“Laws are made for people, not people for laws.”– Albert Einestine
In public administration, focusing solely on formality and ignoring the substance of the matter often leads to injustice. A perceptive civil servant prioritizes the spirit and intent behind laws and policies over rigid procedural compliance, ensuring fairness and justice.
Dangers of Mindless Adherence to Form
- Injustice to Vulnerable Groups: Blind adherence to rules can deny access to benefits for those lacking resources or documentation. Eg: Denying ration cards to homeless individuals without a permanent address.
- Bureaucratic Delays leading to inefficiency and slow public service delivery. Eg: Eg: In the 2014 Kashmir floods, delays in distributing relief due to incomplete paperwork
- Loss of Public Trust: People may lose faith in the system if rigid rules result in unfair outcomes.
- Corruption Facilitation: Complex processes encourage bribes as shortcuts, exploiting the vulnerable. Eg: Vohra Committee – Politician-Bureaucrat-Corporate Nexus
- Stifling Innovation: Eg: Halting creative educational methods due to rigid compliance with outdated curricula.
- Undermining Public Welfare: Public welfare programs may be inefficient if focus remains on formalities rather than outcomes. Eg: Exclusion error under PDS
- Increased Litigation: Eg: Litigations in PPP Projects.
- Moral Disengagement: Eg: Deporting refugees due to missing paperwork, ignoring the ethical responsibility of offering asylum in life-threatening situations.
Perceptive Civil Servant’s Approach to True Intent
- Outcome-Oriented Action: Focus on achieving the intended result of the law, rather than getting bogged down by rigid rules. Eg: Aruna Sundararajan (IAS) as a Telecom Secretary, rolled out BharatNet to connect rural areas
- Empathy and Compassion (Ethics of Care): Eg: Prasanth Nair (IAS) launched several citizen-centric initiatives like Compassionate Kozhikode for compassion-driven governance.
- Judicious Flexibility: adjust deadlines and processes when it benefits public welfare. Eg- Smita Sabharwal (IAS) launched the Ammalalana program in Telangana, integrating public feedback into governance
- Proactive Problem-Solving (Pragmatism): Pragmatism encourages practical solutions over strict theoretical application.
- Holistic Decision-Making: While following the law is important, the true duty is to the public, meaning civil servants must balance legality with morality. Eg: Vinod Kumar (IAS) simplified the flood compensation process, ensuring people received immediate relief without excessive paperwork.
- Balancing Rules with Intent: A perceptive civil servant ensures that laws serve the common good, not just formal compliance. Eg- Eg: U. Sagayam ensured that drought relief was delivered promptly, even if recipients lacked all necessary documentation
“The strictest law sometimes becomes the severest injustice.” – Benjamin Franklin. A perceptive civil servant looks beyond rigid formalities, ensuring that governance serves its higher purpose—equity and fairness.