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Showing posts with label democracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label democracy. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2022

Review of "The Rise of the BJP: The Making of the World's Largest Political Party" by Bhupender Yadav and Ila Patnaik

by Josh Felman.

In 2014, the BJP secured a remarkable victory. They won an absolute majority in the Lok Sabha elections, the first time any political party had done so in three decades. Then, five years later, they repeated this feat, increasing their majority. Now, they dominate the national landscape in a way not seen since the heyday of the Congress party, half a century ago.

How did this happen? Most analysts give a one-word answer: Modi. Others give a two-word answer: Modi-Shah. Without doubt, Narendra Modi and Amit Shah are exceptional politicians and strategists. But life is complicated, and great men cannot entirely determine the course of history.

One reason why the BJP won in a landslide in 2014 is that Congress completely mismanaged the economy. The party proved unable to deal with the fundamental problems that emerged after the Global Financial Crisis, such as the sizeable non-performing loans at the banks. Instead, they tried to resuscitate the economy through lax fiscal and monetary policy, a strategy which failed to revive growth, producing only double-digit inflation. Then came a spate of scandals, and the government became paralyzed, unable to do anything at all.

Even so, it is wrong think that the BJP was merely the accidental beneficiary of Congress' collapse. As this book stresses, the BJP has been rising for a long time.

Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words. So consider the following chart. It shows that despite a notable dip in the 2000s, there has been a clear trend to the BJP's representation in the Lok Sabha. And that trend is upward. The BJP was formed in the 1980s, initially earning just a few seats. By the mid-1990s, it had become the largest party in Parliament.

How can we possibly explain this development? This book provides an answer. Not "the" answer, of course, but a particularly valuable answer, for the explanation comes from a BJP insider. Unlike most books written by politicians, this work avoids the intricacies of long-forgotten debates and refuses to engage in score-settling. Instead, this is a serious work, covering the entire sweep of independent India's history, documented with extensive footnotes -- exactly as one would expect from the co-author, who is a noted, non-political academic. (Full disclosure: I have also been a co-author with Ila Patnaik.)

The aim of the book is to explain how we have arrived at the current political pass. Of course, it does so from a BJP perspective. But that is exactly the need of the moment: we need to understand what the BJP believes, as these beliefs will translate into actions that affect all of us.

So, what explanation does the book provide? Essentially, it argues that the rise of the BJP stems from two factors: its organizational ability and its message. Of the first, the book makes a convincing case. Indeed, no reader – no matter what his or her political view – can finish this book without a sense of awe. It’s not just that the party has come up with one brilliant idea after another, such as "multiplying" their Prime Ministerial candidate by projecting 10-foot holograms of Modi in 200 cities across the country. Even more astounding is the BJP's ground game.

Consider the BJP's strategy for the 2014 election. The party developed a booth management strategy, under which leaders were assigned to every single one of the 1 million voting booths in the country. Each leader supervised around 50 individuals, whose job it was to meet with around 30 voters and convince 15 of them to vote for the BJP.

This arrangement required an incredible amount of effort, coordination – and manpower. Simple arithmetic shows that 50 leaders for 1 million booths required no less than 50 million party workers. For the 2019 election, the party mobilized 110 million members. How on earth did the BJP manage to convince so many people to work so hard for the party?

One strategy has been to convince members that they are part of a family. They even have a slogan for this: Mera Parivar, Bhajpa Parivar (My family is the BJP family.) In practice, this means that the life of a party worker is dominated by an endless calendar of events: campaigns, followed by political activities, interspersed with visits from seniors. Particularly strenuous efforts are made to nourish connexions amongst members from all strata of the party, with seniors being asked to share meals with workers on their visits to the regions.

Another strategy is to employ the highly motivated swayamsevaks (volunteers) of the RSS. The authors are unequivocal about the links between the RSS and the BJP. They emphasize that the predecessor of the BJP, the Jana Sangh, was founded with the explicit purpose of giving a political voice to the RSS' vision for India. And they note that the BJP was born when the leaders of the Jana Sangh were forced to choose between their commitment to the RSS philosophy and their political career in the Janata Party. They chose to stay true to their ideology.

The devotion to this ideology remains strong to this day. Prime Minister Modi has said, 'I am connected to the mission and not ambition. In my life, mission is everything, not ambition'.

So, what exactly is this mission? Put another way, if the second reason for the BJP’s success is that it has developed an attractive message, what exactly is that message?

In some areas, the book gives a clear answer. It says that right from the start the BJP has focused on the fight against corruption. Its first major success came in 1987 when it was able to pin the Bofors scandal on the Congress Party, accusing their senior officials of taking bribes in return for granting a large defence contract. In 2002, Venkaiah Naidu became BJP President partly on the strength of his credentials as convener of an anti-corruption movement in Andhra Pradesh. And of course corruption was a major theme of the 2014 election.

Another key element of the BJP mission, according to the book, is improving the standard of living of the poor, the people whom the Jana Sangh used to call the 'last man in line'. The Modi government came up with a particularly effective way of doing this, by providing the poor with tangible benefits such as LPG gas cylinders and toilets – and cash transfers, paid directly to newly created Jan Dhan bank accounts. These programs created a direct link between the party and the poor, earning in particular the loyalty of female voters.

In other areas, however, the book is much less precise. For example, we are told repeatedly that the BJP believes in "nationalism". But it is not clear what this means. After all, Congress is also a nationalist party; indeed, they led the independence movement against the British.

Some commentators claim that the BJP's nationalism is different because it is a communitarian vision, focusing on building a Hindu nation-state. The BJP strenuously denies this charge. Indeed, the word Hindutva is not to be found anywhere in this book. Instead, the BJP views itself as the party of true secularism, devoted to the principle that no group should be treated differently by the state. Accordingly, they oppose triple talak divorce and special status for Kashmir – because these policies treat different groups differently.

But this argument sits uneasily with the claim that the BJP believes in 'cultural nationalism'. The book takes great pains to stress that this phrase refers to an all-Indian culture, coming out of many traditions: Hindu, Muslim, even Western. But the only traditions the BJP has mobilized to defend – at least the only ones mentioned in the book are Hindu traditions.

Particularly striking is the framing of the dispute over whether to build a Ram temple on land where a mosque was standing. As the book puts it, for the BJP, Ayodhya was not a land dispute; "it was a mission to unite India with the thread of cultural nationalism". The argument seems to be that the country should have united behind this plan, since it honoured an important tradition, the place where Lord Ram was reputed to be born. But many people did not see things this way, and the dispute proved enormously divisive.

That said, the BJP's message of cultural nationalism does resonate with a significant section of the population, giving it a compelling message to go with its superb organization and millions of devoted members. That makes the BJP a formidable vote-getting machine. No wonder it has just risen and risen.

But history teaches that a relentless rise is often followed by a disastrous fall. Indeed, one doesn't have to look very far to see an example of this process at work. Right after independence the Congress Party bestrode the political landscape like a colossus, winning 364 out of the 489 contested seats in the first parliamentary election. But since the 1970s it has gradually decayed, to the point where it holds only 52 seats in the current Lok Sabha.

The BJP has thought long and hard about this example, concluding that Congress declined because it failed to nourish its roots during its long period in power. To make sure this doesn’t happen to them, the BJP not only pays considerable attention to sustaining morale amongst its party members (as already mentioned); it also takes great care to avoid the perils of dynastic leadership. The BJP offers a clear path for ambitious young supporters, who can start with party work, progress to a role in government, and then take up role of an elder statesman. To ensure that this career ladder is not blocked by elderly seniors, members are expected to step aside from active operational roles once they reach the age of 75. It will be interesting to see whether this practice continues, now that the party has a firm hold on power.

Beyond the constant need to replenish the party with new energy, the BJP faces another challenge, one that will be even more difficult to manage: it must meet the needs of the nation. Without doubt, the BJP has found a way to satisfy what we could call 'Cultural India'. But meeting the needs of Aspirational India, the hundreds of millions of young people looking to find good jobs and raise their living standards, will be a far more difficult task.

