By:
Sankrant Sanu
sankrant@msn.com
March 20, 2004
In his recent Republic Day address, Indian president Abdul Kalam spoke
about what has become a hot topic in India today. He said:
“…There are only three members of the society who can remove corruption…
They are father, mother and elementary school teacher.”
The implication of his remarks is that widespread problem of corruption in
India is ultimately a problem of moral character. President Kalam is not
alone in these views in India: in fact, it is a common assumption.
It cannot be denied that the average citizen encounters more petty
corruption in India than in the United States. If this corruption is a
factor of relative moral character, then this must imply that Americans
possess a higher moral character than Indians, which results in the United
States having a lower degree of corruption than India. Examining data like
the Corruption Perception Index published by Transparency
International[1], we find that a number of countries ravaged by European
colonization show up as some of the most corrupt. It must then be
concluded that the people in all these countries are moral imbeciles, who
can`t distinguish right from wrong and haven`t been taught so by their
parents and teachers.
While President Kalam is right that parents and teachers play a key role
in building the values of a child, we argue here that widespread
corruption in society is not simply a function of morality. The phenomena
of what is seen as widespread corruption is a failure of the system rather
than simply of individuals, and it is in the transformation of the system
that we must seek primary remedies.
Are Indians Immoral Or Is It The System?
Firstly, let us examine the question of morality. If it is indeed the case
that corruption is a result of character flaws of Indians rather than
problems with the system, then this character flaw must be widely seen
even when Indians are removed from the Indian system. However, we don`t
find that Indians in America, for instance, are perceived to be especially
corrupt. They are generally regarded as honest, hard-working
entrepreneurs, employees and citizens. How is it that the same mothers,
fathers and teachers, who have presumably failed in India, appear to have
not done a terribly bad job when their children land in the US? Are our
friends and neighbors in India really so much less moral than the people
we meet in the US? Is high morality the prerogative of a particular race
or religion?
That is, if individuals with similar backgrounds appear to act differently
within two different systems, understanding the difference in the two
systems is likely to provide clues to understanding the difference in
perceived corruption in India and the United States.
A Moral Issue Or A Legal Issue?
Let us take a classic example in India of petty corruption. I have applied
for a phone but the telephone linesman is demanding a payment to install
it. (Recent changes have made this example somewhat dated, but that will
allow useful insight.) This bribe demanded by the linesman appears to be a
clear instance of corruption. Yet, one may argue – isn`t this a
straightforward business transaction? [2] I`m paying for a service to the
lineman and he is installing the phone. On giving the payment, I am
certain that the line will be installed, it would be very unusual for the
fellow to run away with my money. So, on one level, this business
transaction has a high level of integrity – and in that sense, the
linesman doesn`t appear to be fundamentally dishonest. On the other hand,
one can argue that this is clearly corruption because he is already
getting paid by the government to perform this service and he is not doing
his job.
But, what if we legalized that? What if the government made a regulation
that the linesman could collect a fee of five hundred rupees per line that
he installs? The same transaction is taking place but we have now
privatized it and we would no longer call it corruption. Has the integrity
of the person changed or have we merely changed the rules? Are we defining
corruption simply within the bounds of legality or can we determine right
and wrong beyond those bounds?
Let us take another example. Top public accounting firms in America have
come under a cloud for taking consulting assignments from the companies
that they were auditing. There was no law to prevent this, but after Enron
broke out, this became a major scandal. It was clear that the paid
consulting assignments to the auditor were a legal tactic to “grease the
wheels” of the audit and this was a practice that was widely being done in
corporate America. Even though this was legal, can we deny that this is a
form of corruption? If we examine the moral basis, public auditors were
obligated to report on corporate accounts to the shareholders and the
public. Accepting paid consulting assignments from the companies one is
supposed to monitor to possibly give a more favorable picture of the
accounts can only be seen as a clear instance of high-level bribery.
