspect of their behaviour.
development
In Madhya Pradesh, however, the percentages. of officials sharing high and modcrate perceptions of the behavioural value of authority are only marginally lower than their percentages showing the same degree of orientation towards development. It is marginally in the opposite direction for the low
value.
logsenl-as revealed by the insignificant value of Xs, namely 1.57, The exercise of authority has no influence on development orientation of the officials, The differences between the two States could possibly be explained by the fact that in Punjab, the authority system is morc or less siablized 4fter ao initial progress in development, while in Madbya pradesh, the devclopment organizations being only io their critical stagos of growth, the authority system is not that ingrained. It thus proves that for a programmo of achieving rapid development, a rigid authonty system may not be helpful in the initial stage$ until the development organisations, ggt stabilized. After the
The Ie.values of these characteristics namely authority and development orientation in punjab, is B.O wnich is statisti_ cally significant at I per cent level of probability for 2 dsglssg of freedom. This means that there is a high degree of agsociation between authority and developmcnt oricntation while in Madhya Pradesh authority of offcials is not related to deve-
Orientation 24t
of stablization, bowever, the authority system that develops may not necessarily hinder the proccse ofdevelopConbined aorrelationship
of all the
Behavioural Values of
io far examined the relationship between tho individual bebavioural characteristics of developmental buroaucracy in Punjab and Madya Pradesh in relation to their developmcntal orientations. We now examine the inter'relationship of the clubbled perceptions of all bohavioural oharacteristics. of the developmental ofrcials in these two States in respeet of their developmental orientation. Table 8.12 gives the average scotes of tbe officials on all behavioural characteristics aod their development orientation by States.
We have
TABLE
8.I
States
Charccteristics
Punjab
Madhya Fradesh
E@--MA;--6v
'rate
High
rue
All
Behav3
r.8
25.4
22.O
39,8
31.4 32.4
28.8 20.0
lopment
X2-Value
42,2
34.8
47.5
1.50
8.t2
the Bar Diagram No. 23 that in Punjab, scores on high valucs of all behavioural characteristics almort equals the scores on high levels of development while the scoreg
248
gAR
,DIAGRAM NO. ?3
PUNJAB
MADHYA FRADESH
tZ f-]
Bureaucratlc Characteristics
&
Developmental
Orientatlon
249
scores of Development oricntatiol corresponding values on development. only erceeds marginally in case of scores on high and moderate values of all behavioural characteristics. On tbe whole the
of the combined behavioural characteristics like authority and rationality in Punjab is not associated with the
association
In Madhya Pradesh
Madhya Pradesh. lt probability for 2 degrees of freedom in Punjab, but significant in Madhya Pradesh. It meam that the oflficials' combined perception of their behavioural characteristics of rationality and authority has correlationship with their development orientation in Madhya Pradesh. In Punjab the combined effect of all behavioural characteristics has no relationship with
their development orientation.
SUMMARY
This chapter has been concerned with an aoalysis of the relationship ofthe perception of aspects on bureaucratic values with their development orientation. It has been notd that the scale values of perceptions of the officials about hierarchy are independent ofthose on orientation towards developmcnt in both the States of Punjab and Madbya Pradcsh, although high values of pcroeptions of hierarchy exceed the high values of perceptions about orientation towards development and moderate and low values of perception of hierarchy fall short
230
of
perceptions on dovolopment
on dcvelopment orientation and the low insignificant valuc of X2 explained the independence of thc two variablos namely the bureaucratic characteristic of hierachy and orientation towards devclopment.
Madlya Pradesh the scores of the officials on hierarchy were marginally higher or lower than the corresponding scores
In
The scores of the officials of both the Governments of Punjab and Madhya Pradssh on their perception of division ofduties-one of the structural oharacteristic of bureaucracy and their orientation towards development were not also iutcrrelated as the X2-values of the structural characteristics of division of duties and developmental oricntaiion are statistically insignificant. Thus the present structurc of division of duties amotrgst the oficials of Madhya pradesh, eogaged in develop. mental activities noither impedes nor helps the dovclopment
activities. Thc ofrc-ials of Punjab are very particular about the oboervance of prescribed rules and procedures. High values givcn to thc_ system of rules by the ofrcials engaged ia dwelofmental
tasks excccds the high scores on orientation towards development u,hereas on moderate and lower valucs attaehed to tho system of rules fall far short of the corresponding scores on orientation towards development with thc result that thc ?("value is very significant. Thus the present system of strict a.nd procedures also serves as a corretating ::a^T:::" lo,tul:r
in
punjab.
the scoros on the observanco of rules by the officers engaged in dcvetopmeatat activities are cither greater or smaller thatr thc correspondirg scorcs on orientation towards devclopment and tho lz-vatue is very insignificant. Thus there i. no .orr.iuti-onrh-i-p b.t*.ro the officials' observance of rules uoO pr*.Ouiu, 'and their
and procedures
In
Madhya pradesh
& Developnental
Ot ient atio n
251
Examining the relationship of the perceptions of officials engaged in developmental tasks in Punjab on impersonal treat ment of thcir clientelc and their orientation towards develop' ment, we fnd very high values attached to impersonality far .exoeeding the high perception on development orientation with a sharp reverse picture for modefate and low values attacbed do the two characteristics. The result is that the I,s-'ialue is 30.42 which is signifioant at I per cent level of probability for 2 degrees of freedoo. The ofrcials' perception of impersonali$ {n Punjab is, thus, strongly associated rriith their developrnent
orientation. The same situation docs not exist in Madhya Pradesh. The observance of the principle of impersonaiity by the ofrcials is not related to their orjentation towards develop'
Inent.
that in Madhya Pradesh, the observanco of the principle of impetsonality by the officials might not have been a hiodrance towards their corrosponding developmcnt orientation, but as the caso of Punjab .illus atcs, a too strict an observance of impersonality by ofrcials in their -dalings has not proctuoed the righi development orientation in the values of the officials, The orientation of ofrcials towards dcvelop' 'ment has thus to be conditioned by the diversifred requirement
It
is possible
of
officials ' of the structural hierarchy, division of dutiss' charcteristics of bureaucraoy, system of rules and impersonality has correlatioo with their devclopment orientation in Punjab but not in Madhya Pradesh'
of the
In respect of strirctural characteristics of bureaucracy and its inter-relationship with development orientation of the officials officials there is some inter'state difference in the perceptions of of Punjab in the two states' The officials of the Goverument of bureauattach higher values to thc structural characteristics The percep' cracy tban their counterparts in Madhya Pradesh' tion of the officials about impersonality in Punjab are correlated with their perception about development' The trend of high' ooderatc and low vsluos about the sttuctutal characteristics of
2s2
bureaucracy in the two States is, however, somewhat similar, On the whole it can be eaid that the pace of deveroprnent is not impeded tbrough an adherence to the weuerian bureuucrati"
of
adherence
as
in the
moderate and low values given to integrity of character were much smaller than their orientation to development. This resulted in large increase in the Xr-value which became very significant at 17.'79 for 2 degrees of freedonr at 5 per cent level of probability. The integrity of character of the officials of Punjab has therefore strong association with tbeir orientation
towards development.
On socio-personal values, a very high emphasis was given to the integrity of character by the devclopment officials ofpunjab cornpared to their orientation towards development white the
In
engaged in developmental
the present level of the integrity of character of the officials activities has no relationship with
attached by the officials to integrity of character are more or less equal to those given to orientation towards development. This gave very low and insignificant value of X,z at 0.13. Tbus
low
values
In Punjab high values of perceptions in respect of equal treatment of individuals were indicated by 53.9 per cent of the respondent officials and low valuos of perceptions by g.g per cent ofthe offlcials compared to high and low values of43.2 and 22.0 per cent of the officials respectively in favour of orientation towards development giving the Xz-value as 6.94 which is statis. tically significant. There is, therefore, good association between the observarc-of principles of equality of individuals bythe officials in Punjab and thoir orientation towardi development.
