Deepali Singh
Deepali Singh
Deepali Singh
GLOBALISATION
DEEPALI SINGH
like the community, the government, the civil society and the corporate
sector.
The term 'good governance' has also been coming by the West for
Third. The development aid to Third World countries in post - cold war era
has given rise to the Western concept of good governance entering the
vocabulary of public administration since the 90s. The World Bank in one
of its documents in 1989, highlighted the concept of good governance.
Governance here is not only confined to political governance but would
include all types of governance, such as international governance, national
governance, state or provincial governance or local governance. It is
recognised that governance is about how an organisation steers itself and
the process and structures that are used to achieve its goal. Governance is
authoritative allocation of values by those in power through decision-making.
Since governance is the process of decision -making and the implementation
of those decisions, governance focuses on the actors who make decisions
and the structures that are involved in decision - making. The World Bank,
for the first time in 1989, highlighted the concept of good governance: Public
Sector Management Accountability, Legal framework for Development
and Information and Transparency. In 1992, the Bank's document on
governance and development said, "Good governance is central to creating
and sustaining an environment which fosters strong and equitable
development and it is an essential complement to sound economic policies".
The document identified three aspects of governance: the form of political
regime, the process by which authority is exercised in the management of
country's economic and social resources: and the capacity of governments
to design, formulate and implement policies and in general, to discharge
government functions. In essence to World Bank, good governance consists
of:
• Political accountability
• Regular elections to legitimise the exercise of political power.
• Participation by various social, economic, cultural and professional
groups in the process of governance.
• Rule of law
• Independence of judiciary
• Bureaucratic accountability
• Freedom of information
• Transparency
• Efficient and effective administrative system
• Co-operation between government and the civil society.
Good Governance has eight major characteristics. It is participatory
consensus - oriented, accountable, transparent, responsive, effective and
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DEEPALI SINGH
efficient, equitable and inclusive and follows the rule of law. It assures that
corruption is minimised, the views of minorities are taken into account and
that voice of the most vulnerable in society are heard in decision-making. It
is also responsive to the present and future needs of society.
Governance is that separate process or certain part of management or
leadership processes that makes decisions that define expectations, grant
power or verify performance. Frequently a government is established to
administer these processes and systems. As a process, governance may be
carried out for any purpose, good or evil, for profit or not. A reasonable or
rational purpose of governance is to see to it (assure), sometimes on behalf
of others that the organisation produces a worthwhile pattern of good results
while avoiding an undesirable pattern of bad circumstances. In a developing
country like India, governance concerns necessarily have a wider ambit.
The recognition that it takes place in domains other than that of exclusively
formal institutionalised political and administrative structures means that
governance concerns encompass a variety of spheres. These include the
political (equal application of rule of law, accountability and transparency,
the right to information, and corruption in public life); the economic (corporate
governance, the regulation of private sector and financial markets); the
civil society (in its various manifestations, not excluding uncivil associations).
It is these aspects that would lead to long-term sustainability of communities,
societies, nations and the universal at large.
The new challenges created by globalisation are compellingly illustrated
by the international financial system. Liberalisation and integration into global
capital markets has dramatically increased the vulnerability of countries
to. volatile movements of capital across borders. Globalisation has also
affected domestic politics and thereby the capacity of governments to
manage these new forces. Economic liberalisation and integration has led
to greater income inequality within countries without strong welfare states
as the incomes of increasingly demanded skilled workers rise while those
of unskilled labour drop. The twentyfirst century began with a wide set of
reflections on the need for more effective international cooperation and
coordination. Policy-makers the world over have begun to ask what kind of
institutions are needed to manage the challenges associated with
globalisation. Good governance being value-oriented is a subjective concept.
It has different meanings for different people. Good governance is a dynamic
concept. It encompasses fast changing political, social and economic milieu
along with the international environment and conditions of operational
governance. The concept of good governance is a value - laden subjective
concept. Modern concept of good governance is participatory, consensus-
oriented, accountable, transparent, responsive, effective and efficient,
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VOL. LVll, NO. 2. APRIL-JUNE 20!1
equitable and inclusive and follows the rule of law. Good governance is
associated with efficient and effective administration in a democratic
framework an administration considered to be citizen-friendly, citizen-caring,
responsive and respecting human rights at large. Indian democratic structure
of governance, which is the largest democracy of the world, badly fails on
the count of good governance. Although people have got the right to
participate in governance directly as well as indirectly but particular situation
is that this characteristic of good governance is partially realised.
The Government of India has paid special attention to governance
reforms. The reforms in economic governance started in the country under
fiscal stabilisation and SAP over a decade ago with the World Bank I IMF
loan conditionalies to improve the balance of payments and fiscal discipline,
and the reorganisation of economy, polity and society, as in several other
Third World countries. The measures for administrative reforms also
followed. The country could overcome the BoP problems, but has continued
apace on it own with governance reforms in a comprehensive manner. The
agenda of reforms has been clearly stated in the recent official documents
and reports of the government. These new political circumstances present
unique challenge to a world order designed in accordance with the
Westphalia principle of exclusive sovereign rule over a bounded territory
and its associated geopolitical mechanisms for governing world affairs.
The Tenth Five Year Plan (2002-2007) of the government has a full
chapter on 'governance and implementation'. It categorically states that
governance issue is at the forefront of the development agenda and state/
good governance is one of the most crucial factors for development. Here,
the notion of governance is broad and comprehensive, and not confined to
just the administrative sphere. This is similar to the agenda of governance
reforms of the major multilateral and bilateral agencies. The Tenth Plan
states, 'Governance relates to the management of all such process that, in
any society, define the environment which permits and enables individuals
to rise their capability levels, provide opportunities to realise their potential
and enlarge the set of available choices. These processes, covering the
political, social and economic aspects of life impact every level of human
enterprise, be it the individual, the household, the village, the region or the
national level... It covers the state, civil society and the market, each of
which is critical for sustaining human development. The governance issues
and strategies identified in the Tenth Plan (chapter 6) include : people's
participation, decentralisation, right to information, civil society involvement,
civil service reforms (rightsizing, transparency, accountability,
professionalism), procedural reforms (single window clearance. investor
assistance cell), judicial reforms (speedy delivery of justice). using
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DEEPALI SINGH