Similarly, many of the major financial services firms in the US are being
accused of inflating the stock ratings of companies that they were doing
business with to the detriment of their retail clients. Internal
communications in the brokerage firms showed that analysts put out buy
recommendations on stocks that they did not think would perform well,
simply because those companies were giving them investment banking
business[3]. Aren`t the payments that the corporate clients make to the
analyst firms a form of bribery for illegitimate ratings? If we were
considering the moral rather than simply the legal implications of the
fact that this was done by nearly all the top financial services firms,
would we then be forced to admit that there is widespread corruption in
corporate America?
Certainly, this becomes even more apparent in the political space.
Cronyism and handing out large defense contracts to companies that have
been campaign contributors has been part of the course in Washington.
Money readily changes hands in Washington at the instance of special
interest groups and multi-million dollar lobbying firms to buy influence.
Legislative outcomes cater to the influence of big money. While this might
not have the on-camera impact of a Bangaru Laxman accepting money for “the
party” from the fictitious defense firm in the Tehelka setup; yet the
difference might well be attributed to a lack of sophistication in
comparison to the Washington counterparts rather than to any fundamental
difference in morality.
Yet, even if we accept that the perceived difference in corruption between
India and the US is not a question of relative morality, it is an
undeniable fact that petty corruption does exist at a much higher level
for the common citizen in India than in the US. If Indians are
fundamentally no more “corrupt”, as a character flaw, than the people in
America, why is the actual experience of the common man in India in
getting basic government services like obtaining a telephone line or
getting a police report filed so significantly different than the
experience in America? Understanding this is a key to solving the problem
of corruption that engages so many commentators in India.
Examining the System
The first major difference between the US and India is in the systems of
governance. Traveling extensively in rural India, I find that the
relationship and attitude of the people to the government is still that of
a colonizing power, not something that either belongs to them or is in
touch with their aspirations. After living in the US for many years, it is
clear that there is a far higher degree of ownership and accountability of
the local government to the local communities. Furthermore, the common
citizen, for most of his or her needs, interfaces with the government in
the local city or township rather than at the state or the national level.
Power and accountability are devolved to a much greater level to the local
administration. Also, American enterprise is far more privatized than is
the case with India and there is less involvement of the government in
daily life.
By contrast, in the Indian system, power is centralized to a much greater
degree at the level of the national and state governments. Further, the
centralized colonial state apparatus, right from its inception, was never
designed to serve the people. As an example, the government official at
the district level was called a collector, his primary role in the system
was extortion, not service. Similarly, the power of the police apparatus
devolved downwards as a means of control of the local population for the
benefit of the rulers, not as an arm of the community for its own
protection and service. The laws themselves were created and imposed in a
top-down manner – and these laws were both alien to the people (the Indian
penal code today is still based on the penal code created by the British
in 1860, with a basis in the British system) and were created and directed
for the benefit of the ruler, not the ruled. This included laws that
outlawed many of the traditional sources of livelihood of the people,
including textile manufacturing and metallurgy, as well as forms of
traditional medicine to further the economic interests of the British.
Furthermore, even in the administrative structure, there was a clear class
system. To implement the system on behalf of the rulers was the Indian
Civil Service (later the Indian Administrative Service) that was
originally only open to whites. Later on, the ICS also included an elite
section of Indians who had been “made white” – i.e., who had gone through
the colonial system of education and been indoctrinated to identify
themselves with the rulers rather than the ruled. The layer of native
Indian clerks and “sepoys” at the bottom were often enforcing rules and
laws that they did not believe in on people who did not understand them.
These natives could, of course, never rise up to the ranks of the officers
or aspire to join their class.
At the top of this system was the Viceroy, drawing his authority from the
Queen of England. It was a centralized and alien power structure,
sprawling like a gigantic bear on the aspirations of the people. An
understanding of this system and its origins is very relevant to
understanding India today. This is because, despite independence and
democracy, the administrative system of India remains completely
continuous with colonial India (and completely discontinuous with
pre-colonial India). While at the top layer the authority of the Viceroy
was replaced by the authority of the elected cabinet and the Parliament,
the entire structure of the government administration essentially remains
colonial in its origin and attitudes.
