RTI, Transparency and Good Governance: Presentation by Shri A.N. Tiwari, Central Information Commissioner
RTI, Transparency and Good Governance: Presentation by Shri A.N. Tiwari, Central Information Commissioner
RTI, Transparency and Good Governance: Presentation by Shri A.N. Tiwari, Central Information Commissioner
and
Good Governance
Presentation by
The World Bank, the ADB, the OECD Secretariat, the UN Millennium Development Goals, the
World Press Freedom Declaration have all listed out elements of Good Governance, important
among which are the following:-
• Accountability: Public officials must feel morally responsible for being answerable for
the actions of the public entity. There should be a collective sense of discharging
functions with efficiency and responsibility.
• Participation: There should be no hiatus between the public authority and the citizenry
and especially the public authority and the client groups this authority is expected to
serve.
• Predictability: The normative behaviour of the public authority should be such that the
people have the confidence that given a set of circumstances its response shall be more
or less uniform. Predictability engenders trust.
• Transparency: It refers to both a state of affairs as well as a state of mind. The working
of the public authority should be such that all rules, regulations, decisions should be in
the public domain. A sense should be engendered in the employees of the public
authority that transparency was not something to be feared but to be made to be a
defining element of the functioning of the public authority as well as its employees.
• Forward vision: The responsive public authority is always prepared to move forward
with its roots firmly in the reality of the situation.
• Rule of law: Government must enforce transparent laws and regulations and codes.
The rent seeking tendencies of the political and bureaucratic classes need to be curbed
through extensive use of RTI.
Transparency is the key not only to the architecture of good governance but a country’s
ability to usher in rapid economic and social progress.
Professor Amartya Sen and other social choice theorists have now included transparency laws
among the elements which promote social and economic progress by improving governance in
a given country.
Public authorities, like nation states, can hope to promote organizational objective by making
transparency a feature of their functioning.
By bringing down the veil of secrecy separating the public authority from the citizenary,
transparency promotes trust.
Secrecy has and this is rather intriguing become an underpinning in the working of most
government organizations / public authorities, especially in developing countries, which had a
history of colonial rule.
In India, for example, the Official Secrets Act a legacy of the British rule has defined for
more than half a century, not only how the organization would function, but also the
approaches and the attitudes of civil servants / employees.
No other Act has done more to create a hiatus between the people and the public institutions
than the Official Secrets Act. It has weakened participatory democracy, made transparency
look like an avoidable luxury, and provided the perfect smokescreen for unaccountable
functioning of public servants. This Act promotes and nurtures irresponsibility.
Ministers and other high officials of the State are required to take "oath of secrecy".
The process of the selection of high functionaries in the Executive , the Legislature and the
Judiciary is deliberately kept shrouded in secrecy.
Even the accountability enforcing watch-dogs of the State preferred secrecy to openness
about the content as well as the methodology of their work.
The fear of public scrutiny is endemic. The mystique of governance has been deliberately
and unconscionably promoted by all organs of the State, fuelling mistrust, cynicism and
worse.
The culture of secrecy is not only regressive, it is also self-defeating. The civil servant
subscribes to the motto “secrecy saves”. All his actions are conditioned by heightened
concern for secrecy even in matters which need not be held secret. This mindset needs to
be changed. Secrecy begins in the minds of civil servants and it is in the minds the battle
for transparency has to be fought.
The Preamble to the RTI Act, 2005 encompasses key elements of good governance.
Experience has shown that use of RTI acts in two ways. First, through individual citizen’s
actions under the Act, pressure is built on public authorities to disclose information,
which otherwise would have been kept confidential. Second, it forces the leaders of the
public authority to revisit their long-held dogmas about what to reveal and what not to
reveal.
RTI enables the citizenry to act vis-à-vis the public authorities as some sort of a benign
Big Brother.
RTI is the only legislation which allows people to question the authority directly without
the intervention of their elected representative, the court or the media.
It is important that public authorities are enthused to look upon RTI not as an
inconvenience, but an ally in transforming governance.
RTI is the most powerful assault ever known on the monolith of official corruption.
Unbridled use of official discretion is known to be the most endemic source of corruption
in developing countries. RTI is a direct assault on use of discretion, which prospers under
secrecy and recedes under transparency.
Precise Identification
Classification
Structuring
Management
Retrieval mechanisms
Utilizations
Some Suggestions
Training
While continuing with the system of disposal of appeals initiated by citizens, CIC/SCICs
should attempt to address issues of systemic change in public authorities. The RTI Act
exhorts (Section 4(2)) that voluntary disclosure of information by public authorities
should become so common “that the public have minimum resort to the use of this Act
to obtain information.” RTI Act serves best when the citizen feels the least need to use
it.
Many an RTI-application will be rendered redundant when public authorities suo-moto
embrace transparency in major aspects of their working.
Information Commissions must use the provisions of Section 19(8)(a) to force the public
authorities to initiate steps to promote transparency.
Section 19(8)(a) should be extensively used:
to compel public authorities to give effect to `Section 4 of the RTI Act (suo-moto
disclosures
to force systemic changes to promote public good.
Commissions can identify select public authorities especially those dealing with public
welfare such as health, labour, rural development, transport, etc. to bring about
transparency-based systemic change over finite time-frames.
RTI should not be looked upon as an autonomous legislation, but should be treated as a
prime-mover for proliferation of RTI-like laws / legislations. For example, a provision
regarding transparency requirement may be included in the obligation of public
authorities in their governing legislations.
Public authorities should be encouraged to bring into the public domain a “question
bank” related to various aspects of their functioning. Not only questions, such
authorities should also provide answers to those questions and disseminate it widely,
specially through websites. A large number of queries, which are now being made
through the RTI Act, will be automatically answered. This can happen only through
serious self-examination and introspection by the public authorities of their work and
their organizational culture.
All Information Commissions and public authorities can pool their resources to create an
Institute which shall catalyze transparency-based systems improvement in public
authorities. It can be done through such actions as laying down transparency standards,
advising public authorities for transparency-based systemic changes, ranking public
authorities on the scale of transparency, disseminate awareness about good practices
among all public authorities, train public authority employees to meet the demands of
transparency-based change and so on.
The right to information laws, alongside expanding the citizens’ rights, should be
systematically employed to transform governance.
These laws could be a powerful magnet for mobilizing the people and enthusing
them to use these laws to enhance and expand their choices for their own
betterment.
THE END
RTI, Transparency and Good Governance