In Madhya
values attached
equality of individuals. were either marginally higher or lrwer to devclopmeni oriintatlon. The X,r_
Pradesh, however, the high, moderate and low by development officials to the principle of
Orientation 25t
between value is insignificant at 0.04 indicating no relationship principles of equality of treatment by lbe oOtttuui.. of
inu
orientation" om"iats of Madhya Pradesh and their dovelopment in that State' The two variables are independent
status conscious' there is no associa' o.s.1"], vis" a-vis. development oriEntation; developmention between the officials, scale values and those on Madhya Pradesh.' There is a iul otit","rioo either in Punjab or the officials in both the States to be conscious ;il;;;;""gst bas neither stat-us as administrators, alrd this factor "U"ltitt "ii nor helped their orientation towards development' irop*ait.a and in aoutyriog the combined relationship of socio'personal orientatiotr' so"io-admiJirtrative values with the development the perception of we find that there is no associaton between ";;;;;;;;tsocio-personal and socio-administrative
like
ffi;
in the two States' uu1o". una these on developmental orientation It may be conciuded, however, that.the existence,of'Jevelopment or less persotral to orieniation in individual officials is more the *".t uo o,i.ntutioi it not likelv to be affected bv as values ive differences in socio'personal or socio'administrat valuc percepttons' thc off&cers tend to share the same
;;; ;;;
Punjab and Madhya orlsntatioc LiiJi"ritt and its correlation wittr their dev:toprent these two attached to ; fi";'*td" divergence il values of high and low values variables, specially in extreme cases there i, a gooct coirelation between rationality and-developmeLt values' orientation in both the States as indicated by signiflcant Punjab and Madnya Pradesh ofx3 at 19,55 and 24.14 for officials respectively. It can further be inferred that the of rationality in their io* perceptions to obsorv&oce "ti""ti"gwith the public and clicntele and in discharge of their dealiogs have no cotduties-may be proportionally larger' But- they towards development' At the respondinily largei orientaiion in,both the States of same time a larger percsntage of officials have higher orientation p""pU Uianya Pradesh may have higber "ta developmont but the same number may not towlrds
tbe Governments of As regards tbe perc'eptions of officials in P;;J with regard to the principle of
thercfore, be suggested that observance of rationatity as a behavioural value is associated with developnrental orientaiion.
of orientation towards development. fnr.or-Ui'"j proportion gf gmcia! having high and moderate *f"., is as higi as 94 pr cent against 7g per cent ot ofrcers "r-'"*lority high fiaving and moderate scores on develsprnsnl orientation, 1n Madhya Pradesh the percentages of officlals sbaring n*n moderate perceptions of the behavioural value ""0 of aut-noriiy are marginally lower than their percentage showing the same degrees of orientation towards development. It i, *urginuity io the opposite direction for the low value.
viz.6
per cent
of
thc
The Xs-test shows correlationship between the values of and devetopment in the 3tate of punjab, bur not 3tlh:tily in Madhya Pradcsh. The results howcver, demonstrate that lbr a programme of achieving rapid development, a rigid authority system may not be helpful in the initial stages of ievelopment, but once the system is stabilized aDd esb;ished the authoritv system that comes into being may not necessarily hinder the process of development.
While examining the relationship of the clubbed behavioural , characteristics of tbe bureaucracy and its
orientation, we
like rationality and authority has thus not hindered the oftcials, development orientation in Madhya pradesh but not so in punjab. The findings in this chapter should be helpful in the validatlon or otherwise of our hypolfreses that had been constructed in the beginning of the study.
Punjab and significant values in Madhya pradesh. The com_ bined effect of the bchavioural characteristics
development
Xr in
9
Bureaucratic Values and DeveloPment : An overview
A fundamsntal assumption that has prevailed throughout tho prcsent study has been the acceptaocc of the concept of development as an aspect of change "that is desirable broadly predicted, or planned and administored or at least influenced by developmentalactioo."i Development adminishationhas' therefore, bson takan to be synonymous with the carrying out qf planoed chango in the conomy (in agriculturg, or industry' o'r the capital infra.structure supporting either of theso), and to a lesscr extont, io the sooial services of the State (especially eduoation and public health). The most direct forms of governmental action are influenoed and executed through its bureaucratio apparatus, and in turn the bureaucracy atso influ' encs th actions of othcr groups and agcnts as well as lhe efforts of the eotire community. The whole pfocoss, howover'
presuppo$es
civil servants, who nsoessarily accept devclopmont as their paramount goal. Tho issue of using oxisting bureaucratlc uppurutu, for development purposes is. linked with tho ways of romoving what most civil servants porccive as thrcats to
approval
system
of
bureaucracy-comprising
a band of
their personal or institutiond survival and of encouraging more productive attitudes and behaviour. Thc bureaucratio
dcvelopmcntal goals may be possible,only through ohuogot in their social, administrativo and political valucs'
of
256
The basio proposition underlying the present study outlined in great detail in the first chapter tnut tn" old traditional values of the Weberian and Colonial bureaucracy place impe di. ments in the achievement of developmental goals had been the theme of many learned work in this 6eld. Anv mean neful analysis o[ an administrative system requires a deeper insight into the value.orientations of the administrators. bur investi_ gations in this study have focussed attention on some of the administrative and behavioural values of the civil services at the grass root level with a view to enquire into the impact of the bureaucratic values on the adnrinistrative performance and to discern wbether ao anti.Weberian moclel of the administrative system and the process of de-bureaucratization can holp meet the requiremeots ofachieving the developmental goals of a developing society.
developmental activities as also of the Rivelue D-epartment, responsible for revenue collection representing the non-developmental activity of the government for the puiposee of
programmes and of the Irrigation Dcpartment who are responsiblc for agricultural irrigation work iepresenting the two
We began this study with the consideration of the value perceptions of the officials ol' the Srate Ele ctricity Boards who are engaged in the development of the rural slectrification
peroeated greatly into developnrental endeavours. A tehsildar, the most important man in the so.called non-developmental department, is now very activeiy engaged in developmental planning, arranging for loans, agricultu;al inputs and a host of other developmental inputs. In fact no'progr"ss in rural development is possible without his active suppiit-.vro tnougt !e laf be generally regarded as an ofrcial unconnccted with the developmental tasks of a devefoping country, in" Oi.tlo"tion between the dovelopmental and "oo-O.ojopnrrotal tasks is made in this study solely with tne purpose ii compars the . value systems of offcials performiug t*o aiif*.Jtur*r.
Revenue is treated even today as a non.plan department and has ostensibly no developmental tasks to pertbrm, the officials' responsibilities have
this
257
VALIDATION OF HYPOTHESES
the beginning of this study' its findings' while others fufor, of ihrs" hau" found support in of Lave revealed marginal nuiiutioot' The most important India whcther engathose hypotheses that the bureaucracy in
' share tbe in dtuatopmental or non'developmental tasks proved' The s-a.e role perceptions and values has been truly values shows the same lr.eptioo oi officials of their bureaucratic pattorn in all the three depattments irrespective of tho ofiasks assigned to them' The structural characteristics
g"a
;;ii";t
r",",.
of oi uurruo"tu"v, viz. bierarchy, division of labour' system imiersonality are predominant in both segments of rrf"r ""J adninistration and in different territorial areas' The interand these departmental difierences, if any, are only marginal' any organisational reasons' but from at.t out not because of
p"r*onut value considerations of the o{ffcials concerned' How' in.r, differences have been noticed in the order of high values utt*trca by tho officials to those characteristics' While the to officials engaged in developmental tasks attach high values
of impersonality, system of rules, hierarchy and division in the non'developduiies in that order, the officials engaged system of mental tasks also attach high values to impersonality' in that order' In ,of.t, alnirion of duties and bierarchy other words ths value positions for Division of Duties and hierarchy get interchanged io tht two activities' demonstrating that impersonality and system of rules are still tho most tasks importani guiding values for the officials irrespective of the
performed.
The inter-State variations in this respect also follow the percentage of same pattern. Curiously enough while a greaterstate tban Madhya Pradesh officiais in Punjab, a moie developed the show high atiachment to these structural chatacteristics'levcl Madhya Pradesh attaching same o..o"n,# of officials in ii t"r"ti it gomewhat less, suggesting that in the initial stages oi Jrnutopt"ot, a littls neifuitiry in the existing systcm of is pcrhaps desirable and necessary; but once
burcaucraiiaation
258
a- programme gets going thcrc ie evcry tendency on th part of the ofrcials towards increased Uur.uuoratiraiioir.
amongst the socio-personal valucs, a greater proportion of officials attached high value to integrity of character (at leasf ostensibly) followed by equality of individuals. The value perceptions do not reveal any significant inter.departgenlal differencos. it appears that the nature oftask performcd .Thus by the officials has had no impact on sbaring these valuo perceptions. Howcver, with respect to socio-iultural ard socio"adminisirativs .values of caste/class considerations and stalus-consciousncss, there were significant intcr_departmental as well as intcr-State variations. While a greater percntage of offcials engaged in tleveloping activilies in puniab showed less attachments to these value ofientatioor. grautff percentage of ofrcials engaged in non-devetopmental " activities showed greater attacbment to these vatues. The intcr.state differences also reflect the some pattrn officiats in Madhya Pradesh showing less orieniation -moretolf,.r" values than in Punjab.