The system in America was, ironically, also started by people who were
originally English. The dramatic difference comes from the fact that
America was a colony of settlement, while India was a colony of
exploitation. In America, the natives were largely exterminated since the
wealth of the land lay mainly in its natural resources and not in the
produce of the natives and the systems of governance that evolved were
what the settlers chose for themselves. In India, the wealth lay mainly in
the output of the locals. The system was designed not for the settlement
of the English, but for the most efficient exploitation and control of the
Indians for obtaining the local produce via extortive taxation to be
carted away to England
Thus, in America, the police force, for instance, evolved from the need of
local communities for self-policing. Thus, as in the settlement of the
West, a sheriff would be appointed by the community from within the local
populace to maintain order. Thus the sheriff was a member of the
community, not an imposed elite, enforcing the laws of the central rulers.
In some ways, the American experience allowed for an even greater
community involvement and accountability than England since it was
difficult to have centralized authoritarian control in a far-flung land
with different groups of settlers, even though the overall Anglican system
rested on a strong belief in a centralized “rule of law” enforced and
created by the authority of the Church and the Sovereign Ruler.
While coming back to the problems in the contemporary Indian system, it is
worth examining briefly the system that existed in pre-colonial India. It
appears that this system was far more community-based in terms of village
and jati laws than the colonial system. Even during the Mughal rule,
though there were some centralized laws, the law-making and enforcement
authority of the local communities were largely left undisturbed. Further,
a large percentage of the local revenue remained with the local community
by which local civil services – such as water resource management,
education and order -- could be maintained. The local community, in many
respects, devolved power upwards, to greater aggregates, rather than
having a centralized power structure devolve power downwards[4]. In
colonial times, this equation was reversed with much of the local produce
being taken away by extortive British taxation, causing local institutions
to decay. Furthermore, a centralized system was steadily imposed that took
away the power from local communities and concentrated it into the hands
of government officials.
As we mention below, this system remained largely unchanged post
independence, though people like Mahatma Gandhi realized the harm that the
destruction of the local community had caused. While there have been some
reforms in the system, in the form of the Panchayati Raj act, yet more
progress remains stymied by the fact that the panchayats have very little
relative authority and control over the sources of revenue, which remain
in the hands of bureaucrats.
From Colonization to Socialism
The post-independence socialist system further strengthened the approach
of an essential patriarchic system – where the state knew best and private
enterprise was something to be controlled by spools and spools of red
tape.
Along with the politicians, the popular media projected the image of the
corrupt, greedy, rapacious businessman, colluding with the corrupt
politician and cruelly suppressing the people. The difficulties faced by
an honest businessman in the legitimate and necessary enterprise of
creating wealth for himself and for the nation were rarely appreciated. In
the book, `India Unbounded`, Gurcharan Das, former CEO of Proctor and
Gamble India, documents the insanity of the license raj that sought to
reduce business to the same level of low-performance as the government.
You could actually be penalized for producing efficiently or more than the
allotted quota.
Even now, despite some liberalization with respect to business, there is a
dramatic contrast between the ease by which one can set up a new business
in the United States as compared to India. In the former case, the state
is geared to assist you. In the latter case, it is often standing in the
way.
Finally, both the colonial period with its widespread poverty and the
breakdown of job security in traditional occupations, as well as the
controlled economy of the socialist period led to the creation of a
culture of scarcity. This culture of scarcity itself led to a desperation,
an attitude of every man for himself, a need to break the symbolic and
literal queue and get in front, since it was doubtful whether staying in
the queue would get one served at all.
Thus, to the inherited colonial system was added the license raj with its
opposition to private enterprise, where the rules were not designed to
serve the people and encouraged a culture of scarcity where one had to
circumvent the rules to succeed – and we were headed into the
inevitability of what we call corruption.
The Creation Of A Parallel System
So, what does all this tell us about corruption? The first and foremost
idea we must realize is that the people and the state, for well over a
century, have been antagonistic to each other. The colonial government
apparatus has been designed to control the people, not to support them.
For the common people, the business community and even the lower-level
government functionaries, the system has been both incomprehensible as
well as an obstacle to their needs and desires. In this situation, the
system is something that needs to be overcome and avoided rather than
something to be abided by. A huge amount of creativity and energy of the
people is thus expended in finding ways to circumvent the system rather
than support it.