The current government is fully aware of this problem, having inherited an economy that was in shambles. Accordingly, it has implemented reform after reform, including Inflation Targeting, the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, and the Goods and Services Tax. But the economy has still failed to take off, as investment has remained stubbornly low.

So far, there have been no political consequences, as the public has accepted that it will take time to restore an economy that was in such bad shape when the current government arrived. But the BJP knows that at some point, the public will demand results.

Accordingly in 2020, the government decided to change tack, abandoning the post-1991 policy of opening up the economy in favour of a new approach, Atmanirbhar Bharat ('Self-Reliant India'), whereby tariffs are being increased to encourage import substitution while production subsidies are being given to firms selected by the government. It is still early days, but there is little in India’s history or that of Asia more generally that suggests this strategy is likely to work. In that case, trouble for the BJP may lie ahead.

For far too long, the nature of the BJP has remained a mystery to the English-reading public. Finally, we have an authoritative presentation of their point of view, one that allows us to understand better how the BJP has risen and what it believes. For anyone who wants to understand how India arrived at the current juncture – and where it is likely to go in the future – this book is a must read. Buy it and read it carefully.


 

Josh Felman is the principal at JH Consulting.

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Does synchronization of elections matter? Evidence from India

by Vimal Balasubramaniam, Apurav Yash Bhatiya and Sabyasachi Das.

Many countries across the world hold elections for multiple levels of the government on the same day. Examples include the United States, Brazil, Sweden, South Africa, Indonesia, among others. Importantly, there has been an increasing demand to synchronize elections across tiers of governance in both Europe and India. In India, the Law Commission, and other bodies, highlight that elections are expensive and find that "holding simultaneous elections would be ideal as well as desirable". The implicit assumption in these discussions is that the question of when voters make decisions about their national and state representatives may not affect how they make these choices and consequently, the election outcomes that emerge from them.

In our research, we examine whether synchronized elections in India lead to significant changes in voter behaviour. We refer to an election in India as synchronized if the national election (or general election, GE) and the state election (or, assembly election, AE) occur on the same day. Otherwise, we say that the elections are non-synchronized.

Specifically, we ask the question how the probability that the same political party wins a seat at the Lok Sabha and the Vidhan Sabha changes when elections are conducted on the same day as opposed to on different days. For this, we compare the same assembly constituency over time with synchronized elections against those that happened on different days. For non-synchronized elections, we pair a national election with state elections that occurred after it and before the next national election.

We find that synchronized elections increase the probability that the same political party wins a seat both at Lok Sabha and Vidhan Sabha by 0.089, which is about 21% of the base probability of 0.42. One concern about interpreting this estimate as an effect due to synchronization is that a long time gap between national and state elections for non-synchronized elections may confound our ability to pin down a plausible causal interpretation of this estimate. We vary the time gap between the elections in any given pair of national and state elections from 150 days to 270 days, and our estimates range from 0.15 (for 150 days) to 0.082 (for 270 days). The estimates are, however, not statistically significantly different from each other. Our preferred specification is the one that limits the time-gap to 180 days -- an estimate closer to the lower bound that we find -- to account for qualitative reasoning that provides plausible exogeneity in the scheduling of elections.

Figure 1 below highlights the approach we take to this study with heat maps for the probability of the same party winning both the parliamentary and state constituencies without (Case 1) and with (Case 2) synchronized elections. Synchronized elections increase the probability of a political party winning both the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha seats. We show this for the ten states that fall within our sample for our preferred estimate. With the exception of Odisha – which has an opposite pattern – all other states in our sample present an increase in the likelihood of electing the same party.



Case 1: Unsynchronized Elections


Case 2: Synchronized Elections
Figure 1: Prob (Same Party winning both PC and AC)

This significant consequence of synchronized elections may not occur in isolation. We characterize the voting environment and find that the winning margin in any given contest at a constituency is on average no different between synchronized and non-synchronized setup. However, there is an increase in turnout for national elections to level with the average turnout for state elections during non-synchronized elections. This suggests that the fraction that participates in state elections is in general much higher than in national polls.

We explore the potential channels that drive this significant effect of synchronization. We find that synchronized elections reduce split-ticket voting -- the Euclidean distance between the vector of vote shares of political parties in parliamentary and assembly constituencies is significantly lower in synchronized elections. This reduction in split-ticket voting could be both demand and supply-driven.

On the supply side, political parties could homogenize information sets and hold similar campaigns for the two elections when they happen on the same day. They could manage greater engagement with voters on the ground due to economies of scale with campaign resources during synchronized elections. Both these factors could align a voter to a single party. On the demand side, it may be that the cognitive demand to rationalize voting for two different parties in the two elections when they vote for them at the same time is high. This increase in decision complexity may give rise to voting for the same party when elections are synchronized. To explore these motives, we use national and state election survey data collected by CSDS for a representative sample of individuals compiled within two days after every election in India.



Panel A: Voters Decision


Panel B: Election Priorities


Panel C: Voting Consideration


Panel D: Election Issues
Figure 2: Micro-data Evidence

We present the evidence from micro-data in Figure 2. We find that voters spend more time deliberating on elections when they are synchronized (Panel A), voters are less clear about objective functions for electing their representative for the two governments (Panel B). Additionally, we find that voters reduce the dimensionality of their choice by looking at political parties more than individual candidates (Panel C). Lastly, we find that voters are more ambiguous about the issue that matter the most for their choice of the vote (Panel D). These observations strengthen our claim that the cognitive challenges of choosing two candidates at once may not be a trivial constraint, especially in a parliamentary democracy where the elected representative matters to how the citizens voice their concerns to the state. And the objective function for the voter for the two elections is compromised with synchronized elections. Thus, we observe a rise in a simple solution of voting for the same political party during synchronized elections.

A critical reason for support to synchronized elections is the cost of holding elections. Holding elections on different days does have high electoral costs both for the governments to organize the elections and for the political parties to participate in them. The most recent General Election in India in 2019 cost Rs.5,000 crore or about 700 million USD.

Recurring elections not just imply more monetary cost but also the loss of governance time as politicians focus their time on campaigning and bureaucrats remain occupied with election work as opposed to implementing policies and public projects. The deployment of security forces away from their primary objective for electoral purposes also imposes further costs on the state. Lastly, the model code of conduct, it is claimed, affects public policy-making.

Such costs may reduce by holding synchronized elections had there been no impact on voter choice and decisions or on the real economic outcomes in India. Our results imply that a direct consequence of synchronized elections is synchronized representation. A growing body of work on political alignment provides mixed effects on real economic outcomes. Political alignment could increase the transfer of resources from the national government to subnational governments in India (Rao and Singh, 2003; Khemani, 2003). However, more recent work highlights that patronage networks and rent-seeking by local politicians may strengthen in politically aligned areas, leading to inferior public service quality. The development consequences of synchronized elections, therefore, are far from straightforward.

Our paper documents that when voters choose their representatives for Lok Sabha and the Vidhan Sabha matter to election outcomes. The administrative gains from synchronized elections, therefore, need to be weighed against benefits from voters evaluating different tiers of government without any overlapping ambiguity.



Vimal Balasubramaniam is researcher at Queen Mary University, London; Apurav Yash Bhatiya is researcher at University of Warwick, UK; and Sabyasachi Das is researcher at Ashoka University. This paper was presented at the APU-NIPFP workshop Strengthening the Republic, January 11, 2020.

Friday, September 14, 2018

Privacy, Aadhaar, Data Protection: Statist Liberalism and the Danger to Liberty

by Anirudh Burman.

Kings will be tyrants from policy when subjects are rebels from principle.