'
greater status.consciousness thao the ofrcials engaged in developmental tasks in both the states. This supports the largely held view that the officials in the traditional departmcnts arc bound to bo more bureaucractic than in the newly established dcvclopmental agencies.
tas&s drsplayed
in
non-devclopment
. Similarly with respect to the behavioural values, the findings indicato tbat tho offcials of the so.called non-development department tend to be more rule-oriented, authori ty-conscious and rationat than the officials .og"g.d in Cwetoprentat tasks. The inter-Statc variations aie'sigoincaot. Grcater pefcentage of officials in Madhya pradesh had low attachmcnts to these bohavioural values comparcd to that of nun;af, wn.rc jl: i""iO.."T of.devolopment was higher. This again supporrs tne conclusion that in the initial stagcs of thc estiblishment of ofan organization, when tho rolo-eipectations ana goal-percep. tions of the officials ere not quito cliar, thcy i;d-;, demon-
Overview
259
Etatc grester flexibility in tbeir behaviour than in the obsorvanco of bureaucratic values in the agcncies whicb havc cxisted over a period of time. This oonclusion is also evident from th-c fact that the value-perception of ofrcials cngagcd in a
remains more or less identical and on the same pattern in the two States
irespective of their geographical locations and the nature of work performed. On tho wholo, thus, the first hypothesis that the bureaucracy in India whether engaged in devolopmental or non-developmental tasks share the same values and roleperceptions, is truly proved.
The sccond hypothcsis whether a different sst of values, orientations and attitudes is necessaty for the officials cngaging in developmental tasks also gets good support from the findings of the study. The analysis of empirical data in both the States clearly show that the percentage of ofrcials engaged ia developmental tasks who could be regarded as having the right type of developmeot oricntation varies only between 4l to 48 perc,cnt. It follows that a larget proportion of the ofrcials have a more bureaucatic attitude, which hinders the procosses of change and dovelopment. There is thus a need to inculcate a constllation of a different value systems otber than the strictly bureaucratic ono amongst all officials, but particularly a&ongst thosc engaged in acbieving dovelopmont targets. An ofrcial having grcater dcvelopment orientation is likely to be one who could show more flexibility in the intcrpretation of system of rulcs, and less rigidity in the observancs of thc principlos of hicrarchy, and impersonality. Amongst the behavioural values which secm to be most cherished amongst the officials have been
the strict observanco of codos, rules and regulations and adhering to tbc principlo of rationality in decision-making. While from the ofrcials' poiot of view such valucs ensure thcm protection from unnccessary public criticism, the dovelopmental work which is most often situational, docs need some flexibility in the strict observance of the letterr of rules and rogulations. It thus scems desirable that for developmcnt purposes, the group of officials shr;uld be imbibed with different burcauoratic valucs than those who are eogaged in the non-developmental work.
260
reveals that the developmental ofrcials must po$ess a definitive attitude towards the decentralization of authority as well as encourage participative decision-making. The ofrcials engaged in developmental tasks do need to possss a different attitude of change and dovelopment orientation rather than ao attitude. of the maintenance of status-quo alone.
'zation of the developmental or non'developmental dpartmcnts is almost on the same par in both the statos, although one of the states is wetl developed while the other is still in the process .of devolopment. This follows that the officials' attachment to "the structural characteristics of bureaucracy aro not entirely incompatiblc with the processes of development. Thc frndirgs ven go to illustrate that a burcaucratic organization is some' 'what ossential to the processes of devolopment.
However, some
.characteristics
that the officials sbarc do come in conflict witb 'their developmental orientation. Whilc the pattern of values attached.to the 'integrity of cbaractot' and'equality ofindividuals'is more or lcss the same in the two States under study, the compatativcty low percentage of officials attaching high importance to 'equality of individuals' in both the States and particularly in tho dcvelopment dcpartments indicatos their incapability to absorb the due or undue pressures tbat arc often brought over thcm from difrerent guarters in the dischargc of 'their functions. Although the ompirical data does not reveal
"any significant variations on the attitudo of ofrcials to caste/claes considerations in their decision-making, it does not also show any sigoificant correlationship between the adherenco to caste/ class considerations , in the development and non.developmert departmonls of both thg Statos. Even the kind of preferential .treatBent that is constitulionally requirod to be shown towards
t An
Overuiew
261
the
actual practice. Some significant percentage of officials of tho Department of Irrigation in both the States sem to attach high imiortance to this value as compared to'that in the Electricity or the Reveoue department. This clearly supports thc welF prevalent belief that in the matter of opening of irrigation-d ucts
-or
weaker soctions
water channels, caste/class considerations docome into play, especially in a less developed State like that of Madhya Pradesb in comparision to that of Punjab' Interestingly the findings also indicate that the officials have a feeling that a greater pro' portion of the bettor'of population is not. prepared to give appropriate consideratioDs to the needs of the less prosperous oiti""*y, and on thcir own part they seem to be quite helpless in showing preference to the needy sections of the society'
Amongst the socir'administrative values, a high incidence of statuJ-conciousn:ss has been noticed both amongst the ofrcials working in all the three departments in both the States' Whilo this sort of perception is understandable to certain
xtent amongst the ofrcials engaged in the non'dovolopmontal the activity of Rivenue collection, the same is imperceptible in various casc oi officials engaged in development work, wbere the on the classes of ofrcials have to work as a team' Although in the whole incidence of status consciousness tends to be lowpr proportion developmental departments in both the Statos' the a to this colonial trait is still very high' stickin!
spirit of team-w;rk ig to be inculcated amongst the ofrcials' ,ii i, neccssry that such a value gets low priority and sooe
of omtiutt
If
also bo remembered that thc ofrcials' perception of status' consciousness tends to inctease in relation to the powr and authority that the ofrcials come to enjoy as a consequence of the growth in their developmental programmes and activities' Caro has to be takn to see that the influence of such growing authority is. not avetse either to the processes of decision.rnaking or to the accomplishment of developmontal objectives'
institutional doviccs to secure participative decision'making and team-work be introduced in the system. Howovor, it must
majority
of
262
officials in the development department show less orientation towards change and achievemeat of development targcts, A possiblo reason why the officials are trot able to develop a right orientation towards change and development. is the lack ofany motivation on their part to do so. Since the offcials' promotion policies aro largely governed by seniority, their performance has tess rclevance to their achieving the
reveals that the authority-oriented outlook of the ofrcials does come into conflict with the achicvement of developmental goals. Thus. the citizen.clientele relationship would have to be based on diferent value-pattcrn other than the authority and statusconsctousness.
The fourth hypothesis that the value constellation of the bureaucracy reflects the ethos of the social system from which the ofrcials are recruited gets a major support from the findings of the study. Although the majority of officials belonging to Class I and Class II services engaged in devolopment tasks are comparatively young in age, but a majority of these have an urban or a big town and a 'service.class' background. However,. in terms of economic factors such officials cannot be described to havs come from afluent classes, but they tend generally to come from the middle-class families. It is only in the Class III services, that a major shift is noticed in respcct of their socio-economic background, wherc majority of officials tend to come from lower or lower-middle class families in the society. Although thc findings do not attempt to provo that the officials belonging to a particular constellation of socior
actions in the performance of particular tasks, but these do a correlationship botween the valuc systems of the officials and their socio-economic bactground. Thc tcndency on the part of Class I and Class II officials to attach high values to hierarchy, authority and status-conciousnesg are in a way roflective of their socio.economic status that they onjoy in thc society. . Even the majority of Class III officials, who comc from a rclatively lower socio-economic background do show
reflect
economic back-ground tend to carry the same attitude in their work-environment and thereby Condition their decisions or
263
greater regard
feet
for the bureaucratic values once they dig their tho bureaucratic jungle irrespective ofthe fact whether they are engaged in developmental or non-developmental tasks.
in
Further, although the marital status ofthe officials does not bave any significant correlationship with their behaviour on the job but therr having to maintain a larger or loss number of dependents does have some bearing on their attitude towards the bureaucratic characteristics. The kind of hierarcby/ authority system that the majority of ofrcials have in their social set up is also reflected in their official-behaviour. Similarly the tendency of a majority of officials not to indulge in participative decision-making and of status-consciousness is indicative of the kiod of socio-economii ethos in which they had been brought up and continue to live and bring up their
families.
