Civil Service Values & Politicisation
Under this scenario, there is a definitive trend towards the 'politicisation of bureaucracy'. The rising materialism and acquisitiveness in social life have also adversely impacted upon the ethical values of both the permanent executive and the political executive.
What are the consequences of this 'politicisation of bureaucracy'? Discuss. (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Individual career incentives (proximity to power advances careers) vs. institutional values (non-partisanship is the oath).
T3: Short-term service delivery (politically driven can appear effective) vs. long-term governance capacity (partisan civil service hollows out institutional expertise).
Politicisation of the bureaucracy refers to the erosion of the permanent executive's constitutional independence — the transformation of civil servants from neutral implementers of policy within the law into responsive instruments of the political party in power. It operates bidirectionally: political executives colonise administrative decision-making; and civil servants, recognising the rewards of proximity to power, actively seek partisan alignment to advance their careers. Both dimensions must be addressed.
Consequences of politicisation:
1. Governance quality deteriorates. When postings, transfers, and promotions are determined by political loyalty rather than competence and integrity, the best officers are marginalised while the most compliant advance. The result is a self-reinforcing selection process that removes professional excellence from senior decision-making roles.
2. Citizens lose the neutral arbiter. Democratic governance requires that every citizen — regardless of political affiliation — can access state services equitably. A politicised bureaucracy delivers services to political constituencies, not to citizens as rights-holders. Welfare schemes reach supporters; enforcement targets opponents. This is constitutional discrimination under Art. 14.
3. Long-term state capacity erodes. Politicised civil services cannot provide the institutional memory, technical continuity, and professional advice that effective governance requires. Frequent transfers of honest officers destroy institutional knowledge precisely where it is most needed.
4. Civil society loses trust in the state. When citizens believe that administrative decisions reflect political calculations, they lose faith in formal institutions — driving them toward informal, often corrupt, channels for service delivery.
5. Democratic accountability weakens. A civil service that tells the political executive only what it wants to hear — rather than accurate information and honest professional advice — makes democratic accountability impossible. Parliaments and electorates cannot hold governments accountable for consequences they were never warned about.
Institutional safeguards: T.S.R. Subramanian v. Union of India (2013) — Civil Services Board with mandatory minimum tenure protects officers from retaliatory transfers. All India Services (Conduct) Rules, 1968 — non-partisanship is a mandatory value. 2nd ARC's Fourth Report recommends performance-based rather than patronage-based postings. Mission Karmayogi (2020) emphasises competency-based career progression. Fixed two-year minimum tenure for key field postings would remove the most effective political pressure tool — the arbitrary transfer.
The civil servant's role: Politicisation is not only a political executive's failure — it is also a civil service failure when officers abandon neutrality for career advancement. The remedy is both institutional (Civil Services Board, tenure protection) and cultural — a civil service that collectively values constitutional morality over individual advancement. As Ambedkar said: "Constitutional morality is not a natural sentiment. It has to be cultivated." The cultivation begins with each officer's individual choice of loyalty — to the Constitution or to the politician.
(a) What are the options available to Ramesh as the Director of the Home Department of the bordering State?
(b) What option should Ramesh adopt and why?
(c) Critically evaluate each of the options.
(d) What are the ethical dilemmas being faced by Ramesh?
(e) What policy measures would you suggest to combat the menace of infiltration of illegal migrants from the neighbouring country? (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Loyalty to departmental hierarchy vs. loyalty to the Constitution — the AHS's suppression order is itself potentially a security failure.
T3: State-level reporting vs. central-level escalation — if the state channel is compromised, constitutional duty requires going to the central Home Ministry.
This case presents a national security and civil service values dilemma — a superior is ordering the suppression of an accurate, professionally prepared security report, under career threat, with no legitimate professional basis for doing so.
Ethical dilemmas: Three tensions define this case. Career security — a prestigious posting and an upcoming promotion — directly conflicts with the constitutional duty to submit accurate national security reports. Loyalty to departmental hierarchy — the AHS is Ramesh's direct superior — conflicts with loyalty to the Constitution, since the AHS's suppression order has no legitimate professional basis and is itself a security failure. The state-level reporting chain may be compromised, which raises the question of when central-level escalation is not disloyalty but constitutional duty.