                                         - Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France

Edmund Burke wrote these lines in a scathing critique of the demise of ancient traditions of allegiance, fealty and "dignified obedience" in the wake of the French Revolution. These lines today apply in a very different sense to the search for state-centred solutions to protecting privacy and personal data. The discourse over privacy, identification and data protection shows that liberal concerns with state power co-exists with a preference for state coercion in the name of furthering ostensibly liberal objectives. This discourse is marked by the absence of underlying liberal principles based on societal and associational freedom, and instead, repeatedly shows a preference for state coercion for achieving its ends.

This discourse and the policy responses to the same fail to address two fundamental questions: first, what does the right to privacy seek to protect? Privacy is treated as an end in itself, and this has significant ramifications on how we think about constituting liberty in our society. Second, what institutional and associational processes are necessary to protect privacy? Institutional and associational processes that rely overwhelmingly on state coercion are counter-intuitive and may ultimately harm individual privacy and autonomy.

I address three major strands of the privacy discourse that address different aspects of the right to privacy, but share a common problem: the discourse is framed in a manner that treats privacy as an end in itself. The result of the nature of this discourse is that state power to infringe on privacy seems to have strengthened rather than weakened. I begin with analysing the existing discourse on the debate over whether India's increasingly ubiquitous identification system, Aadhaar, violates privacy rights or not. I argue that by focusing on Aadhaar's constitutionality vis-a-vis the right to privacy and not examining the ends for which Aadhaar is being used, the existing debates fail to question the use of state power via Aadhaar and its implications for privacy and liberty.

The next major strand of the privacy debate, the judgement of the Indian Supreme Court in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India ("Privacy judgement") also treats privacy as an end, rather than a means to protect other ends. As I argue, the consequence of the judgement is to provide clarity for the use of state power with respect to privacy rights rather than to elucidate those aspects of social existence that need protection from the state through privacy rights. Data protection, and the Personal Data Protection Bill proposed by the Justice Srikrishna Committee is the third major strand of the privacy debate. The Bill also treats privacy as an end. In seeking to protect data as an end in itself, it confers a wide jurisdiction on the proposed Data Protection Authority. By doing so, the Bill gives the Authority the power to potentially surveil all data in India in order to, ironically, protect data privacy.

I argue that by treating privacy as a broad right and an end in itself, we have defined the role of privacy in society narrowly. Instead, privacy as a right has to be discussed in specific contexts such as marriage, sexuality, crime records and employment history. Each context reflects a different tension between a specific public interest and the privacy interests of specific individuals. Only such specific discussions on how privacy rights can help individuals protect their freedoms, can further the interests of liberty in our society.

Efficiency, Privacy and Aadhaar

In the decades since independence, Indian politicians and intellectuals by and large agreed on the need for a social welfare state. Specifically, a State that would strive to provide health, education, food, and infrastructure to its populace. Despite the mixed record of the State in achieving these objectives, the premise of what the Indian State should do has not been challenged to any substantial degree. While the State has withdrawn from running industries and fostered private markets over the past three decades, the assumption that welfare is a fundamental task of the Indian State has not been questioned. In fact, the welfare state character of the Indian State has been significantly expanded in the past two decades through initiatives such as NREGA and others addressing food security and debt relief.

A central task before a welfare state is identification, or what James C. Scott calls the quest for "legibility". The search for legibility is rooted in policy makers' inability to comprehend complex realities and their consequent search for symbols or markers that make society comprehensible or "legible" to them. For the purposes of the State, individuals must be defined primarily in terms of specific traits (e.g. age, education, residence, income, profession, ethnicity, caste, etc.) While this quest for legibility is not confined only to the state, no state can act on its welfare mandate without making individuals legible. Benefits are distributed to individuals based on how a state identifies them. Thus, if only "the poor" can avail of LPG subsidies, defining who is "poor" becomes of central importance. Aadhaar is the product of this search for better identification, required due to ever-increasing welfare and regulatory functions the Indian State has to perform.

In the decades before Aadhaar was implemented, the manner in which the state identified beneficiaries was critiqued as being deeply flawed. The systems were rife with documented instances of poor implementation and fraud. Additionally, many in need of what the welfare schemes sought to provide lacked the documents to prove their eligibility for the same. While concerted efforts were made to improve public distribution systems through initiatives like computerisation, significant exclusions continued to take place. These improvements were also unevenly distributed across state governments, and subject to sustained political commitment.

Any improvements in targeting/identification however, have remained subject to new political diversions and demands from the State. NREGA for example, was a new social welfare scheme that required the determination of eligibility on metrics that were different from say, traditional PDS schemes. It required the State to collect and maintain information about individuals based on metrics that the Indian State had not collected in a systematic manner prior to its introduction. Every new scheme that requires benefits to be conferred to individuals had and continues to have its own metrics for eligibility (Jan Dhan Yojana requires very different kinds of identification requirements than say, Start-up India).

The demand for better and different forms of identification therefore increase each time a new benefit has to be made available to individuals. If the state has to perform an ever-increasing number of welfare functions, it will require ever-increasing information about intended beneficiaries, as it needs to know whom to include and whom to exclude. Over time, therefore, the extent of information collected about individuals increases due to the numerous functions the state is required to perform.

This is not just confined to welfare measures. Any state action that intends to regulate individual conduct has to determine whom to regulate and on what basis. If, for example, persons with criminal backgrounds are to be excluded from contesting elections, the state needs to collect and analyse information about the criminal backgrounds of those contesting elections. If the state intends to regulate banking, it needs to collect information about banks and financial firms.

The increase in the collection of information for discharging the functions demanded from the state constitute the source of the concerns with privacy. The largest threat to individual privacy therefore comes not from the existence of Aadhaar, but from the ever increasing number of regulatory functions and welfare measures demanded of the Indian State. Problems of identification systems are downstream of these demands. State-centred solutions, and unprincipled welfarism pose a greater threat to individual privacy and liberty than any single identification system used by the Indian State.

This is borne out by a careful analysis of the main points of contention in the Aadhaar and data protection debate.

Aadhaar is a database that maintains bio-metric and other personal identification information about individuals. If a government or private agency wishes to verify the identity of an individual, the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), as the custodian of the Aadhaar database, enables such authentication through specified mechanisms. Aadhaar does not maintain records of what was authenticated. It retains a record only of when a person's identity was verified and by whom, not for what purpose.

Aadhaar is therefore more or less a value-neutral utility. In itself, it does not have a fixed use other than to identify individuals. It is up to the user (the government or private agencies) to use it as a means of identification for a specific purpose. Such use depends solely on its utility as an accurate system of identification. It does not pre-suppose what the system is going to be used for. Its raison d'etre is to enable the state to identify individuals accurately, if required. Its existence, in fact, promotes discourse on what it ought to be used for, and how it ought to be used.

When Aadhaar was conceptualised and being created, the state promised that the system would be used for identifying beneficiaries of social welfare schemes. This has however, not remained the case. From tax compliance to school admissions and new phone connections, the use of Aadhaar has extended well beyond social welfare purposes. It is, however, important to note that this growth is demand-led for the large part. Government departments and agencies, as well as private firms, are using Aadhaar because it is a largely accurate database compared to other mechanisms for verifying individual identity. State authorities and private agencies are mandating Aadhaar-based authentication because they see value in it, not because the UIDAI says they must. The alleged threat to privacy has therefore come about not because Aadhaar exists, but because the State chooses to use it for discharging the functions demanded of it.

Some detractors have argued that Aadhaar is unconstitutional as some individuals are unable to access social welfare benefits due to authentication failures. In many such cases, the implementation by these departments and agencies has been faulty. Aadhaar authentication requires a connection to the central Aadhaar database, and this becomes problematic in cases of poor internet connectivity. In such cases however, it is the user agencies that are at fault. Making Aadhaar authentication mandatory in remote areas with low internet connectivity is an example of poor planning and implementation. It is the use of Aadhaar that must be debated.