The fifth hypothesis, whether the possible inbuilt resistance of the svstem still continues to be based upon the old colonial traditions is also supported by the findings of the study. In an
elrlier chapter, it has been demonstrated that a majority of officers sbow a high orientation to the olubbed values of structural characteristics of bureaucr'acy. In thoir orientation
iowards their clubbed perception of. socio-personal and socio. administrative values as also the behavioural charactcristics they show the same high value patterns. In other words, the fact wbother they had been engaged in the development activities or not makes little difference to their orientation towards. beureaucratic values, Their orientation to soiio-personal, socio-adminisrrativc and behavioural values does not show any significant variations from that of their' soore on structural characteristic of the bureaucracy. It can thus be construed that the inbuilt resistanbe of the bureaucracy towards tho developmental programme is largely an extension of their arlier colonial traditions of a rigid bureaucratic system, whicb has not much diluted despite somo changes noticed in thsir behavioural pattem. The findings also point out that the pace of development cannot be accelerated through a very rigid adherence of the Weberian characteristics of bureaucracy, nor does it scem possible to suggest that a rapid programme of
264
en
debureaucratization would bo able to bring about accelerated progress in the field of development, Finally, the hypothesis whether the bureaucraoy in India has no clear concept, perception and cvaluation of its oapacities for developmental tasks is not strongly supported by the findings ofthe study. It appears that by and largo a rnajority of oflicials seem to feel that they possess the necessary skill and capacities to cope up with their developmental responsibilities, and at least half of these officials have a feeling that their education' training and experience was being properly utilized for develop'
mental tasks.
seems
minor percentage of these officials however, that their educational achievemcnts and training were not being utilized adequately. Thus it appears that the officials in their own perceptions secms to posses the necessary skill and capabilities for developmental work though at least one tbird of the ofrcials expressed grave doubt about their capacity to meet the challenging situations of the changing environment.
to believe
On the reciprocal perception of the villagers whether they think that the ofrcials possess the nocessary capacities and
skill to perform developmental tasks, opinions had been divided. About 40.42 percent of the villagers interviewed in both the States had been sceptical of the ofrcials' capacities to achievc developmental goals and targets, and only between 25-30 per cent of the beneficiaries felt that they possessed the right aptitude towards developmcnt. It is also significant to note that about half the rospondents in the villages felt that the officials had to be goaded for developmental work through the exercise of pressuro by the politicians or the party bosses. These facts indicate why many of the officials, although think themselves to be capable to discharge the duties of a developmenta; officer, find themselves unable to cop up with actual work onvironment and are unable most often to resist the pressures of the political leaders either for justified or unjustified causes. On the other haod a majority of the beneficiaries carried the impressiou, perhaps erroneously, that the ofrcials tend to be more acoomruodative to the requests of the political leaders.
: An
Overview
265
on buraucracy tbat in various scttings of development and have been conducted in different ecological framework seem to have firmly establi' shed the theory that the band of officials brought up in the
The findingr of a large number of studies
traditional administrative culture, and wedded to the Weberian model of bureaucracy is totally unfit to perform the responsibilities of devetopment administration, It has been argued again and again that the development administrato-rs have to be qiite flexibti in their approach, shed the existing formalism, be amiable in nature, ostgoing, people'oriented and should be wilting to takc risks and on'the'spot decisions without worrying for thi procedures, and the rules and regulations notwithstan-
dirg'
While the present study does not attempt to rebut this on thoory, nor do the findings indicate that such an attitude th. jutt of tho officials will not be conducive to attainment of dwelopmont goats, the study does point out certain limitations to a blanket acceptance of the above premises and in the process seeks to answer some questions having theoretical implications that had bcen raised in an earlier chapter'
fhe study clearly dcmonstrates that the values imparted by the colonial bureaucratic system, so far as its structural the organisation is concerned, does not necessarily stand in and industrial wa'y of development process. The agriculture
progr.r* that has taken place in Punjab since Independence has ieei attained through a hierarchical organisation with a system of rules, prescribed individual resp cnsibilities, and-the observation of impersonality on the part of the ofrcials' These are not always impediments to development' On the other of the offi' nnoO, ttttt" providi a framework for the operation of developmental goals cials, without which the accomplishment the bccomo difficult, if not altogther impossible' However' become dysfunctional when same very cbaracteristics tend to greater mphasis is laid on their observance instead of making ise of them 8s a tool towards lhe accomplishment of the tasks-
266
The same very fact that the state of punjab has moved to a position of rapid development and that *ith alt the structural characteristics of bureaucracy, the Government in Madhya Pradesh has embarked on a programme of development, show that the bureaucratic system per se is not inimical to develop.
ment.
Similarly
way of development, The high values attached by a very bigh proportion of the officials to the observance of rules and integrity of character suggests that notwithstanding the naturc of tasks, these are essential values which make a p-ublic service more dedicated. Our findings have not at all given any indication to the contrary view-poini that tbe non-observance of rule or a compromise with one's integrity will accelerate the process of development. These qualities are as much necessary in the public scrvices of a denrocratic developmental framework as they are supposed to have been tbe traits of rhe bureaucracy in India of the pre-Independenco days, Forone thing adherence to the rules gives the oficials a chance to 'defend themselves against unwaranted criticisms or attacks, fo1 another matter, it enables them to maintaio impartiality ,andin the face of enormous political and other klnds oi pressures us also to apply a modicud of . egalitarian treatment in making ths fruits of development available to people.
study that the pre-Independence burcaucratic traditions which train the officials to respct their political masters, to observe a system of rule and to maintain a high standard of integrity of character are not necessarily a stumbling block in the
of
the
dcvelopmental challenges.
the study does not portray that the attributes -SimilarJy of capability and honesty are irreievant- to development. In fact the findings clearly show a gap betwten the ofrcials, own perception and the villagers' perceptions of their capabilities for deveroprnent. Thus it appears that the most desirabre attribute of a development adnninistrator would be to be inherently capable of performing his development tasks. Here thc study certainly rcveals the weakness oi the officials, to faco
""pu.ity
An Overview
267
A lot has been written altl said about the result-orientatiotr does suggest u i"uJopttnt administrator. True, the study "f need for such an orientation on thc part of the officials' as tbe attitu-de is necesthe findings do bring out the fact that such an officials give duo ."iyftt ripid pace if development' If the ablo to secure consicleration to this value, they would be more ofthe politioians the ready cooperation of their own colleagues' work' But tlis and of the masses at large for developmental typ. of orientation' -all does not mean that io orior to achieve tuir
rules, regu|ations, procedures the officials should ignore result'orientation mean that the criteria florms. Nor does the be sacrifuirorrr, just dirtribution antl allocation of resoutces "i on the altar of their being result-oriented' An official fcod would of a result'orientcd
and
p"r*tJ"g,ne outlook
.:dmT:lJator to face socio-political uff .nuff.og.t ani opposition from all kinds of pcrson who would sacrifice .nniroo..-otr, tut noi the kind of able to get the prime values of his profession in order tobe along with his colleagues' suporvisors and politicians'
be necessarity a person
who would
system that Thus the kind of theorotical framework of a value posscss is the oac which to some th;;;;.hil;t officials must bureaucratic- character' extent has to be based on conventional and
istics,
of hierarchy, system of
;;;;"fty.