Furthermore, there is little or no performance accountability within the
administrative system. It is very difficult to fire corrupt or
non-performing employees, and very few rewards for honest and
conscientious employees within the system. As a result, corruption is a
form of subverting the system, both by the employees as well as by their
customers, the general public – by creating an unofficial, but functioning
system of private transactions in lieu of the dysfunctional and often
antagonistic official one from the perspective of the people. This is one
aspect of understanding why a large number of countries that show up at
the bottom of Transparency International`s Corruption Perception Index are
former colonies.
Why is the unofficial system functioning? Going back to the telephone
example, making a payment to the linesman will ensure that the work is
done. The linesman will probably himself have a system of
“revenue-sharing” with other officials and employees, as a result of which
a parallel system and economy is created. What are the characteristics of
this economy? That one`s job will get done relatively efficiently, that
the bribe-receiver will be accountable to the bribe-giver, and the people
who are more productive in this system will make more money than the
people who are less productive. In other words, this system partly
restores the very characteristics of accountability, efficiency and
recognition of performance that should be part of any well-functioning
system and which is largely missing in the official system.
This does not imply that all is well. There are plenty of problems with
the parallel system, including the fact that there is a high degree of
overall inefficiency in having two systems -- and this ultimately is
debilitating and costly for the nation. Over times, it erodes the very
foundations on which the institutions of the state rest. But before we can
talk of eliminating or minimizing this parallel system of bribe taking and
giving, it is critical to understand the real problems with it.
One of the biggest problems with the colonial apparatus of government is
that it is a corrupting system. That is, it is a system that is more
challenging for an honest individual than for a dishonest one. How is
that?
Let us take the example of an honest telephone linesman. He goes about his
job installing a telephone line without demanding a bribe. The problem is
that he now becomes a threat to the revenue of the unofficial system. This
means that he will be targeted by his peers who are operating within the
unofficial system and in the likely case of his boss being part of the
“cut”, he will get transferred to some other, less privileged location, so
that the unofficial system can continue unhindered. Obviously, he will
also be making less money than his peers. All in all, the system will make
it both harder and much less attractive for him to remain honest – that he
does so will be as a result of the sheer force of his will.
Similarly, for the ambitious businessman interested in growing (and thus
creating jobs), the system has stood as an obstacle. He had to succeed
despite the system, not because of it. Are Indian business people
fundamentally dishonest? I would say not. In fact, business in India has
traditionally relied on a very high degree of trust – with word of mouth
agreements often standing in lieu of signed contracts. It is this high
degree of mutual integrity that has enabled Indian traders to control a
majority of the world diamond trade today, for instance. Yet, like the
government employee, the successful businessman has been penalized by the
system, making him complicit in its corruption.
Thus, rather than fundamentally corrupt individuals, we have a corrupting
system – a system in which it is more difficult and less rewarding for
someone to be honest than to be corrupt. A well-functioning system is one
in which exactly the opposite is true – the cost of being dishonest is far
greater than the rewards of being honest. A corrupting system is corrosive
to all that encounter it – it literally breeds corruption and transforms
honest people into corrupt people over time. Ultimately, this corrosive
system completely dissolves the integrity of the official system – to
survive at all, one needs to start playing by the unofficial rules. Of
course, the unofficial rules soon need their own enforcement mechanisms
and the money power starts combining with muscle power. This raises the
importance of non-state enforcers and the spiral into criminality begins.
One can see a higher degree of such breakdown in places such as Bihar, for
instance, where parallel “senas” and private justice have replaced even
these non-functional state institutions.
Why then have we tended to study corruption largely as a symptom of social
morality and culture? We need to remember that the larger system also
consists of the institutions of education and media, all of which relate
very differently to the people in the Indian context than in the United
States. There is a noticeable difference between social science programs
in India and the United States in how they study their own societies. The
Indian elite intelligentsia tends to study their own society largely
through colonially inspired categories and lenses. As such, it is
programmed to construct cultural blame for criminal acts in a way that
academics in the United States are not[5]. This creation of culture blame
(and culture shame) is a phenomenon found in most colonial societies. It
was an original construction of the colonizing powers that set up and
controlled the institutions to make the natives easier to rule by having
them accept the cultural superiority of their masters (and the relative
inferiority of their own). Social science studies in India thus show
continuity from colonial times and institutions and a disjunction from the
people at large.