This and other issues have been brought up in a clutch of cases currently pending before the Supreme Court. The cases in the Supreme Court however lay the blame on the existence of Aadhaar rather than its uses. Additionally, of the many grounds of challenge, there are some that are simply not amenable to effective redress through judicial mechanisms. The first is the question of exclusions. Any system of identification is designed to exclude. The purpose of identification is to enable inclusion at the cost of exclusion. The danger is that of unintended exclusions. People should not be excluded from benefits that were intended to be made available to them. The detractors of Aadhaar claim that the implementation of Aadhaar is leading to arbitrary exclusions, with persons who were previously included now being excluded. However, one must distinguish between the role of Aadhaar in unintended exclusions, and the uses of Aadhaar leading to unintended exclusions. For example, if there were no scheme called NREGA being implemented, there would be no Aadhaar-related exclusions from NREGA. In such a case Aadhaar would continue to exist, but not be the cause of any exclusions in NREGA. Exclusions are occurring because there is a welfare function that the state is discharging.

Another point of detraction has been that of data security and data leakage. The claim is yet again, that because of its potential for misuse, the use of Aadhaar for seeding information about citizens creates a potential for misuse. However, any information that the state stores by aggregating data using some other central identification ID (PAN numbers, passport numbers, Voter ID cards, etc) is subject to the same potential issues. Any central identifier that could be used to link multiple databases is likely to suffer from similar issues. If PAN numbers or mobile phone numbers are used to aggregate data about individuals instead of Aadhaar, the same fear of profiling is still likely to exist. The problem is therefore not with Aadhaar, but with the process of profiling individuals. It is therefore necessary to problematise the issue of profiling, rather than the use of Aadhaar for profiling.

The discourse on these issues reflects undue focus on means rather than ends. It is important to distinguish between Aadhaar as an instrumentality of the state, and the purposes for which Aadhaar can be used. It is the latter that leads to privacy concerns, not the existence of the instrumentality itself. The same privacy concerns will remain tomorrow if Aadhaar is replaced by another system of identification. The Indian state will continue to violate individual privacy, liberty and dignity if the ends to which systems of identification are used are not carefully examined, questioned, and thought through.

Some of these issues require political solutions, others judicial ones. The judiciary can provide judicial answers to legal questions. It is not a forum that can provide answers to questions of efficiency. It cannot help society decide on what is the most effective method of identifying individuals while respecting individual privacy. This is a political decision that has to be reached through a political process. The judiciary can also not answer questions as to what are "good" methods of data aggregation and storage. These are technocratic decisions that also have to come from the political process.

This is due to the very nature of the judicial process which seeks blunt answers to blunt questions - "is Aadhaar constitutional or not?". Any path the Supreme Court takes to balance competing interests such as privacy versus efficiency will be, at most, a second-best alternative to what sustained political engagement could have created. The nature of judicial outcomes is to provide perfect legal certainty by ending political contestation with legal certainty. Judicial interpretations of constitutions have the effect of ending political and legal disputes, not to create space for further political negotiations.

Any future negotiation can only take place by treating the court's decision as a given. A good example is the spectrum allocation case, where the Supreme Court held that telecom licenses were arbitrarily allocated, and that future allocations can only happen through auctions (subsequently modified by the Supreme Court in another case). Any further discourse on the subject had to deal with the fact that spectrum had to be mandatorily auctioned, with no possibility of discussions over better methods of spectrum allocation. This is what happens in most cases that come before constitutional courts. In the judcialisation of Aadhaar, we may have lost a significant opportunity to negotiate politically and improve its functioning.

The nature of relief claimed from the Supreme Court in the Aadhaar case asks some legitimate questions that the Supreme Court is well placed to answer, particularly with respect to whether the law should have been passed as a money bill, and in which instances Aadhaar can be made mandatory. But it also asks many questions that do not help address the real concerns about privacy - if all identification systems lead to exclusion, in what circumstances is exclusion constitutionally impermissible? If all data aggregation systems are potentially vulnerable to leakage and theft, in what circumstances is data leakage unconstitutional? If all state welfare functions lead to some kind of profiling, what kinds of profiling are constitutionally impermissible? In short, what are the values that the right to privacy seeks to protect?

Privacy judgement: Clarifying the use of state power

If the expectation from the Supreme Court in the case of Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India ("Privacy judgement") was that it would explain what underlying values the right to privacy seeks to protect, it was belied. While the Supreme Court bench that decided this case was constituted because the Aadhaar bench made a reference to it, this case itself did not decide on privacy rights vis-a-vis Aadhaar.

In a remarkable feat of judicial activism the Court not only declared that there is a fundamental right to privacy, but that this right is an end in itself. The leading judgement (given by 4 out of 9 judges) states that the purpose of the Court in writing the Privacy judgement is to expound upon the right to privacy by providing a "doctrinal formulation".

The judgement lists a series of Indian cases in which a right to privacy has been claimed. As the Court itself notes after discussing these cases, many past judgements have held that a right to privacy exists under the Indian Constitution. What then, one might ask, was the need for this nine-judge bench? The answer provided by the Court was,

"...The deficiency, however, is in regard to a doctrinal formulation of the basis on which it can be determined as to whether the right to privacy is constitutionally protected..."

The Court therefore intends to assert the existence of a right to privacy as an end in itself, rather than a means to an end. Unlike all previous cases the Privacy judgement itself notes, this judgement was written with no applicability to a specific dispute before the court.

A long line of jurisprudence listed in the Privacy judgement highlights the fact that privacy has always been used to protect a specific interest or value: In Kharak Singh's case, it was privacy in the context of night-time domiciliary visits. In RM Malkani v. State of Maharashtra and PUCL v. Union of India it was privacy in the context of telephone tapping. In Gobind v. State of MP, the discussion on privacy was in the context of history-sheeting under state police regulations. In Malak Singh v. State of Punjab it was a surveillance register of specified categories of convicts. In Rajagopal, the judgement on privacy centred around the question on whether the autobiography of a convicted prisoner, allegedly co-authored by someone else, could be published. In Mr. X v. Hospital Z the issue of unauthorised disclosure of a patient's HIV status was in question. In Sharda v. Dharmpal the question of privacy rights arose in the context of a court order forcing a person to undergo a medical examination as part of divorce proceedings. In District Registrar and Collector, Hyderabad v Canara Bank, the question of privacy was in the context of the confidentiality of documents submitted to a public official. In the US Supreme Court case of Griswold v Connecticut that the Privacy judgement cites as well, - the right to privacy was held to exist in order to address a specific concern, namely the right of a married couple to use contraceptives.

In fact, globally, one would be hard pressed to find a judgement that is totally divorced from a factual dispute, that does not treat the right to privacy as essential to protecting other specific rights. Why does this matter? It matters because in treating privacy as an end, the judgement and the detractors of Aadhaar fail to deal with the underlying issues that infringe upon privacy and liberty. This in turn leads the Court to formulate tests that on closer inspection, clarify the use of state power with respect to privacy rights, without adequately explaining what those privacy interests are.

The Court notes that privacy is essential for the protection of individual autonomy and dignity. But it does not elaborate on what aspects of autonomy are worthy of being protected by privacy. Other than illustrating some examples of how the right to privacy could be applied to specific situations such as sexual orientation and data security, it provides no guidance on how this right to privacy is expected to interact with situations where individual privacy is subjected to larger societal interests. For example, the Court talks about the protection of individual identity in the context of data protection, but provides no explanation of what specific harms the right to privacy seeks to protect in the context of the misuse of personal data.

This is important as there are situations when individual autonomy and privacy may legitimately be circumscribed by societal interests. These include the disclosure of health records for buying health insurance or seeking health benefits, and the disclosure of income related information for claiming subsidies, etc. The judgement offers no consideration of the tension between individual privacy, liberty and public interest; this could only have been done in light of a specific dispute where the Court would have been forced to balance real and conflicting tensions.

Faced with this lack of factual circumstances, the Court in the Privacy judgement instead justifies possible constraints on privacy rights through a vague necessity doctrine. The Court states that the right to privacy can only be constrained by a parliamentary law made for a legitimate state interest, with constraints proportional to the object the law seeks to achieve.