"-Jorpr.t"li
of administration goals bf a development for achieving the "oiy-J1tu*itine adminis'ration.However,thestudydoeesuggestsomemodifica. and behaviou' {ions in the socio'personal, socio'administrative administration' On theore' ral value patterns ;f a dovelopment have to be tical ptaoe, the valuc system of the ofrcials would searedinamannefinwhiohthenegativismofthedysfunctionminimum' For ;;;;;i;";.;;;;ttutioo are reduied to theout that a dove' of-the study point ,iit porp*t the conclusions (a) is flexible lopmental bureaucracy needs a framework whioh pragmatic, i'c', able-to take into oonsideralo'it, opttutioo, (b) is point ilt tnl "-is""oi"s or ine- circumstaqces from a practical based processes of view, (c) encouragcs open decision-making ooaitttot-uoadisoussionsamongcolleagues'(d)isoentered
debureaucroiized model
268
around client-oricnted philosophy, and (e) is laden with human for all espeoially for tho weaker. attompts havo been made by many theorists, such
boxes clients into specialized categories and forces the clients. to adjust to conditions as they exist, Becauso the bureaucracy suffers from tbe soarce resour@s and the clients ask for too much, the bureaucrats treat the clients impersonally. If the client demands special treatmcnt, or does not confbrm to tbe organizatiou definition of propor bobaviour, the clicnt is not treated well at all. White tried to reversc those patterns and suggested that instead of client as subordinate, rhe agency treated clients as peers. But that could not approximate those, ideals any morc than traditional organizations could be perfectly bureaucratic, And such an organization was never able to solve the problcm of scare resourocs, which is the primary cause of bureaucratization in public agencies,
evotve a theory ol structure that discar.Js bureaucracy in favour of more feiible forms of orlanization.2 Bennis painted a picture of a non.hierarchical oiganization,. temporary in its arrangements, governed by ability rather than by authority, with democratic methods of supervision. Hir model closely fits the needs of modern organisation with a specific task to perform in a rapidly changing environmcnt. Such.a model was highly successful in t4e USdin putting the. man to the moon. But it is doubtful wlether Bennis's theory will equally worh in an cnvironment of development where an amorphous clientele confronts a fragmented servicc-oriented institution such as an Electricity Board or an Irrigation Department. Clearly what is needed is a new-version of the iostbureaucratic theory appropriate to a client-centred organizatio n. Orior White came very close to discovering oo" ,urh alterna* l1ut,t A buroaucracy, in its purely idoal form, treats clients as. if they were the last layer in the organizational hierarchy. lt Warren Bennis
to
as.
In the samo vein, another attcmpt was made by Friedrick Thayer, a career public oxecutive turned scholar, wio attacked the principlc of bierarchy and suggBsted ..that orgaaization a!
'
An
Overvievt
269
;lslil i"""f".
cess of
of groups' reprcsenting collectlve will, wnere]college ihe solution to a problem' the various elements invotvtJ in In a way it is like would interloclc ,o *"p ooiil" lototioo' i"tii"e tn. organization pyramid on its side "5
the post'bure' is thus a lot of confadictions amongst structure that bureaucratic aucratic theorists about th. [i;;i
There
across organization
line' * a*ornu decisions' redesign the asscoblv cut that in administration' and plao systems a "pro'In place' he sees "f"",. bounoat-ies"'n its
undcr
couldsolvetheproblemsofdevelopmentoiheterogeoussociety post-blreaucratie tire that of India. All tb*;';;;il about -the. administrative of the. edge organizations are on the i;Ji;; i"oOt extrapolated frolD These can uu o"-Jtiu-t? research. "' can-^s1ggest that -wouraroat events. Similarly *tt-^ pttt*t studv more,appropriate be. the structural organizatio"n tluutsuch where (a) notwithfor developmental work i""rd ut flows to nti'ut'ntui-puitern' the authoritv, which ;;;J;-;;ctd Problems"(b) the persons withthe auiritv io :;ilil situations' "-uil"j Gr to tn"' ""oi*-ooication ,(c)- is client;; "tttc'og and professional . oriented, (d) encourages opto to problem solviogand mobility, and (e) ."t "[i""J"no" particiPativc decisions'
POLICY IMPLICATIONS what systen tho existing bureaucratic steps could be taken to mouid What tlen are policy in plications
of th study-- and
tobeabletoservetheneedsofadevelopmcntadministration? to make certain clranIn the frrst instance, it seems necessary of the bureaucracy that mieht ees in the structural compotrents theofficiars to operateand bring behaviour for about.the dcsired changes in the bureaucratic policy strategy developmental tasks' A three-pronged of "r"t"if.gbe adopted it tnit-tltp"tt ful ttAutiog. the number needs to especially inlbe orgaoiza' lcvels in tbe decision-maxing pio."$, clearly shown that tion ofthe fietd ofEccs' Oolt- fiodiog* have
;il...i;il;l;;;f
i;
Iu
delay on the part of the oftcials to take decisions on _promoting greater agriculturc production has Deen a source of constant irritation aiA OiscontJnt between the offcials and rhe beneficiaries, (b) tne omciairlill. field establishment shoufd be vested with reqoirit" O: ""ii""ty and power to take spot-decisions in the execution of dovelop. I ibJr mental targets, and (c) the functional division of the work between the officials should bo such as would .ncourage team work with a determined leadership and direction iD the implo_ mentation of development goals.
flexible so as to adapt itself to the situations at hand, obviating the need of referonciq and cross-references at iigt.iirorl, o, ut tbe Head euarters.
. The structural aspects of the development organization would have to be further moulded with a oiew 1o ,rruru opro communicatioh and professional mobility amongst the various levels of officiats. Ii is also neeessary to ,., tn? the system
to find appropriate solutions to the arising problems. Evidently at present the officials at these levels riceive only very scant attentiou in terms of the education and training necessary for the developmental process. Out of the two iofr"qu"ot ,oO insufrcient Refresher Courses thdt ars_ at present tJlO for tn" middle level officials only a few of these are able to attend
them.
capabilities, orientation of helpfulness, the oficials at every level of the administrative heirarchy have to be grilied through a regular preggs5 ofl training which would enable them to have a wroer understanding of tbe problems of the difforent groups of people at the grass root level and make them concerned
it is also necessary to make certain radical anunges ofthe incumbent officiars. If their orientation towards development has to match with the reciprocal perception of the beneficiaries, confiJence in their
in.the socialisation process
Secondly,
and block levele, the burcaucracy wields trormous power and prestige which in thc development context
At the district
t
.Development
An
Over.view
211
self-aggrandizoment.
;;fi1;;;";rganizer. .p"ciaiist, a "u"o!" most "-p"iir*,] p"rsonality. It-is "!tni important that the right rp ii titgf.
an inpJopr." ut. inoren and given proper orientation' Such programmes' iiuiduat has thus to undergo a series of training in'crease his own understanding of the ;;;;*h *ui"n rc could his locality-that orobtJms faoed by his nation, his state and the totalitv of ecological factors in [;;;;;J.nd-ing of he can rhioh he work.. He sbould bc made to think how best whose needs of the clients utifis. fti, speciality to meet the a*ttp*"ot he is concerned with' Suoh training programmes process' have to bc regularly a part of the official's socialisation recruitment to his progress at ;ight l'-; tni a"y or Lit ioitiul is not to- undermine diflerent levets of the organizatioo' This
tn'n..afororientationinthenewtechniquesaoddevelopmentto he himsclf is in the field of his own speciality' for whicb A constant -.interaction of' some xtent responsible to develop' aad the specialists. with..public.men' social ilili;b*is groatly improve r.i.oti*tt antl with higher level ofrcials will officials engaged in process of the
il;;;i;ii"s
prograomes' In the context of administration of developmcnt attitude of necessary that the offioials develop an it i, lrfi.oi-otitotutiool Remainiog under the law and subject to "f* ris; controts of accountability, a development administralor of decision' JoofA Uu forwardJooking in his approach in respectgroup' Not problems ol his clientele ;;tt"c and solving the cision'makiug' but only he should encourage participative- de a be in closo touch with the olient groups through rnotfu and ;;fi; "f.. fattern of fiequent consultation' information to has ;;?;*: ihe administrator communitv ,relatiooship and confidence' ievelop on a oote of mutual trust
in Finally, it wsuld further be neccssary to effcct changos theofrcial'ssoci,o'pcrsonal,socio'administrativc'iocio-cultural value systems, in oidor to effect desirod changes in his behaviour
272
towards his own colleagues, towards his subordinates, towards the pcople, and towards the political leaders with whom he. comes into daily contact. A collaborative effort ofthe officials, the common men and the public leaders need to permeate the developmental process. For the moral concern and personat
responsibility
of
coercive powers
could this be achieved is indeed a ticklish problem. If the officials could be made to realise the importance of the ideals of human dignity and social awareness in tb.eir dealings much ofthe problems arising from their ofrcial behaviour could be ri.ritigated. This demands, what a public administrationist has termed, a sort of creative intelligence botb at the administrative and political levels. Administration. is mannod by buman beings and is thc ssrvant of a courplex society. It is tru that the qualities of an administrator, which motivate him towards public good and public interests cannot be either tested at the time of their recruitment or imposed through a sct of training progfammes. But such values can certainly be inculcated through a well designed and integratcd programme of motivation matching their performance with a regularieward and puoishment system. This calls for a promotion and inccntive system^linked with their productivity aE also the weeding out of the unfits. The ofrcials would have al$o to be enabld to realiso their importaoce in their work, so that they do not feel simply a cog in thc machine. A project-team appioach in the reorganisation of administrative hiirarchy wouii have to be iniroduced. The bureaucrats have to be enabled to shed out their inhumane, technocratic, impersonal and a faceless imaga fulty ln; noncst lunctionaresproject their pubtic imagc oi impartlal ano ,1mcra]s^must and at the same time be closor to their subordinatcs and othsr segments of the sooiety *itn r*oa they havo to work without laorificing their concern for public interest against the individual,s interest,6
those cxercising the great legulating and oftho modern state, it is esseniial that their
-,Thy ultimately public bureaucracy 8tatrd8 in oeed of eratcat son8lttvity in order to serve publio intereet. public interesf actually is and how this could But what bc served
273
can best This is a never ending search' Public -interest bended lowards any U"-r"rnuO when puUlic policies are not and the various conflicts of ioterests are
urr*,
organisation
of
rationality
aid
NOTES
1 John
D'
varistiorg-on Three
and Clange (Now'
w,itti"t r'
simo
Aooroaches to Deielopment t
io.k,
2 For
Mc'craw
llili
'll:t#g*?ln',,,1['i;*Yl:i;,',t':,:h"f, P,"lilHilff'll;
Cummings putfi.Hng Co', 1977'l' '6tguoi"utioo :, A: Alt-e..r-native to 3 orion white, "Tno piatectrcai' 29 (January'Fobruary Bureau6acy", Public Aitmini-stration Re ew'
dtails of alisoussion
. 33il';ft3fu
to conpetition rhavor' An Enit to Hiercrchv' An Enit Viewpoint" 1973)' (Nw York, Now ". (University of Alabama
APPENDICES
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-3
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9c c\9 K3
r r |
at
rrr
69
-O
ao
oo
oo
q)
t\
\o
r+
I
5
o\
o o
(..1
ri
|9 a0
t
c?r
s
I
c!
