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Governance Illusion

Updated: December 14th, 2025, 08:00 IST
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Governance is hard and good governance, meaning efficient and effective governance, is harder. Optics is a poor substitute for outcomes, but when outcomes are hard to come by through governance, then optics can be relied upon rather than admitting failure.

When the airline business grinds to a halt and airports across India are an angry mess, the solution is to circulate photographs of an airline CEO folding his hands in supplication before the minister. Problem solved. When dozens die in a fire in a structure that shouldn’t have existed, the solution is to bulldoze the remains of the structure. Of course, thousands of such structures remain.

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Another satisfactory solution is renaming. In New India, MNREGA will now be called Pujya Bapu Rural Employment Guarantee Act and expanded. Ten years ago, a few months after taking office, prime minister Modi said in the Lok Sabha that MNREGA would be continued only because it would show how poorly Manmohan Singh’s government had performed: ‘My political instincts tell me that MNREGA should not be discontinued,’ he said, mocking the Opposition benches, ‘because it is a living memorial to your failures. After so many years in power, all you were able to deliver is for a poor man to dig ditches a few days a month.’

Modi would instead let the scheme die naturally as his government would create better jobs and MNREGA would not be required. After the government had taken office, Nitin Gadkari indicated that MNREGA would be limited to less than a third of India’s districts and that wages would be lowered and delayed for beneficiaries to make the scheme unattractive.

The assumption was that job creation under Modi would make the scheme redundant. By December 2014, except for five states, all others had received significantly lower funds from the Union in 2014, compared to 2013. As India’s economy began to weaken and unemployment rose, Modi began to invest more and more in the scheme he had called a failure. In 2014–15, MNREGA got Rs 32,000 crore; in 2015–16, Rs 37,000 crore; in 2016–17, 48,000 crore; in 2017–18, Rs 55,000 crore; in 2018–19, Rs 61,000 crore; in 2019–20, Rs 71,000 crore and in 2020–21, Rs 111,000 crore. The memorial under Modi was almost three times the size it had been under Manmohan Singh.

Since then sleight of hand, including keeping the MNREGA budget opaque and denying states access to funding, has ensured there is no transparency on demand. The renamed scheme now will solve all of this no doubt.

That has been our history of good governance: Things that were difficult to do and required planning and implementation were first taken up and then abandoned. This was true even when the project was as hallowed as the Namami Gange, taken up in June 2014 immediately after the election victory. It was given an outlay of Rs 20,000 crore ‘to accomplish the twin objectives of effective abatement of pollution, conservation and rejuvenation of National River Ganga’. The Ganga required not so much cleaning—because it flowed continually into the sea—as ensuring that further pollutants did not enter it. This was a granular problem that had to do with hundreds of places where effluent was being discharged into the river. Once it was learned that cleaning up required substantial effort, enthusiasm for the project waned.

In February 2017, the National Green Tribunal observed that ‘not a single drop of river Ganga has been cleaned so far’, and that government efforts were ‘only wasting public money’. The next year, the 86-year-old environmentalist G.D. Agarwal, who had been on a fast unto death for 111 days, died, having given up even water. A professor at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur who had served on the Central Pollution Control Board, Agarwal had been demanding a law to protect the Ganga. A day before Agarwal died, Gadkari (who was Union minister for Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation) said almost all of Agarwal’s demands had been met.

Allocations to Namami Gange fell from Rs 2,500 crore in 2016–17 to Rs 2,300 crore in 2017–18 and then to Rs 687 crore in 2018–19. In 2019–20, about Rs 375 crore was spent. That year, the project was folded into a larger one now called Jal Shakti. When the lockdown in March 2020 led to the temporary shutting down of polluting units, the Modi government claimed that the Ganga had been cleaned. The government website for the ‘National Mission for Clean Ganga’ lists the minutes of the meeting of the council running it. Just two meetings were held over 10 years it seems, one on 14 December 2019 and the second on 30 December 2022.

After 10 years and a thick stream of publicity, is the Ganga clean? The Opposition says no. ‘Why has Ganga river gotten dirtier despite spending Rs 20,000 crore: Congress asks PM Modi’ is a headline from the Press Trust of India from 14 May 2024.

That is the problem of talking about good governance after being in office for more than two terms. The record is before us, and continues to unfold daily. How many Indians are still convinced by optics? Most likely it is those people who want to be convinced that good governance abounds in New India.

By Aakar Patel

Orissa POST – Odisha’s No.1 English Daily
Tags: Aakar PatelOP Editorial
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