A Culture Of Entrepreneurship?
If there were a cultural generalization that can be drawn about the Indian
response to a non-functioning and antagonistic system, one would hazard
the generalization of Indian entrepreneurship.
Even in a repressive state-controlled economy, entrepreneurs like
Dhirubhai Ambani managed to circumvent the system and succeed. People such
as JRD Tata, stymied by government control at home, established industrial
enterprises throughout South-East Asia. Indians that migrated throughout
the world demonstrated a talent for entrepreneurship – from low-tech
hotels and restaurants to the high-tech software revolution.
We needn`t look only at large entrepreneurs, but at small ones as well.
The unorganized sector – small businessman, traders and others -- remains
a very large part of the Indian economy and employment base. From the
vendors boarding buses at strategic stops selling knick-knacks to the
mushrooming STD operators, people found creative ways to innovate.
In fact, large hierarchical institutions have rarely been part of the
Indian ethos, whether in religion, government, or even private enterprise.
Our religious ideas themselves were entrepreneurial and not controlled by
large centralized hierarchical institutions, unlike Western Christianity.
Our pre-colonial laws themselves were highly diverse, localized and
community-based rather than all of them being handed down and enforced by
a single central authority. Even functions such as the maintenance of
land-records were not state-run, but managed by private individuals – the
dependence of their livelihood on their reputation for honesty assured the
integrity of the system. A network of specialist contractors rather than
monolithic institutions managed even large projects, such as the
construction of fabulous buildings or the manufacture of ships. In
contemporary times, the now famous Mumbai tiffinwalas, profiled in Forbes,
distribute 175,000 tiffins a day exceeding Six Sigma quality of delivery,
based solely on a network of private operators[6].
So, we are no strangers to either free enterprise or small government.
Corruption can then be regarded as forced, perverse manifestation of this
spirit or even a form of dissent in the context of an alien and
antagonistic system. If the system were changed to support and harness
this entrepreneurial spirit rather than stymie it, the sky is the limit to
what we can achieve.
Towards Change
How then do we create change in the system so that it is more responsive
to the people, more fulfilling to the employees and more effective for the
nation? The following steps should be considered, in order of importance:
1. Reducing the size of the government and privatizing non-essential
functions.
2. De-centralizing government functions away from large hierarchical
bureaucracies and creating greater local accountability.
3. Simplifying laws, rules and procedures, taking into account the actual
needs and practices of the people and creating a greater focus on customer
service in public institutions
4. Simplifying taxation, reducing duties on property taxes and property
transfers and creating greater transparency and “buy-in” for the use of
tax-proceeds by devolving more taxation and spending to local
administration from the center and states
5. Tackling campaign finance reform – realizing that elections today
involve large expenditures and creating rules for legal campaign
contributions that take this into account while reducing the influence of
criminal/black money
6. Creating a clear performance-based reward system within the government
to create greater incentive for honesty and performance
7. More effective enforcement and prosecution of the remaining corrupt
personnel to increase the cost for the corrupt
The first fact to realize is that the answer is not more rules and larger
bureaucracies, but a more transparent, accountable and responsive system.
One option there is simply greater privatization where market demand and
competition will drive accountability. The telephone example is again a
good one. If we are fundamentally corrupt, why is it that we do not have
to pay a bribe in India to get a mobile phone? How would the situation
have been different if mobile phones were to be a government monopoly
instead? The answer is simple – in the case of competitive private
enterprise, it is in the interests of the private operator to provide
greater customer service – it is only in a monopoly where these interests
are divergent. Some of these aligning of interests can also happen in
semi-private models. In a recent journey on a local bus in Delhi, I was
pleased to find courteous service and the conductor making sure that I got
a ticket. Later I was told that the driver and conductor now get a
percentage of the proceeds and both the quality of service and the revenue
that is collected by the government has gone up as a result.