,ia &9
tal
Appenilix
293
=3 =3
n-i
*3 s3
ne x=
da> c\l "no qQ @
ot |D bo
ttrG'?Noi.9F ra -:
=--"v
aGeA =si -g S j $p
3,."
I
oio\ r -.9*6=g
v)
x
Gl
El
d
c.l
s
t\
|, o
o g
o
6t
L)
>r
tatr <o
t)
.!a
*\
Iri I
cl
C)
t (\
()
!)
r.J
e ao
t?
IE
I
tct
lu
I
ta
,d
rl
ll
a,
E E
.=
r<:o
EF
c.i
ttt
esEEE;
|.l
*j
284
Itt
I' I
lc trt
e-
l:
l"
!f a
c.l
t-: t.\ IL
I RE Sg -l qaG
o!a$+'
c-l rl
g s3 -d
990 c\o
ta'! \o o <)
Aaa- -3 3 xE
r-r .n ,.i co qd .C -: N
e.l
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a")
.: ts U
,;
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e8
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aD t,
lrtf
lt^
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ls
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lr. rr o
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to
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t-:
q) 6S
slIN .:l
^slta \l
I
ta
t\.t
l"
s e{'
$
ll.
tx
| 'r: t-i ru
tr
I
l
l-
c.]
.Ss qq
i
]
F$
i l
(Rcplics will be kcpt strictly confidcntial) Please encircle the code number of the reply'
l.l
odc"r. for
tating
increa'
"'
your l'
Mostly,
times, 4'
a1y dccision
os
tion/rovonue collcction?
1,2 --
at 1' Mostly' 2' Often' 3' Sorne' Never' il'discretioa in the timcs' 4' Seldom' 5' interest of bctter Pcr'
Caa you takc action formaoce
286
1.3
area increases,
If through your eforts 1. Ccrtainly, 2. Considorably, agricultural production/ 3. 4. Not nccessaritn revenue oollection in tho 5. -Usually, Not at all.
1.4 Do you have a chanco l. Mosrly,2. Often, 3. Someto take a decision on times, 4. Seldom, 5. Nevcr. your own with regard
to day-to.day work without consulting your Buperior omcers? Arc you required to do
riors?
1.5
J.
l.
Il.
2.1
Divislon of Labour
scnior ofrcers?
2.2
Is there any clear-cut l. To e great extnt, 2. To division of duties betsomo ortcnt, 3. Gencrally, ween you and your 4- Not so rigidly, 5.
No
difference at
aI.
Is therc any clear-cut division of duties betwcen you and your ju.
nror ofrcers?
l. To a grcat extent, 2. To
4. Not so rigidly, 5.
somc extent, 3. Generally, No difference at all.
2.4
responsibi- 3. iome, a. V"ry -iiiirrr, lity for work donc by you? 5. Nothing. Does your position re. l. At all times, 2. Maoy things, ],ou to do things 3. Some ilingr, A. p"* 3uire pertormed
like ro take
l.
A great deal,
2.
Enough,
by your
perior ofrcers?
2.5
su-
ltl:
by
l.
Appendix
II
of
Rules
287
lll.
3.1
System
Do you feel tbat therc are adequat9 rules and regulations to guide You in your work? In your daY'to'daY work, would You go strictlY
l. l.
To a great 6xtent,
2. To
3.2
by rules which
maY
Definitely, 2. ProbablY, 3' Not sure' 4. Wqul'l not probablY Profer, 5' Dofrni' tcly not Prefcr.
and delaY in tho imPle' mentation of the develo' pment plogf amns/rvo' nue adminisfiation?
3.9
Woirld you Prfor changiog the eristing rules in tba ioterest of achieving
l.
targets
of
develoPment/
not Prcfcr'
revenue collection?
3.4
l.
CertainlY,
2.
Quite likelY'
3.
'
immediate suPPlY of
water/electricitY/rovision
PerhaPs,
4.
PerhaPs
'
3.5
l.
initiativo
in
suPPlYing
288
IY.
pbst?
competitive test
4,2
is
it l. Fully,2.
all.
Partly,
3. Not
at
Seniority in Govt./ to be the main criterion other department, 3. Hard of selection and advance_ and good work,4. Keeping ment in your depart_ your officcr happy, 5. A friend/ ment? rclation to speak at the right
Place,
V,
Impersonality
2. Largely, 3. I" .just morc or less the.somcwbai'ugrr",-i. Largety same as any other disagrce, 5, Entircly disagiei. -per. son. Do you atrec ? 5'2 Whether a pirson is I. Entirely,2. Largoly,3.
Entirely,
5.1
me one pemon
is l
or is nst satisficd Sqmewhat agree, 4. Largely yjlh pv- handting the {isagree, 5. Entiroly disagree. --.' case, I do not bother as long as I follow thc
you com to l. Eatircly; 2. Laryely, 3. know cortain porsong Somewhat, 4. Lwgely disagree, wcll, you may find that 5. Disagrec complctcly,
?
Do you agree
Appcrdix
Il
289
J.4 .
You soinetiurcs bccome l. BltirelYogice, 2r LargolY quitcclosc and fticndlY 8gfee, 3. Sooowhat agreo' to the PoPlc during the 4. Largely disagroq 5. Entlrc' coutse of Your official ly disagree. work. Do You agree ? 5.5 Do you become Personal' l.' Certainly, 2' L*gelY, 3, ly close to the PeoPle for Al times, 4, Seldom 5' NeYer.
.ieasons
other
?
than
..
official work
5.6
No preferential treatment, When You krow that May treat PttferablY, 3' certain known and trus" ted PeoPle will not let May treat eomewhat Preferab' you down, will You not 1y,4. Largly Ptferably' 5. like to makc anY dePar' Definitely preferablY alwaYs. ture from trcating all People in the samewaY ?
l. 2.
YL
Socio-personal Talues
6.1
Sdsit Even in difficult circum- l. Fully, 2. MostlY,'3, 5. Never stances the officials must times, 4. Not alwaYs, remain abovo board' Do you agreo?
No official can be effec' L StronglY agree, 2- Gentive if he constantly trics erally agree, 3. Agree somc' to aocommodate the times, {. Disagree, 5,'Strongly rcquosts and wishes of
6.2
everybodY.
agec
?
Do
disagrec.
You
6.3 Administration betng .1. Strongly agraa,2. GonorallY what it is, one has to agree. 3. Agree sometimes 4.
comPromise
2n 6.4
Priocif,er of cquality of l. Certainly, 2. Largcly, 3. individual towards tlc Somctinoe, 4. Rarely, 5. Ncver
through a dovclopmcnt
pla_n. Do you agrac
?
6,5
leadcrs who
Must
do, 2. Optiooal,
cnjoy
somo
all possible
l.