It is, however, explicit in stating that the question of legitimate state interests in violating privacy rights can only be reviewed on the grounds of arbitrariness. In addition to laying down this test in the absence of specific circumstances, the judgement provides broad illustrations of what could be considered legitimate state purposes - national security, promotion of innovation, conferring social welfare benefits, etc. Unlike previous cases where the facts of the dispute ground the doctrinal points made by courts, the doctrinal points here can be construed widely or narrowly depending on the specific predilections of future courts.

The question of legitimate state interests is the question that should have occupied the attention of the Court - what kinds of infringements of privacy are permissible when specific actions of the State are claimed to be in furtherance of legitimate state interests? As per the Court, the only basis on which such a claim can be challenged is that of being arbitrary and disproportional. As long as there is no arbitrariness or disproportionality, infringements of privacy are permissible. However, neither arbitrariness or disproportionality are tests related directly to liberty and privacy in themselves.

For example, it is one thing to question whether the law related to telephone tapping is arbitrary or disproportional to the legitimate objectives of national security. It is another to question whether telephone tapping violates privacy or not. As per the test laid down by the Supreme Court, the law would not be unconstitutional if it were not arbitrary or disproportional. The test limits the discussion on the tension between privacy and national security only to the grounds of arbitrariness and proportionality. In doing so, the Court arguably missed an opportunity to create tests for legitimate state interests in interfering with privacy rights. Instead, the judgement of the Court illustrates a broad range of legitimate state interests where the state can interfere with privacy rights.

The same conclusion can be reached regarding the applicability of this judgement to other issues. If combating marital rape is a legitimate state interest, the Privacy judgement takes us no further in thinking about how to enter the private sanctuary of a bedroom in a way that respects the privacy of the married couple. Any law can be made as long as it is not arbitrary or disproportionate to a widely construed notion of a legitimate state objective. This is arguably an incomplete test, since it does not seek to balance the legitimate privacy interests of the married couple with the objectives of the state. The only balancing factors are that such laws not be arbitrary or disproportional. These tests are however, not related to liberty interests. The US Supreme Court in Griswold v. Connecticut found liberty interests that were violated by state laws that interfered with the use of contraceptives. Had that law been judged on the basis of arbitrariness and disproportionality, the outcome in the case may have been different.

State power has therefore been arguably expanded by limiting the grounds of challenge to arbitrariness and proportionality. It is therefore debatable whether we are better off than earlier, having created clear limits on the right to privacy, without any clear, substantive limits on state power. Only the state seems better off.

Personal Data Protection Bill: Leviathan On Steroids and the End Of Privacy

A logical consequence of treating privacy as an end in itself is the Personal Data Protection Bill proposed by the Justice Srikrishna Committee. Because the Bill treats data protection as an end in itself, it focuses only on the protection of data rather than the protection of interests that would be harmed by the unscrupulous use of data. The Bill casts a wide net, and in the process proposes the creation of arguably the most powerful and draconian state regulator India may ever see.

First, the lack of clarity of underlying values - the purview of the Bill extends to all data (in electronic form or otherwise). "Processing" of data is defined to include "collection" of data as well. So, the kirana store down the street that provides credit to customers for buying groceries on the basis of their previous repayments, a record of which it maintains in physical registers, would be subject to state supervision for its data management practices. The Bill mercifully provides some small exemptions for such "small entities" in Section 48 for manual processing, but they still have to comply with other data protection requirements.

Further, any discussion on specific privacy interests should have to deal with multiple conflicting interests - if individual privacy is important for the sake of, say, protecting individuals from online sexual harassment, a data protection law would have to deal with the tension between the right to access and participate on the internet freely and visibly, with the genuine potential for online abuse and harm. The provisions enabling data processing after consent would have to be tailored for this specific issue. Similarly, in its broad application of data protection requirements to the entire economy, the Bill fails to balance the tension between the conflicting interests of economic growth and data protection.

An example of the possible problems that may arise due to the lack of clarity on the ends of the Bill are the requirements regarding discrimination. The Bill states that "any discriminatory treatment" is a harm, and creates penalties and offences for causing such harm. But, devoid of any grounding of what forms of discrimination are permissible, this becomes an impossible standard to adhere to. Legitimate forms of discrimination such as preferring to lend money to people who pay back on time, over those who do not are essential to society. However, if a prospective borrower is refused a loan based on his or her credit history, this could constitute "harm" under the Bill.

Similarly, if an online matrimonial site shows its user only high net-worth suitors from Bihar based on an analysis of the user's past preferences, such discrimination would be beneficial for the user, but would be construed as discriminatory, unless there is clarity on what the provisions regarding discrimination seek to protect us from. But, since there is no real clarity on such ends, the supposedly safe route the Bill takes is to create a regulator with vague powers and ask it to protect data.

Parts of the Bill have been taken from the EU's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). The GDPR however sits on a bedrock of privacy jurisprudence (example) in the EU that goes back decades. We have borrowed the legislation without borrowing the privacy jurisprudence and the overall institutional ecosystem within which the GDPR operates. When the Bill is enacted, it will be interpreted and implemented without the underlying benefit of this jurisprudence. There will therefore be substantially less guidance for the proposed Data Protection Authority (DPA), and fewer checks on how it will interpret its powers.

Second, the claim that the DPA proposed by the Bill is a Leviathan on steroids is not a light one. One look at the definitions of "data" and "processing" confirms the wide scope of the law. In Section 60, the first function of the DPA is an ambiguous "monitoring and enforcing application of the provisions of this Act". In Indian state parlance this translates to: Use state coercion to solve every real or imagined problem provided you have the resources to do so. Even if the DPA were to construe such language strictly, it would have to intrude into almost all systems of data collection, storage and processing within the country to perform this function effectively. In the name of protecting data, it would necessarily have to supervise all data.

If for example, the DPA is to monitor compliance with the codes of conduct it is required to write for data processing, it will have to monitor the way in which data processors implement such codes with respect to their consumers. This will have to be done an economy-wide scale. One may argue that this can be done through less intrusive methods, but that is missing the point. The substantive power is there, and the powerful choice of how to regulate remains with the state. We shall remain at the mercy of liberal men, not liberal laws.

This broad jurisdiction is almost unprecedented for India. This is a huge departure from sector-specific jurisdictions carved out for other state agencies. The Reserve Bank of India can only collect data about banking and some other financial firms. SEBI can only do so with respect to the securities market. TRAI can only collect information about those in the telecommunications industry. The DPA is a regulator of data across sectors and jurisdictions. It will have the power to impose significant compliance costs and penalties on all individuals and enterprises that may collect data, even for purely incidental purposes.

Third, failure to abide by data protection requirements could land persons in jail. The offences under the Bill are proposed to be non-bailable. When combined with vaguely drafted provisions, this would have significant negative effects on society if the law is effectively applied. The Srikrishna committee report does not explain why such draconian punishments are required for the protection of data. Even serious crimes like murder are bailable. The report does not show any evidence to prove that misuse of data is a crime worse than murder.

The net consequence of the Bill, if enacted, would be this - the enactment of arguably the most powerful and intrusive regulatory agency in India, the enactment of draconian offences with great potential for misuse, and a punch in the face of private enterprise. Command and control is back, this time the driving force being the ideology of statism.

Conclusion: Privacy through the state, not from it

The ongoing discourse on privacy, Aadhaar and data protection leaves us with the inescapable role of the state as a mediating entity. In the Aadhaar discourse, the uses of identification will continue to be decided by the state without any clear agreement on what such uses should be. The right to privacy elucidated by the Supreme Court will have to evolve on a case-by-case basis as more state action relevant to privacy emerges. The Personal Data Protection Bill empowers the state to protect our data with broad and vaguely defined powers.

The fight for privacy as a means to protect individual liberty has, in the forms it takes today, led us to a point where state power on the whole, has been arguably strengthened vis-a-vis society. Contradictory to its stated aims, the current outcomes of the privacy debate are predicated on state coercion as a tool for protecting liberty.