Option evaluation: Withdrawing the report is a constitutional violation — career considerations do not override the duty to provide honest professional advice on national security. Requesting the AHS to put his withdrawal instruction in writing is the critical first tactical step: the AHS will almost certainly refuse, neutralising the pressure. If the state channel remains compromised, the Central Ministry of Home Affairs must be informed under the Whistleblowers Protection Act, 2014 — infiltration with forged documents is a central government concern under border management law.
My decision: I would not withdraw the report. Request written order from AHS. Escalate to Home Minister and Chief Secretary if AHS maintains pressure. If state channel is demonstrably compromised, report to Central MHA under WPA 2014. Invoke Civil Services Board protection against retaliatory transfer under T.S.R. Subramanian (2013). Document all communication contemporaneously.
Policy measures on illegal infiltration: Multi-layer biometric verification at border crossing points; inter-state intelligence sharing on forged document patterns; an independent reporting channel from border district officers directly to the Central MHA, bypassing state home departments when the latter are compromised; fast-track prosecution courts for infiltration-related criminal offences.
(a) As a conscientious civil servant, evaluate the options available to Vinod.
(b) In the light of the above case, comment upon the ethical issues that may arise due to the politicisation of bureaucracy. (250 words, 20 marks)
This case has an unusual double structure: the first question is whether Vinod should expose the Chairman; the second — more sophisticated — is whether he should do it through an Opposition politician. Both questions must be answered.
Should Vinod expose the Chairman? Yes. Vinod has video evidence of active bribery. Under the Whistleblowers Protection Act, 2014 and the Prevention of Corruption Act, a civil servant who witnesses corruption and fails to report it is not neutral — they are complicit. Silence here is not professional discretion; it is abdication of constitutional duty.
Should he do it through the Opposition Board Member? No. The Opposition Member's offer of "career rewards" in exchange for using the evidence is structurally identical to a bribe — it converts a constitutional duty into a partisan transaction. If Vinod provides the evidence through this channel, he has: (a) compromised his neutrality permanently by becoming a political instrument, (b) given the story to a party whose interests shape how it is told and used, and (c) accepted the principle that his professional conduct can be traded for political patronage. None of this is compatible with civil service values.
Vinod's most appropriate course: Decline the Opposition Board Member — politely but explicitly, in writing if possible. File a confidential complaint with the Central Vigilance Commission under the WPA 2014, attaching the video evidence through the protected channel. Invoke Civil Services Board protection against retaliatory transfer. Document the Board Member's approach as part of the record — it may itself be relevant to understanding the political dimensions of the Chairman's conduct.
On politicisation of bureaucracy: Vinod's case illustrates that politicisation is not always top-down. The Opposition Member is attempting to capture Vinod from outside the ruling party — replacing one form of political dependency with another. Civil service neutrality means resistance to both. The civil service's authority derives from the Constitution, not from any political party — and that authority is preserved only when civil servants resist capture from every political direction, not only from the government of the day.
Reform: Civil service appointments to boards and public undertakings should be term-fixed and insulated from both ruling party and opposition interference — preventing the kind of leverage the Board Member is exercising here. The CVC complaint channel should be strengthened with faster processing for cases involving video or documentary evidence.
Discuss the following with reference to this case:
(a) Ethical issues involved in re-appropriation of funds from a welfare project to the developmental projects.
(b) Given the need for proper utilisation of public funds, discuss the options available to Rajesh Kumar.
(c) Is resigning a worthy option? (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Full procedural compliance including parliamentary notification (transparent, legally correct) vs. suppressing notification (politically convenient before four elections — legally impermissible).
T3: Is this decision illegal or merely politically inconvenient? The distinction determines the appropriate response.
Ethical framing: This case differs from the others in this theme because the re-appropriation may be legally permissible — if it follows the full GFR procedure including mandatory parliamentary notification. The ethical question is not whether to do it, but how: transparently, with full parliamentary notification, or quietly, suppressing the notification to avoid pre-election scrutiny.
