RS Sharma talks to
Forbes India about his tenure as the director general and mission
director of the UIDAI and his vision as the new chief secretary of
Jharkhand.
Ram Sewak Sharma
Age: 57
Designation: Chief secretary, Government of Jharkhand
Education: Masters in mathematics, IIT Kanpur; masters in computer science, University of California
Career: Indian Administrative Service (1978 batch)
Hobbies: Photography; reading technical books, especially on programming
Q
Does it worry you that even though you might have set the nuts and
bolts of UID correctly, there could be other governance issues due to
which UID-enabled schemes may still not work?
A. Yes, you
are right. It does worry me. I completely agree that ultimately these
tools have to be used by humans in a political system and if you have a
lot of vested interests there, and a lot of fellows who are [adversely]
affected by that [UID], then they will either blame the tool or even
destroy it.
Q Now that you have quit the UIDAI, how do
you look at those who criticised UID? Do you think they were justified
to some extent?
A. There are two broad sources of criticism
for UID: One, a lot of people were worried about the privacy of personal
data and suspected that UID can be used for surveillance; the other
group was that of NGOs working with marginalised people, and they felt
UID was becoming a tool for exclusion. For example, a manual labourer
may not be able to give valid thumbprints and fail to get minimum wages
under NREGA.
There is a third group, which has not yet come into
the picture: It comprises people who benefitted from the leakages in the
system, like bogus ration cards. Once the actual transfers start, the
economy of leakages will oppose UID in a big way.
For the first
group, we have very cogent arguments since we are not collecting any
confidential information except biometrics. That, too, is secure and we
do not allow it to be downloaded. On the exclusion front, we have
maintained that we will manage the 1 percent or 2 percent exceptions who
fail to receive benefits.
Q You are now the chief
secretary of Jharkhand, which is often labelled as one of the
worst-governed states in India. How do you look forward to your tenure?
A.
One of the problems of governance has been that we have not built
systems over the years. So, we tackle problems in an ad hoc manner; it’s
more like firefighting all the time without really contributing much.
Suppose we have 50,000 teachers in the state, and if I don’t maintain
their promotions, salaries, etc, there is going to be a lot of
grievances and these fellows are going to file writs in the high court
and our fellows will just be responding to those writs and contempt
cases.
So, I told my officers, you can continue with this
firefighting drill or you should think long term and build systems. And I
believe, by and large politicians don’t resent you if you try to
improve systems. And that is the only way we can improve governance in
the long term. The other thing is to be responsive and responsible at
the ground level, otherwise we would have problems like Left-wing
extremism. Our delivery systems should be transparent and
non-discretionary.
Read more:
http://forbesindia.com/article/exit-interview/people-benefiting-from-system-leakages-will-oppose-uid-rs-sharma/35071/0?id=35071&pg=0#ixzz2TMYlSysG
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