It is a grave error to presume that the state will act benignly to uphold liberal values of privacy and autonomy. One reason is that these privacy values have not been sufficiently articulated - the discourse is almost entirely around means and not the specific interests the right to privacy seeks to protect. This can only be done by discussing privacy in specific contexts - if land records are to be made publicly accessible for increased efficiency in land markets, what is a reasonable expectation of privacy in such a context? Or, if the state wishes to build a sex offenders registry, how do privacy interests militate against such a system? As stated earlier, problems of identification systems are downstream of these issues. By not questioning the ends of identification systems like Aadhaar, its detractors are attempting to have their cake and eat it too. Even if Aadhaar is struck down, it is doubtful if privacy interests will be served in the long run.

Second, a liberal state cannot be built in isolation from the larger state apparatus. A state that habitually violates the rule of law and relies on draconian laws cannot be trusted implicitly to uphold liberal values just because the law empowering it is for a seemingly benign purpose. The Right to Education Act, a seemingly benign law, provides everyone the right to free and compulsory education, but does so by seriously constraining the right of private educational providers to actually provide education. This is routine for the Indian state - the pursuit of seemingly liberal objectives through coercive mechanisms. A state that routinely treats dissenters as traitors, evicts helpless landowners, and uses torture as an investigative tool, cannot reasonably be expected to act liberally in the interest of liberal values, especially if it is given draconian powers with vague objectives. It is reasonable to presume that the data protection law will suffer from the same illiberalism that we see in the Indian state.

A lot has been said of the misuse of data by private firms. A reasonably responsive state acts as a bulwark against such misuse. There is no bulwark against the state. If it is determined to take a certain course of action, whether it is the imposition of an emergency or the demonetisation of currency, no system of checks and balances is sufficient. Additionally, in the case of the data protection Bill, there has been no evidence shown by its proponents that the scale of the proposed data protection requirements is in any way commensurate to the dangers posed by private data companies.

Perhaps the greatest threat to individual liberty, autonomy and dignity comes from the fact that state action crowds out non-state action. State regulation operates to the exclusion of self-regulation. If, for example, the State determines the prices of essential commodities, private persons cannot negotiate and agree on the prices of such commodities. Though it has its problems, civic-associational regulation is often capable of much greater nuance and compromise than state regulation. State regulation in contrast, operates largely within binaries - permission versus prohibition, legality versus illegality, all enforced with coercive power behind it.

Those arguing in favour of privacy must avoid resorting to similar binaries. The present discourse rests on absolute moral claims about privacy, where political arguments should be made. Escalating political arguments to moral ones hastens the end of democracy. Since the moral claims of one side are considered odious and abhorrent by the other, no middle ground can be reached because collaboration with the opposition is treasonous in a moral fight. This spells greater danger for the survival of democracy; the only beneficiary is the increasingly-powerful State, and the stakes for capturing power become higher and higher. The impulse to turn to state-centred solutions has to be checked if individual privacy and dignity are to be preserved.

 

The author works with the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, and is extremely grateful to Suyash Rai and Vasudha Reddy for discussions and inputs.

Wednesday, March 01, 2017

Judicial review of the Speaker's certificate on the Aadhar Bill

by Pratik Datta, Shefali Malhotra and Shivangi Tyagi.

Under the Indian Constitution, for a bill to be enacted into a law, it has to be approved by both Houses of the Parliament - the Lower House (Lok Sabha) and the Upper House (Rajya Sabha). There is one exception to this general rule. A bill certified as a 'money bill' by the speaker of the Lower House can be enacted into a law by the Lower House alone, without any approval from the Upper House. The Aadhar Act, 2016 was enacted using this route. After being passed by the Lok Sabha, the Lok Sabha speaker certified the Aadhar Bill as a 'money bill'. Accordingly, amendments suggested by Rajya Sabha were not considered and the bill was enacted into law. This led to a controversy, ultimately leading up to a constitutional challenge by Mr. Jairam Ramesh before the Supreme Court. Mr. Ramesh alleged that the speaker incorrectly certified Aadhar Bill as a 'money bill', allowing Lok Sabha to enact the law completely bypassing Rajya Sabha. This matter is going to come up for hearing before the Court on March 14.

Article 110(3) of the Indian Constitution states that the decision of the speaker, whether a bill is a money bill or not, "shall be final". In Mr. Ramesh's case, the Supreme Court has to first decide if it can question the speaker's "final" decision to certify Aadhar Bill as a 'money bill'. The Supreme Court has in three earlier decisions refrained from questioning the speaker's decision. These judgments are Mangalore Ganesh Beedi Works v. State of Mysore (1962), Mohd. Saeed Siddiqui v. State of UP (2014) and Yogendra Kumar Jaiswal v. State of Bihar (2015). As per these judgments, the speaker can certify each and every bill to be a `money bill' capable of being enacted by Lok Sabha alone, rendering the Rajya Sabha and the bicameral legislative system redundant. And the Supreme Court cannot question the speaker's decision since it is "final".

In a recent paper titled Judicial review and money bills, we argue that this position of law developed by the Supreme Court is incorrect. Many commentators have already argued that the enactment of the Aadhar Act through the money bill route was unconstitutional. For instance, Alok Prasanna Kumar, Amber Sinha and Suhrith Parthasarthy have pointed out that the Supreme Court's decisions denying judicial review are problematic. Vanya Rakesh and Sumandro Chattapadhyay have also made out a case favouring judicial review of the speaker's certificate. Our paper adds to this line of literature by substantiating these arguments in detail. In this post, we highlight five reasons why the Supreme Court could legitimately question the speaker's decision in spite of its "final" status under the Constitution.

Indian Constitution does not explicitly bar judicial review

The Indian Constitution adopted the concept of money bills from the British Parliament Act, 1911, with crucial modifications. The 1911 Act defines `money bill' and lays down a procedure for them. Section 1(2) defines a bill to be a money bill which 'in the opinion of the Speaker of the House of Commons' contains only specific provisions. Article 110(1) of the Indian Constitution defines a bill to be a money bill 'if it contains only' specific provisions. Effectively, in Britain the determination of whether a bill is a money bill is left to the subjective 'opinion' of the British speaker. In contrast, the definition of `money bill' under the Indian constitution is not left to the subjective opinion of the Indian speaker. The Indian speaker's decision has to be based on the definition provided in the Constitution.

The 1911 Act mandates the British speaker to endorse his
opinion on money bills, on a certificate. Section 3 gives absolute legal conclusivity to the certificate of the speaker. It reads:

Any certificate of the Speaker of the House of Commons given under this Act shall be conclusive for all purposes, and shall not be questioned in any court of law.

Article 110(3) of the Indian Constitution also grants 'finality' to the Indian speaker's decision. It reads:

If any question arises whether a bill is a Money Bill or not, the decision of the Speaker of the House of People thereon shall be final.

Unlike the 1911 Act, the Indian Constitution does not mention that the speaker's decision "shall be conclusive for all purposes" and "shall not be questioned in any court of law". Therefore, although the Indian Constitution grants conclusivity to the speaker's decision, it does not explicitly bar judicial review. We find that the Constituent Assembly intended for the "final" status given to the speaker's certificate, to be applicable only inside the Parliament - including the Rajya Sabha and the President. Our paper explains this argument in detail.

"Final" decisions have been questioned by Supreme Court

Decisions of various authorities have been given "final" status under the Indian Constitution. Yet the Supreme Court has on multiple occasions exercised judicial review over such decisions. For instance, in Kihoto Hollohan vs Zachillhu (AIR 1993 SC 412), the "final" decision of the speaker regarding disqualification of members of the House under Tenth Schedule of the Indian Constitution, has been held to be a judicial decision subject to judicial review. This suggests that the "final" status given by the Indian constitution does not automatically immune the Indian speaker's decision or certificate from judicial review. Our paper provides a detailed table where we show that there are 17 types of "final" decisions in the Constitution, out of which there are only 3 instances where the Constitution specifically mentions that the validity of such "final" decision cannot be questioned. The decision of the speaker, whether a bill is a money bill or not, is not one of them. Moreover, the Supreme Court has held 5 types of "final" decisions to be subject to judicial review.