The civil service values dimension: Rajesh's obligation as Head of Budget Division is to process the re-appropriation through the complete legal procedure — including parliamentary notification — regardless of whether that notification is politically inconvenient before four state elections. His role is not to shield the political executive from accountability for its budget decisions; it is to ensure those decisions are taken through transparent, legally compliant procedures. The political executive is accountable to Parliament and the electorate for re-appropriating welfare funds; Rajesh's job is to ensure that accountability mechanism functions, not to suppress it.
What Rajesh should do: Process the re-appropriation through the full GFR procedure. Insist on mandatory parliamentary notification — this is non-negotiable. If directed to suppress the parliamentary notification, refuse that specific instruction in writing and escalate to the Finance Secretary. The re-appropriation itself is a policy decision for the political executive; the suppression of the notification is a procedural integrity issue that falls within Rajesh's professional responsibility to resist.
On resignation: Resignation is not appropriate as a first response. Rajesh has not been asked to do anything illegal if the procedure is followed fully. His institutional role is to enforce the procedure — that is his contribution to constitutional governance. Resignation before exhausting procedural insistence would be premature and would remove the procedural safeguard without resolving the underlying concern. If Rajesh is eventually ordered to process the re-appropriation without parliamentary notification — in writing — and that written order is not retracted after formal escalation, then resignation may become appropriate as a last resort after all channels are exhausted. But that threshold has not been reached yet.
1. Anticipating specific threats to ethical standards and integrity in the civil services.
2. Strengthening the ethical competence of civil servants.
3. Developing administrative processes and practices which promote ethical values and integrity in civil services.
Suggest institutional measures to address the above three issues. (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Reactive accountability (catching wrongdoing after the fact) vs. proactive integrity design (preventing wrongdoing through institutional architecture).
T3: Training as values-building (transformative) vs. compliance-checking (transactional).
The 2nd ARC's Fourth Report ("Ethics in Governance") identified the same three dimensions. These are not theoretical — each has a specific institutional translation.
(1) Anticipating specific threats to ethical standards:
Institutional measure: Ethics Risk Mapping. Each ministry and department should conduct annual mapping of positions and processes with the highest corruption exposure — procurement, licensing, land records, recruitment. Risk-mapped positions should have enhanced accountability mechanisms: mandatory rotation every two years, asset declaration with genuine scrutiny, and lifestyle verification for officers in sensitive postings. This converts reactive anti-corruption (catching wrongdoing after the fact) into proactive risk management. CVC should develop a standardised framework for departmental Ethics Risk Assessments, reported annually to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Governance.
Specific threat to anticipate in 2024+: Digital corruption — manipulation of e-governance portals, procurement algorithms, and data systems. The Ethics Risk Assessment must explicitly include cyber-corruption vectors, not just traditional bribery channels.
(2) Strengthening ethical competence:
Institutional measure: Competency-based ethics training (Mission Karmayogi, 2020). Mission Karmayogi explicitly includes ethical competence as a core domain alongside technical and managerial competencies. Implementation requires: mandatory ethics case study modules (not lecture-based) at every promotion stage — not just induction; mentorship pairing of senior officers with exemplary integrity records with junior officers in high-exposure postings; peer review forums where officers can discuss ethical pressures they face without fear of career consequences. Most importantly: promotion decisions must include ethical conduct assessments — not just technical performance — so that the career incentive structure rewards integrity rather than ignoring it.
(3) Administrative processes that promote ethical values:
Institutional measures — three specific ones:
Transparent decision-making with documented reasoning: All discretionary decisions above a defined threshold (posting decisions, contract approvals, regulatory clearances) should have documented reasoning that is reviewable by oversight bodies. This converts ethical behaviour from a personal virtue into a structural requirement — officers cannot make undocumented arbitrary decisions and cannot easily act on political instructions that would not survive documentation.
Social audit and citizen feedback mechanisms: MGNREGA's social audit model — where citizens directly evaluate whether entitlements were delivered — should be extended to other welfare schemes. Citizen-facing digital rating systems for government services (like the one in Rajasthan's Jan Soochna portal) convert accountability from an internal government function into a public one.
Separation of decision from beneficiary: Where a single officer controls both approval and implementation in a high-value process, split the functions — one officer approves, another verifies, a third disburses. This is the procurement committee model and should be extended to all high-value administrative decisions. It makes collusion structurally harder and honest officers structurally protected.