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Public Administration

Key Points at a Glance

Issues in Public Administration: Union-State Relations, Minister-Civil Servant Relationship, Generalists vs Specialists, Administrative Reforms, Social Audit

Paper III · Unit 2 Section 1 of 11 0 PYQs 23 min

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Key Points at a Glance

  1. Union-State administrative relations — Article 256 (States must ensure compliance with Central laws), Article 257 (States must not impede Union executive action), Article 258 (Centre may delegate powers to States), Article 312 (All India Services); Centre can issue administrative directions to States; States have own executive machinery but must implement Central laws. / **- ** — 256, 257, 258; AIS — -

  2. Sarkaria Commission (1983–87) — chaired by R.S. Sarkaria; examined Centre-State relations; key recommendations: (a) use of AIS should not be curtailed; (b) Inter-State Council should be activated; (c) Governor should be a non-partisan constitutional head; (d) emergency powers under Article 356 should be used sparingly; Punchhi Commission (2007–10) reviewed and strengthened the same recommendations — especially Article 356 misuse. / ** (1983–87)** — - ; AIS ; - ; Art. 356 ** (2007–10)** — ; Art. 356

  3. Generalists vs Specialists debate — Generalists (IAS): administrative breadth, coordination, policy coherence; Specialists (doctors, engineers, economists): domain depth; Paul Appleby (1953) and the First ARC (1966) both defended the generalist; Ashok Mehta Committee argued specialists should lead technical departments; 2nd ARC (2008) recommended domain specialisation as a compromise. / **- ** — (IAS): ; : ; (1953) ARC (1966) — ; — ; 2nd ARC —

  4. Administrative Reforms — Key commissions: (i) First ARC (1966–70), Chairman Morarji Desai (later L.K. Jha); 20 reports; recommended PM's Department, DOPT; (ii) Second ARC (2005–08), Chairman Veerappa Moily; 15 reports; wide-ranging recommendations on ethics, RTI, local governance, e-governance. / ** ** — ARC (1966–70): 20 ; PM , DOPT; ARC (2005–08): 15 ; , RTI, , -

  5. Social Audit — Pioneered by Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan (MKSS) in Rajasthan (1990s); institutionalised under MGNREGS (Section 17) — mandatory gram sabha social audit every 6 months; CAG guidelines; examining muster rolls, bills, and actual work done vs records; empowers citizens to hold government accountable. / ** ** — MKSS ; MGNREGS — 6 - ; , , ;

  6. Inter-State Council (Article 263) — A constitutional body for Centre-State coordination; established in 1990 (after Sarkaria recommendations); chaired by PM; all CMs as members; rarely meets — only 11 times since 1990; Punchhi Commission recommended it meet at least thrice a year. / **- ** — 1990 ; : PM; CM ; 1990 11 ; — 3

  7. Weberian model vs Indian reality — Max Weber's ideal bureaucracy: hierarchical, rule-bound, neutral, merit-based. Indian bureaucracy faces: over-centralization, political interference, red tape, departmental silos, and accountability deficit. New Public Management (NPM) reforms (1990s onward) — introduce market mechanisms, citizen charters, performance contracts, e-governance, output orientation. / ** ** — : , -, : , , NPM — , , -

  8. Paul Appleby's Reports (1953 & 1956) — American PA expert Paul Appleby studied Indian administration twice; key observations: (a) Indian administration is "excessively good by accident, excessively bad by design"; (b) Recommended PM's Department; (c) Defended the generalist civil servant; (d) Emphasized political accountability over administrative neutrality. / ** (1953, 1956)** — PA ; : PM ; ;