Secondly, a restructuring of government function needs to happen so that
there is far greater local accountability. Let us take the example of
education. Currently, appointments and administration of teachers for
schools are centralized at the level of the entire state. This means that
accountability flows into the state level bureaucracy that is itself only
accountable to the ministers. Since the ministers are elected, it turns
out that the loop of accountability to the consumers is closed only at the
highest level. This is inefficient and frustrating at all levels. The
teachers find that they are subject to arbitrary transfers by bureaucrats,
the end consumers are not in the loop at all of teacher accountability or
performance, the ministers find themselves deluged with personal requests
for low-level appointments and the bureaucrats find themselves at the
mercy of politicians. I recently met one of the senior-most bureaucrats in
the state of Rajasthan with a reputation for honesty. A visit to his house
showed that he had a very simple lifestyle. However, he was despondent
about his lack of ability to make change. “Everything in this system is
delegated upwards,” he said. “Even the transfer of a chapprassi will come
as an order from the minister.” Clearly, the system serves no one well.
In contrast, the accountability in the US in areas of day-to-day contact
of citizens, such as education or the police force, is usually far more
local. School boards operate at a city or school district level. The
boards are elected and accountable to the parents. Similarly, the mayor of
the city and the local police chief are the highest level of authority
that concern the citizens in most local matters – not state level police
chiefs, secretaries or governors.
The importance of having a more performance oriented government system can
also not be over-emphasized. A job that is satisfying and rewarding is
itself an incentive not to look for other avenues of gratification. I was
recently talking with a government executive engineer who had been posted
at the Bhakra-Nangal Dam for many years. I was surprised to learn that he
was a civil engineer. When I asked what work was there for a civil
engineer on a dam that was constructed several decades ago, he replied
laconically, “There is no work.” This is a sad commentary on the affairs
of the government – what kind of performance will such a system monitor?
Taxation is another area of reform. Land and property transactions as well
as local retail sales remain areas of high black money generation. There
was a time when capital gains on sales of property were as high as 66%. No
one in their right mind, after holding property for twenty years, would
pay 66% of it in tax to the government – especially when the government
appeared as a black hole of antagonistic incompetence, serving very little
useful purpose. While this has been reduced, property transfers still
remain expensive transaction with high stamp duties. Devolving more taxes
down to the local community level, where the benefits of the government
expenditures are both more visible and more accountable, will also help in
this regard.
It is also worth noting that greater prosecution of corrupt officials has
been placed last in this list even though it often receives the greatest
emphasis from anti-corruption crusaders. This is because enforcement,
while necessary, will remain ineffective in tackling the magnitude of the
problem in the absence of systematic reform. At the present time,
community activism can yield better long-term results when directed
towards crafting a more responsive system than simply pursuing a few
high-profile enforcement cases.
Similarly, continuing to harp on corruption as simply a moral problem
without addressing first the issues of systemic reform exacerbates the
problem of corruption rather than helping it. This is because if the
problem is that we are corrupt, it becomes very difficult to change
anything, since it is obviously very difficult to change who we are as
people. It is no surprise that in the light of this belief, very few
people in India believe that we can fix the problem of corruption.
Realizing that much of it is a problem of the system can be an empowering
and actionable idea, even while the road may be long.
It is worth remembering that, even with all the problems in the Indian
system, it still survives and functions because there remain a remarkable
number of honest people trying to do their jobs, despite all the
difficulties and disincentives. It is this honesty that we must build on
and nourish as we create a blueprint for deep, systematic changes.
Beyond Systematic Corruption: Re-Examining Individual Morality
While in this article we have discussed the systematic origins of petty
corruption, this is not meant to imply that values are not important. It
also does not imply that fixing the system will create some kind of
utopia, where no corruption or criminality will occur. However well
functioning the system, there will always remain criminals and outliers –
no society is free from that. A dysfunctional system, however, makes it
easier for criminal tendencies to come to the fore. Also, the survival of
the parallel system, profitable to vested interests, is always in conflict
with those that seek to uphold the primary system and not play by the
rules of the secondary one. Thus the parallel system creates its own forms
of extra-legal enforcement, where criminal elements readily find room, to
ensure its survival.