Partly,
Never.
4.
Generalv. Sometimes, 3.
2.
cials, Do yciu
by
ofr.
agreo ?
l.
crtainly,
trnportant role
work-area ?
consideratioal play an
Partly, 4. S"raimer
Not at all.
?.
Usuailv -
3.
""'f'lt
in
dovelopmcnt adminis-
Iocally
castcs,
dominaat
Very much, 2. Considcrably, Partly, 4. Sometimcs onlv ---- --'J ' 5.' Not at att
1.
3.
classes/religi_
ous groups ?
AppeTrtftx
II
5.
Not at all.
291
7.3 It is said that sites of l. Very much 2. Considcrably' ncw prograr.nmcs are 3. Pattly, . Sometimes only,
on casto/class considofation.. Do You
solectcd
agree ?
?.4 Do your plans give l. Certainly, 2. Usually, preference to small/ Sometimes only, 4. Seldom,
marginal farmers/eco' Never.
nomically weaker sections?
3, 5.
?.5 Does yout develop- l. Certainly, 2, Usually, 3. mental work give pre- Sometimes only, 4. Seldom, ference to diferent 5. Never.
clarses, espccially the deprcssed ones in the
society?
7.6
Are the better-off peo- l. Certainty, 2. Usually, 3. ple willing to sacrifioe Sometimes only, 4' Soldom 5. for the upliftment of, Never. the section of the com'
cular
scheme favours
?
the latter
how is
By mutual disoussion,
Vm.
Socio.admlnisftotivc valucs
about 2,
Quito froo,
292
.
yourself and your
wofk 3, Just suffciently free, superior 4. Not sufrcicntly frec, 5. Not freo at all. 8.2 Do the senior officers l. Invariably always, keep distance from you? 2. Mostly, 3. Sometime s, 4, Seldom, 5. Never. 8,3 Are the senior officers l. Invariably atways, of your department 2. Mostly, conscious of their 3. Somtines, status? 4, Seldom, 5. Never.
with your oftcers ?
IX.
9.1
Behavioural Values
Would you like appoint. l. Why not, 2. Usually, ing a known person who 3. Sometimos. 4. May nof
is readily available
and 5.
Never.
9.2
initiative
convinced of
use of a case?
9.3
by the activities of thc pressure group in your work area and adjust a particular programmo of actio* against the set
rules and precedents
1
l.
Appadtx
II
293
3.
9.4
Would you consider fa. l. Must dq 2. Optional, vourably proposals of Must not do. political leaders who
enjoy publio
even though
support
9.5
plcx exists
in
To
l.
some extent,
4.
Little'
govern-
5. Not at all.
ment hierarchy?.
9,6
What is the attitudo of l. Vcry friendly, 2. Somewbat your sonior ofrcers to- friendly, 3. Indiffcront, 4' wards their suborilina- Somewhat unfriendlY, 5' Quite
tes?
unfriendly.
9|1
liko I . Yes, all the subordinates, subordina- 2. As many as possible, 3' to meet thcir OntY some of them, 4. Just tes? a fcw of them, 5. Nonc at
all.
Whether enough autho' rity is dclegated by the senior officers to their
subordinates?
9.8
deal, 2. Enough authority given, 3. TheY delcgate. some but not enough authority to their subordinatcs, 4. Little authority dolegated
l. A great
5.
authority.
say thst
l.
what respeotful, 4, SlightlY work aro rospectfill in rcspeotful, 5. Not at all restheir bahaviour and de- pectful.
msnds?
Quite respectful, 3.
Exceedingly resPectful, 2.
294
Bureaucrat ic Values
in
Development
9.10 How do the citizens who their work are apPrehcn' sive of the officers' attitude and dealings?
l.
3.
9.1t For achieving a high tar' 1, To a great oxtent' 2. To a get of dcvolopmont' are considerablc cxtent, 3. To you concernod with ohan' some oxtent, 4. Little, 5. Not ging thc attitudes of at all. unwilling but PotentiallY
good entreprcneurs?
9.12 Is the success of bringing about change in thc atti tudc ofthe PooPle through your initiative and Persu'
l.
9.13
Is the achiovement of l.
targets or results consi' dered important in Your dcpartmetrt, evcn thougb they may mean dcviation
sll.
thc
gets?
specified rcsults/tar-
Aptnitix
9.16
II
295
5' Not siiuation, would you con' 3' Somewhat' 4' Little' sider your responsibitity at all, it is unnecessaty' to go 8o much out to guide the PcoPle with whom You deal?
9.1? How ofton do all officers moet for taking any par'
arcrp"ii*
9.18 ----
decis'loni
6'
Does
not arise'
dcci' 3'
Sometimes,
Ncvor'
sion.making?
Satisfactlon
5'
X,
10.1. How often do thc citi zens come to' meet the . officials. for their worh?
10.2 Do you think that such t. Yes, all of them' maetings are super' 2. Yes, most of thcm' 3' Yes, about halfoftham' fluous? 4. Most of thc meetings arc
unnce88ary,
5. All
10,3 Do
you
visitors?
the
l. Very
5'
Nevcr'
4'
Seldom,
ofyour dutios?
296
10.5 Would you say that the L Always vory itrtGrostins. work you are doing is 2. Intcresting trrost ofti; interesting? time, 3. Bqually dull and
5.
10.6 When
you do
somo
ated by your
officers?
good work, is
5, Never.
10.8 If
givcn a chance to do l. Definitely,2. euite likely, the same type of worL in 3. Probably, 4, probably not. another ofrce/depart- 5. Certainly not. ment would you like to switch over?
present post, bow
10.9 In your
10.10 How does tho work you ' do in your prrsent posF
capabili-
l. Fully utilisod 2. Mostly utilised, 3. Only moderately utilised, 4, Little utilised. 5. Not utilised at all. l. Very well, 2. Welt, 3. Fair, 4, Poorly, 5, Very poorly.
Personal Particulars
in
com-
What
status?
is
your
maritat
Appendix
|
II you?
291
11.4 Thc place where you wers l. Village with 5000 people
born?
or
less.
4.
,.
citv witb
than
10,00,000
PeoPle.
ll.5
Wheredidyou livc maxi- l.Villagewith 5@0 people mum time upto 20 Years or less.
orage?
'' *,,;H;I3."i"?lfJi";
3.
A town vith
100,000'
PoPulation
A city
with PoPulation
ana
Matricutation.
educated?
29E
Bureau.cratl c Values
in Doclopment
your
say your l. More than Rg. 1500 p.m. parenents/guardians income 2. Between Rs. 751.1500
at the time of
vour
p.m.
3. Between p, m. 4. Between
Rs.
251-750
1.9
2. Betweeh Rs.751.1500 p. m.
3. Between Rs.25l-750'
p. nr.
4. Between Rs. 101.250
p. m. 5. Less than Rs. 100 p.m"
I
promotions
3. Class
IlI.
I, 2. Class II,
l.l2
ll.l3
Appendtx
II
299
ll.l4
In case You receivetl train' 1. Lsss than 3 montbs. ing Please indicate the 2.3 to 6 months. 3. 6 to 12 months. poriod of trainiog. 4. More than a Year.
11.15
Ycs.
Yes,
2. No.
anY
member
of
|.
2. No.
tion or social club? Your name Please {1.18 The post You are holding
please.
ll.l?
Thank you for the time and effort oontributed up this questionnaire. Performonco Blocl
I
for filling
Gootl
Medilnn
2. 3.
l.
GV MV
PV
2. 3. Pv
r.
I
GV MV
t. GV
2.
3.
MV
PV
Appendix III
l.
I.
1.1
you
in
which
work suffer from naturol calamities lite (a) Flood (b) Drougbt
Yes, l. Yes,
1.
2. No 2. No.
1.3
'
Please
Some,
302
Bareaucrutic Values
in
Development
l.4
l. 3. 5.
1.6
true, 2. Genorally
pro-
4. l. 3. l. 3.
so, 3. Sometimcs, Rarely, 5. Never. Very true, 2. Generally so, Sometimes so, 4. Partly trua, 5. Not truo at all,
Very tr*o, 2. Gcn$ally so, Sometine-s so, 4. Partly true, 5. Not true at all.
1.8 A genoral complaint of the ofrcials has been that poplc are not cooperative with thom in the developmcntal
efforts. Do you agree? 1.9 Do you agree whethor thero is delay in the
decision-making at
higher levels?
I
l. 3.
5.
.10 Is
it
l.
il.
2.1
l.
3.