British and Indian Parliamentary systems are different

Much of the differences between the 1911 Act and the Indian
Constitution originate from the inherent differences between the British and Indian parliamentary systems.

Britain follows a system of parliamentary sovereignty where the legislature is supreme. In their model it is possible to give absolute conclusivity to the speaker's certificate and immunise it from judicial review. We feel this was not possible under the Indian Constitution since it is not based on parliamentary sovereignty. Giving absolute conclusivity to the speaker's certificate or decision would have been incompatible with the overall scheme of the Indian Constitution, for two reasons.

First, India has a written constitution. All organs of the state (including the speaker) must abide by the Constitution. Any violation is liable to be struck down by the courts. This separation of powers is a basic feature of the Indian Constitution. Allowing the speaker to violate the constitution without any recourse to judicial review impinges upon this basic feature of the Indian Constitution.

Second, Britain does not have a written constitution. Therefore, it is impossible for the British speaker to violate the constitution. The British Speaker can only violate the rules made by either Houses of the British Parliament or procedural laws enacted by both of them. These being 'internal matters' of the Houses, such violations are immune from judicial review. In contrast, India has a written constitution. Certain law making procedures are prescribed by the Indian Constitution (like the money bill procedure), while some other procedures are prescribed through rules by both the Houses of the Indian Parliament (like voting on bills and resolutions). Similar to Britain, the rules made by the Indian Parliament are treated as 'internal matters' of the Houses, immune from judicial interference. We feel violation of constitutional procedures are not 'internal matters', and hence cannot be immune from judicial review. This explains why the Indian constitution framers did not explicitly bar judicial review of the speaker's decision as is the case in Britain.

Supreme Court's contradictory jurisprudence

Our research highlights the inherent contradiction within the Supreme Court's own jurisprudence on judicial review of legislative proceedings and the Indian speaker's certificate on money bills. Article 122 of the Indian Constitution prohibits the courts from questioning parliamentary proceedings on the ground of 'procedural irregularity'. We argue that 'procedural irregularity' refers to violation of procedures in rules made by each House under Article 118 or in any law made by the Houses under Article 119. Violation of a constitutional procedure is not mere 'procedural irregularity'. This distinction was highlighted by a seven judge bench of the Supreme Court in Special Reference No. 1 of 1964. It held that if the procedure followed by the legislature is illegal and unconstitutional, courts can exercise judicial review. This interpretation of Article 122 has been blatantly disregarded by lesser benches of the Supreme Court in the three decisions mentioned earlier. These three cases erroneously held that violation of the constitutional procedure for money bills is a mere 'procedural irregularity' and hence cannot be questioned by the courts.

Other common law jurisdictions allow judicial review

The position followed by the Indian Supreme Court is at odds with the position adopted across five common law countries with written constitutions and bicameral legislative systems. Our research shows that courts across these jurisdictions broadly support judicial review in this regard. In Australia, if a law imposing taxation deals with any extraneous matter, the Australian High Court can exercise judicial review under section 55 of the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act, 1900. The Canadian Supreme Court has observed that the procedural requirement must be complied with to create fiscal legislation. The Constitutional Court of South Africa has exercised judicial review to determine if a Bill was calculated to raise revenue or not. The US Supreme Court has categorically held that a law passed in violation of the Origination Clause (equivalent to money bills under the Indian Constitution) would not be immune from judicial review. Pakistan Supreme Court has in four cases struck down laws enacted as money bills since they did not fall within the definition of money bill under article 73 of their constitution.

Conclusion

Our research suggests that Indian legislative proceedings are immune from judicial review only on the ground of 'irregularity of procedure' and not for constitutional breaches. If a House commits breach of any procedure in any rule made by itself or in any legislation that the Houses themselves had passed, such breach is an internal matter for the House itself to act on. It is not open to judicial review. But if a House commits a breach of any constitutional procedure, such breach is open to judicial review. A contrary interpretation would mean that the Indian speaker can certify each and every bill to be a 'money bill', practically dispensing with the need for the Rajya Sabha. Such an interpretation would effectively render the constitutional design of a bicameral legislative system completely redundant. This is precisely what has been done by the three earlier judgements of the Supreme Court. Jairam Ramesh v. Union of India offers the Supreme Court an opportunity to revisit its interpretation of the Constitution on this issue.

References

Pratik Datta et al., The controversy about Aadhaar as a money bill, Ajay Shah's blog, March 20, 2016.

Vanya Rakesh and Sumandro Chattapadhyay, Aadhaar Act as Money Bill: Why the Lok Sabha isn't Immune from Judicial Review, The Wire, May 9, 2016.

Alok Prasanna Kumar, Why the Centre's dubious use of money bills must not go unchallenged, Scroll.in, May 11, 2016.

Amber Sinha, Can the Judiciary Upturn the Lok Sabha Speaker's Decision on Aadhaar?, The Wire, February 21, 2017.

Suhrith Parthasarthy, What exactly is a money bill?, The Hindu, February 27, 2017.

Pratik Datta et al., Judicial review and money bills, February 28, 2017.

 

The authors are researchers at the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, New Delhi.

Friday, November 25, 2016

Problematic terms in the demonetisation debate

by Anirudh Burman.

The Government's move to demonetise Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000 notes, and place restrictions on withdrawals, exchanges and deposits has attracted both appreciation and criticism. This piece analyses the framework of this discourse and its implications for the economy and society. Terms like "demonetisation", "corruption", "inconvenience and hardship", "implementation" form the basis of this discourse. Interestingly, most of these terms have originated from the Government itself. This piece argues that by confining ourselves to these terms, we fail to grasp the true nature and impact of this measure.


The economic context


The Indian government's move to withdraw the legal tender status of Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000 notes has had widespread effects on the economy. Holding these beyond a certain notified date will be
illegal. Those left with these notes after December 31 will lose their wealth by a corresponding amount. There are daily reports of the plight of urban daily wage labourers, farmers and those in unbanked areas.

The economic impact of this measure is being contested. A great piece by my colleague Suyash Rai argues that the costs of imposing this measure far outweigh the benefits are likely to affect the poor and under-banked areas disproportionately and may have a modest impact on corruption at best. Others have played down the likely impact on the poor and rural areas. They have supported the demonetisation as a courageous and bold step towards a larger effort at wiping out endemic corruption and black money.

What is already safe to assert is that for better or for worse, there has been large-scale disruption within the economy. Print and electronic media, social media, daily conversations are consumed with conversations around the principle and implementation of demonetisation, and around issues of corruption and black money. Yet, most of this discourse follows a predefined framework, using terms and nomenclatures propagated by the Government. The framework of this discourse is problematic, and this framework itself may have deleterious effects on our society.

Problematic term: "Demonetisation"


Characterising the government's move as "demonetisation" is the most problematic fallacy of the current discursive framework. In this case, the Central Government has said that the RBI will refuse to honour its promise to provide legal backing to Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000 currency notes. They will effectively refuse to honour the property rights of those holding them. Every time the RBI issues a currency note, it adds a liability to its balance sheet. By refusing to honour these notes as legal tender, the RBI will extinguish its liability towards persons holding them, in effect enriching itself. In addition, substantial restrictions have been placed on exchanging old notes for new, withdrawal and exchange of money. This is a substantial interference in the rights of people from accessing their own money. This is expropriation, not demonetisation.

In its broadest sense, expropriation refers to a taking of certain items or goods by the government by refusing to honour the property rights of those holding such items or goods. Bank nationalisation was an act of expropriation. The Indian government refused to honour the property rights of the owners of banks and transferred the ownership of the banks to itself.

