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Why Indian Governance Depends on Individuals

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A recurring observation among administrators, researchers, and citizens engaged with Indian governance is that outcomes depend heavily on who is in charge. A district performs well under one Collector and slides under the next. A welfare scheme delivers under one state secretary and stalls under another. A court order gets implemented when a particular official is in post and lies dormant when they leave. This person-dependence — the tendency for governance quality to fluctuate with the qualities of specific individuals rather than operating consistently through institutional design — is widely documented and widely lamented. It is not a feature of unusually poor governance; it is a structural characteristic of a system that has historically under-invested in institutional design and over-relied on individual discretion. Representational Image: Why Indian Governance Depends on Individuals Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has documented that the IAS, India's premier civil ...

How Institutional Memory Breaks in Indian Governance

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Every government accumulates knowledge through experience of what policies worked in which contexts, which implementation approaches succeeded, where earlier reform attempts failed and why. This collective knowledge is what scholars call institutional memory. In other words, this is the stored understanding that allows an organisation to learn from its history rather than repeating it. In India, institutional memory in government is systematically disrupted by a feature baked into the administrative system — the frequent rotation of IAS officers across postings, departments, and roles. Research by Lakshmi Iyer and Anandi Mani found that the average tenure of an IAS officer in a single posting is approximately 16 months, with only 56% of officers completing more than one year in any one position. When the individuals who carry contextual knowledge of a subject, a district, or a sector change every 12 to 18 months, the organisation loses not just continuity but the judgment that comes fr...

How Corruption and Procedure Coexist in India

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One of the most durable misunderstandings about corruption in India is that it operates in opposition to bureaucratic procedure — that corrupt officials bypass the system, and that clean officials follow it. In practice, the relationship is more complex. Corruption in India often operates through procedure: the file moves through the correct channels, the notes are written, the signatures are obtained, the stamps are affixed — and at each stage, informal payments or political favours determine how quickly, in whose favour, and on what terms the procedurally valid outcome is reached. This is not a paradox. It is the product of a regulatory environment in which formal procedures are numerous enough, and discretion wide enough, that corrupt outcomes can be delivered through formally correct process. The result is a system in which procedural compliance and corruption are not mutually exclusive — they are frequently simultaneous. Representational Image: How Corruption and Procedure Coe...

Why Rules Are Applied Selectively in India

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Selective rule enforcement is one of the most consistent features of Indian governance and it is observed across urban planning, environmental regulation, tax administration, labour law, and public order. It is not a marginal phenomenon but a central operational characteristic of how state authority is exercised at the ground level. In its most straightforward form, selective enforcement means that the same rule is applied to some actors and not to others — that one vendor's cart is seized while identical carts nearby continue to operate, that one factory faces labour inspection while a competitor does not, that one builder's deviations from approved plans attract demolition orders while another's attract only paperwork. This differential application is not always corrupt. It is often the product of rational administrative choices, political calculations, and enforcement capacity constraints that interact to produce systematically uneven outcomes. Representational Image: Wh...

The Indian 'Compliance Culture' Explained

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In most formal bureaucratic systems, compliance is binary: rules are followed or they are not. In India, the relationship between law and its application is considerably more complex. Compliance is frequently partial, negotiated, context-dependent, and mediated through informal relationships between citizens, businesses, and officials. This is not simply a result of corruption, though corruption is one element. It reflects a regulatory environment in which the density of legal requirements exceeds the realistic capacity for universal enforcement, creating a structural condition in which selective compliance becomes a rational adaptation for all parties. Former IAS officer Sanjeev Ahluwalia, speaking to India Today in 2025 about customs procedures, described Indian bureaucracy as a "maze" with rules that are "extremely and unnecessarily complicated and intrusive" — a characterisation that resonates across most regulated sectors. Representational Image: The Indian ...

Why Reform Is Still Hard in India

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India's post-independence history is punctuated by periods of declared reform that slow, stall, or reverse before completing the institutional changes they promised. The 1991 liberalisation, which dismantled the licence raj and opened India's economy to competition, remains the most cited example of successful reform — and it required a near-collapse of foreign exchange reserves to make it politically viable. Farm laws passed in September 2020 were repealed in November 2021 after over a year of mass protests, before they could produce their intended market effects. Labour codes passed between 2019 and 2020 consolidating dozens of existing statutes remain largely unnotified at the state level as of 2025. The pattern — ambitious legislation or announcement, followed by implementation failure, dilution, or outright reversal — is structural rather than exceptional. Representational Image: Why Reform Is Still Hard in India Understanding why reform is hard in India requires examining...

Who Controls Policy in India — Elected vs Permanent Executive

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India's executive is constitutionally divided into two distinct but interdependent structures. The political executive — the President, Prime Minister, Chief Ministers, and their Councils of Ministers — derives its authority from democratic elections and is accountable to the legislature. The permanent executive — the Indian Administrative Service, Indian Police Service, Indian Foreign Service, and other central and state civil services — derives its authority from competitive recruitment, institutional position, and accumulated expertise. The political executive changes with every election. The permanent executive does not. This difference in tenure, accountability, and expertise defines the working relationship between the two — and shapes every consequential policy decision made in India. Representational Image: Who Controls Policy in India — Elected vs Permanent Executive The formal position, established in the Constitution and confirmed in B.R. Ambedkar's explanations duri...
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