APpcndix
III
is
303
2, Oftcn, 3' 2.2 Do the canals have ade' l. Very often, 4. RarelY, 5' Ncver'
cuate suPPlY of water GenerallY,
when irrigation
needed?
2,3
l.
3.
petlY, 5.
l. l,
Verv
oftcn,
of
GencrailY, VerY
2'
2.5
when You need? Is there anY interruPtion in the suPPlY of electri' oitY whcn You need it?
2.6 Is
as
PeoPlo
Often' 4' RarelY 3. GenerallY, 5. Never. 2, VerY often' Power utilised bY l. Certainly, 4' RarelY' increaged 3. GenorallY,
often,2'
for
agricultural Production'
5. Never.
main'
l. VerY well, 2. FairlY well' i. PtoP..fV, 4' Not ProperlY' l: t"tv PoorlY, o' Does not
arise.
2.8
l.
privatc pumps/tubewclls availablo locallY? 2. ConsiderablY' 2.9 For adoPtion of anY in' l. MostlY, 3. UsuallY, 4. RarelY, novativc programme of
agricultural
ment, are Staff/VLWs?
develoP-
5. Never.
uI.
3.1
l. Very
Lot,
politelY,
2.
Quite
Gdvornmcnt
servatrtg
oolitclY, 3. GenerallY
indiffcr'
i.
304 3,2
ln
Dev elopment
1.
5.
Certainty always,
2.
Very
for agricultural
needs?
3.4
leaders?
Do you find the admin. 1. Certainly, 2, Generally, istrators mor accom- 3. Sometimes,. 4. R arely, modative to potiticat 5, Never, 6. Does not arise.
3.5 Do you feel that the 1. Very often, 2. Often. ofrcials are cut of from 3, Sometimes, 4. Seldom. .the peoplo and as such 5. Not at all, 6. Does not t-h.y ignore popular arisc.
demands?
3.6 Do the ofrcials, in your 1. Certainly, 2. Usually, 3. opinion, bave the apti. Somotimcs, 4, Rarely, 5. Not tude for devslepmsal at all, 6, Does not arise.
work?
It/.
Personal parriculars
4.t What
4,2
is
completed years?
your age in
What
status?
is your marital
ced).
4.3
cal/Professional
Matriculation, 2. Bacbe-
4.4
sohool or higher),
What is
you
income?
L 2, 3.
More than Rs. 1500 p.m. Botween Re. ?5I.lSOb p.n, Between Rg. 251.250 p.m.
Appendix
III
religion? l.
305
What is your
caste? l.
6.
4.7 Your name please. 4.8 What is your prinoipal l.
occuPation?
2' Industry'
1r,""#tl1';hi"?::?H:,
I I
Good
I
{--T--1, GV MV PV
Signaturc:
Date:
Bibliography
(A) BOOKS
.dhmod, Munoer, The Civil Servant ln Pakistan (London, 1964);'.
Albrow, Martin, Bureauuacy (London, 1970). Appleby, Paul ff., Public Administration in ladia: Repo,t ofa ,srrvey (Ncw Delhi, 1953). Awasthi, A. and Ramcsh K. Arora, Bureaucracy qnd Devetoitment: Indlan Perspective (Now Delhi, l9?E). Bansal, Prcm Lata, A&ninistraiive Development in India (Ncw Delhi, 1974).
Bcnnis, Warren , Changing Organtsations (New
:
York,
1966).
Bennis, Warren an{'Phillip E. Slater, Tftq Temporary Soaiety (New York, 1968).
308
ln
dminis traprocess
'.
Bjorkman, James W., Politics of Administrative Alienation in' India's Rural Developmen! programme (Delhi, 1979).
Blau, Peter M., The Dynamics of Bureauuaay (Chicago, 1963). 3lau, Petcr M., and Marshal W. Mayer, Bureaucracy in the Modern SocierT (New york, 1956).
ed., Asian Bureaucratic Systemsi Emergent from Imperial Tradttion (Durham, 1966). tsraibanti, Ralph, Political and Administrutive Deeelopment
Braibanti'Ralph
the British
Caiden, Gerald 8., The Dynamics of pubtic Administatton: Guidelines to Cutent Transformation in Theory and Practice (New york, 197 I ), Chanda, Asok, Indian Administration (l,ondon, 1958). haturvedi,' H. i., Bureaucraca and Local Community i Dytr6. mics oJ Rural Development ( Jelhi, I 977).
ohen, Hary, The Demonics of Bureaueracy: Problems of Change in a Government Agency (Ames, 1965).
Crozier Michael, The Eureauuatic Phenomenon-An Ex amination of Bureaucracy in Modern Organizatian and lts Cultural Seuings in France (Chicago, 1964).
Dey, B. K., Bureaucracy, Development and public Monagement in lndia (New Delhi, 1978). Dyer, Federick C. and John M. Dyer, Bureaucracy Ys. Creativityt
'Ihe Dilemma ol Modern Leadetship (Florida, 1965).
Bibltography
lBldcrsveld. S.
309
J., A, P. Barnabas and V. Jagannadham, Tfe Citizen and Administration in Developing Demouacy An Empirlcal Study in Delhi (New Dcthi, 1968).
'.
Francisco, A. Gergio, Background, Cover Pattemt and Attitudes of Filtppino Higher Oficials (Ann Arbor, 1967)' Fry, Geoffrey Kingdom, State*nen in Dlsguise : The Changing Role of the Administrative Class of the British Home Civil Service, 1853-66 (London, 1969). .Gabriel A. Aloond and. Sydney Yatba, Civic Culrure (Boston,
1963).
Ganl, George F., Derteilopnent Administration : Concepts, Goals, Methorls (Mrdison, 1979). Ghosal, !t,
K, Civil
Service
ln India
under
the
East Indio
Company (Calcutta, 1944). 'Gorwala, A,. D,, The Role af Admlnlstrction z Past, Present and Future (Pooaa, 1952).
of
Industrial Bureaucracy
Grecnberg; Martin Harry, Bureaucracy and Development : A Mexican Case Study (Lexington, 1970).
{I:rdy
Ferrel,, Bureaucracies
Rules ard External Assistance (Bloomington, 1966). rHoady, Ferrel, Public Administrutton:
{{eady, Ferrel and Sybil Stokes, eds., Papers in Comparatlve Public Admtnisftation (Ann Arbor, 1962). fieggedus, Aodras, Socialism and Bureaucracy (London, 1976). .
It{igginbotham, Stauley J., Cultures in Confltct
Jain,
in
Indian Admtnlstration
"Katz, Devel and Elshor Benda, Bureaucracy and thc Public: A Reader in Afficial-Client Relarions (New York, 1973). Kelsalf, R. K,, Er'gt er Ctvil Servant in Britain (London, 1955).
?f0
Bett4teen
La Palombra, loseph, Bureaucracy and Politlcal Development (Princeton, 1963). Maddick, Harry, Democracy, Decenftalisation and Development (Bombay, 1963). Maflick, Sidney and A. Van Meso Edward, Concept and
Admlntstrative Behavroar (New Jersey, 1962).
Issues
in
M-athur, Kuldeep, Burcaucratic Response to Development-.A , - 'Stady of Block ' Development Offlcers tn Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh (Delhi, 1972).
Mathur, Kulrteep,
Sources of
. ,
and Political
.Pressure;, in
Mathur, Kuldeep, Mohit Bhattacharya and Sudipto Mundle* '1.' ":Itow Bureaicracy Meeti ii Crisis-Tlrge Srudies (New Delhi, 1975). McCurdy, Howard E:, Public Admiiistration :- A 'Synthesis (Menlo Park, 1977). Mehta, 8.,.Sureaucraq) aniC Change (Iaipur, ,I9?5),
Merton,.Robert
K,, Social
Theory
York,
1968).
Montgomery, J. D. and W. J. Siffin, eds., tl,pproachcs to DeveIopment Politics; Administration and Chqnge (New York,
1966).
Mengelis, Nigos
1967).
P.,
Org.anisotion.
aad
Bur,eauoacy - (Chicago,
in.
Nayar, 'P. K.8., Leadersnip, Bureaucracy.. and planntng India; A Soiiological Srndy (New Delhi, 1969). Pai'Panandiker, V. A., bersonnel System Administration (Bombay, 1966).
for
-Development
*fr
Blri Panandileor, V. A. and 8.
Panda, Basudeva,
9.
Kshirsagar; Biriauuacy
aid
Delhi,
I 97E).
"
Delhi, 1978).
Scr vices:
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