Reforming the system can go a long way towards a different relationship
between the people and the state, where it makes sense for most people to
play by the rules. However, as we mentioned earlier, even societies like
the US where rules are generally not set up in opposition to the people,
the problem of corruption remains. Also, in any situation, there are
always criminal elements that will tend towards making the quick buck
irrespective of the system. Reform of the system is unlikely to change
these people, but it changes the tolerance of the system towards these
elements.
To tackle these kinds of corruption, which goes beyond systematic reform,
we would need to return to the question of values that president Kalam
spoke about, literally what a society learns to value. If excessive,
unbalanced materialism becomes the over-arching value, with all means
considered legitimate to get it and no training in self-control, then it
is inevitable that there will be corruption in society. But tackling this
is a question of inner transformation, where it is recognized that the
legitimate human strivings for artha and kama need to be guided by dharma.
Certainly in the traditional Indian context, the teachers and the parents
transmitted values. The teacher was interestingly called acharya, a word
that is based on the root achar, or conduct. Thus the transmission of
values was by personal example and conduct of the teacher, not by “moral
science” lessons. Values were embedded in the role models of daily life.
The other form of transmittal of values is via stories and exemplars.
Stories that were told by grandparents and parents during childhood also
have a positive role in the creation of values. Finally, the example set
by parents as well as those portrayed as “successful” role models to
emulate is certainly also important. In the contemporary world, mass media
is a very powerful force in the creation of samskara. In a responsible
society, mass media would recognize this role rather than view its role
solely as “anything goes” entertainment, blindly aping western mores or
measuring its success in purely materialistic terms. But this is
ultimately a matter of awakening to responsibility, not ham-handed
government censorship.
So, once the systematic problems are tackled, we will be at the level of
the “developed” world in terms of corruption. As we mentioned earlier, the
developed world is certainly no exemplar as far as morality goes. To go
beyond this, one comes back to the messages of the rishis on inner
transformation. This inner transformation is ultimately what can enable us
to go beyond greed, avarice and a consumerism that obsessively seeks
satisfaction outside oneself to move towards “santosh”, a santosh that is
ultimately the basis for the elimination of all corruption.
Sankrant Sanu
This article was originally published
on Sulekha.com.
http://www.sulekha.com/expressions/column.asp?cid=305914. Republished
with the permission of the author.
(C) Copyright 2004, Sankrant Sanu. All rights reserved.
Notes:
[1] www.transparency.org
[2] This example was first given to me
by Prof. S. N. Balagangadhara
in a discussion. His inspirational insight into this topic is gratefully
acknowledged.
[3]Wall Street faces prospect of criminal charges,
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,3604,689537,00.html
[4] For a picture of Indian society in pre-colonial and early British
times, the mult-volume Collected Works of Shri Dharampal are highly
recommended.
[5] An interesting example is the fact that prevalent spousal killing for
insurance money in the United States is not dissimilar with spousal
killing for “dowry” in India. The former is not tracked or studied as a
crime attributed to “culture” in the US while the latter is studied solely
in that category in India. Similarly, “abortion” is treated in liberal
discourse in the US as a matter of “a woman`s right to choose”, while in
Indian liberal discourse it is labeled as “foeticide”, to emphasize its
relation to murder, and studied as a culture-attributed crime. Similarly,
marriages under 18 are studied as the phenomenon of “child marriage” in
India and labeled as “evil” in scholarly writing. A similar phenomenon is
studied as “teenage marriage” in the US. Interestingly, even in the case
of “child marriage” in India, the consummation of the marriage almost
invariably happens post-puberty in India so the phenomena are not
dissimilar. Interestingly, states such as Massachusetts have a legal age
of marriage as low as 12, and nearly 15% of marriages in the US took place
in the 15-17 age group (1970 figures).
[6]
http://www.forbes.com/global/1998/0810/0109078a.html
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