Land acquisition is an act of expropriation.  The government expropriates the property rights of individuals. Land reforms undertaken in the 1940s and 1950s were acts of expropriation where property held by zamindars was transferred to the states by virtue of laws passed by them.

The Vodafone tax demand by the Indian government has been alleged to be an expropriatory action as Vodafone's income is being expropriated by imposing an allegedly unfair tax on it. Expropriation need not be an absolute taking or extinguishment of property rights in all cases.

Even a high degree of restriction or interference with property rights has been held to be expropriatory in many jurisdictions worldwide. Therefore, the Government and RBI's decision to (a) withdraw legal tender status, and (b) impose severe restrictions on withdrawals from one's own account is definitely an act of expropriation.

This act of expropriation is singular, given the nature of the expropriation and the views of the political party in power. Two of its cabinet ministers favoured a debate early last year on whether the word socialist should remain in the Preamble to the Indian Constitution and its ally the Shiv Sena demanded the removal of the word (link here)! This same Government is now justifying this expropriatory act as a moral imperative.

The nature of the expropriation is much more problematic. There are at least three ways in which this expropriation is remarkable:

  1. In most cases, property rights of certain defined individuals or classes are expropriated. The owners of banks were identifiable individuals, and so were the zamindars who were expropriated when land reform laws were passed. In this case, it is not so. Property rights across the entire economy are being expropriated without distinction. At the same time, there is no single identifiable person who is being expropriated. This is likely to have societal consequences I will elaborate later.
  2. Governments usually expropriate rights, or assets - like wealth, mineral resources, land, intellectual property (through compulsory licensing). In this case, the medium of exchange in society is asset being expropriated. This is an expropriation of cash, not wealth. This is singular in the annals of expropriatory actions by governments worldwide. Many governments have demonetised currencies to combat hyperinflation, but no one has withdrawn legal tender status on currency notes in times of normalcy, and imposed restrictions on an individual's ability to hold cash at the same time. In an economy that is almost completely cash driven, and where most households hold Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000 notes as means of exchange for sustenance, this is bound to have serious repercussions.
    Money is not just a medium of exchange and a store of value, it is also, as has been argued, a source of social prestige and psychological security. In a cash-based economy like ours, people primarily derive social capital and psychological security from money in the form of cash. This expropriatory measure has therefore arguably extinguished or imperiled the social prestige and psychological security of those who relied on cash money to provide these for them.
  3. Governments usually expropriate the rich to redistribute to the poor (at least ostensibly) or to create benefits for the public good (roads, highways, etc). Bank nationalisation expropriated the rich bank owners so that Indira Gandhi could use banks as agents of poverty reduction. Land reforms were done to expropriate zamindars and redistribute land to the poor. In other countries, governments expropriate owners of oil fields and mineral deposits so that the government can channel the benefits from such resources for the public good. Since this expropriation is economy-wide, everyone's medium of exchange is being confiscated/ restricted regardless of whether they are rich or poor. However, the main brunt of the expropriatory action is on the poor. There are two main ideas being talked about with regard to what the government might do with the windfall in order to redistribute wealth to the poor. To clarify, neither the Government nor the RBI have stated or clarified on what they intend to do, and what legislative changes will need to be made. It is however worthwhile to discuss these as the two broad ideas that are being discussed -
    1. The government may improve its fiscal situation and use the fiscal space to provide income tax relief/ loan waivers. The poor are not going to benefit from income tax relief since only 4 percent of India's population pays income tax. The Sixth Economic Census of the CSO (March 2016) finds that only 2.3 percent of non-agricultural establishments received financial assistance from financial institutions. This number is likely to be the same or even lower for agricultural establishments. Loan waivers are therefore going to have minuscule impact, and benefit only those who are well-off enough to access the formal financial system.
    2. The government may, through some legislative jugglery, recapitalise banks and kick-start lending. Again, the gains are going to accrue mostly to the rich and the middle class. It is debatable as to how the unbanked and expropriated 40 percent would reap the benefits of any bank-led redistributive measure since 40 percent of the country is unbanked (Census 2011).

This is therefore, a unique expropriatory measure that expropriates from everyone in society to benefit those who suffer the least "inconvenience" from the expropriation (more on this later).
Discussing this step as an expropriatory measure brings to the fore legal protections and requirements that are concomitant with expropriation: what is the legal authority for taking away the
property of individuals? Is compensation due to those who have been expropriated and if yes, in what form? What due process is applicable to expropriatory measures taken by the Government? Coining this expropriation demonetisation is putting lipstick on a pig in its truest sense.

Problematic term: "Corruption"


Equally problematic is the way this expropriatory action has re-defined the "corrupt" and "corruption". All preceding actions against corruption taken by the Indian State in the past have been against those who have either evaded taxes or earned money by committing illegal acts. The issue was that certain people either evaded taxes or did something they were not supposed to, and such people had to be identified and punished. The voluntary disclosure scheme followed this overarching principle by encouraging people who did not pay taxes to come forward. The same principle is at play in the issue over identifying people who have stashed their illegal money abroad, and in the identification and prosecution of officials violating the Prevention of Corruption Act.

This expropriatory measure has the potential to re-define how people think about the corrupt and corruption. For one, the focus is now on confiscating corrupt wealth and black money. Identifying the corrupt and identifying individual acts of corruption has taken a backstage. Expropriation itself has become a mode of punishment. It is being suggestively implied that society has a chance to start again with a clean slate if black money is wiped out. The complete failure of the state to act against corruption is being used as an excuse to infuse society with a new kind of morality.

Second, corruption has now become a crime without a perpetrator. Multiple people I have talked to situate themselves as victims of corruption. A landlord who has built an illegal flat does
not give his tenant a lease-deed and accepts payments only in cash told me he was proud the Prime Minister had taken this step on behalf of honest people like him. An auto-wallah who confessed to driving without a permit and did not agree to go by meter railed against the corrupt during the duration of my journey. An Uber-driver praised the expropriation repeatedly while he ferried me. Close to the end of the ride he nonchalantly told me he had to drive carefully since the police had impounded his license the previous day. While these anecdotes hardly constitute statistical evidence, they are indicative of the fact that people go to great lengths to justify their actions as moral and honest.

However, the logic goes, everyone else must be corrupt if corruption is endemic enough to justify this kind of measure. This discourse is elevating the widespread cynicism and hatred against politicians, bureaucrats, the police, big business, small business and the media. Everyone feels like a victim and everyone else is suspect. But no one is a perpetrator or an agent. Everyone wants to sock it to the rich and the corrupt though no one knows who they are. So it is acceptable to take some punches yourself if the corrupt suffer in the process. The Government is at once elevating the pitch for shared sacrifice while also (most probably and hopefully, unintentionally) exacerbating the conditions for social and institutional distrust. Issues of class envy and class conflict are already coming to the fore and may get further magnified in the future.

This, in turn, is likely to create a collective psyche where no individual or institution can be trusted. No one is deserving of empathy since their corruption might be the cause of your suffering. This is happening even though the Government is at pains to explain that this will be one among many previous and future steps against corruption. By re-framing corruption as a crime without an agent through this singular action, the Government has perhaps unwittingly created the conditions in which the nature of discourse regarding solving corruption in society changes permanently.

This is a simple expropriation at its core. The object and effect of this measure are predominantly expropriatory. The confiscation of black money is an incidental benefit by design. The rhetoric of sweeping up black money and the design of the expropriatory measure do not match up to each other.

Problematic terms: "Inconvenience"


It is inconvenient to have to switch to a mobile wallet and stand in an ATM queue for 2-3 hours once a week. Many people I have spoken to are ready to suffer this inconvenience if it helps achieve the stated objective of finishing off black money in the economy. When individuals who depend on their daily wage to feed themselves and their families are laid off, this cannot be called an inconvenience. The tribulations of agricultural workers and small entrepreneurs cannot be called an inconvenience if their enterprise fails due to the lack of liquid cash. Sectors of the economy that function largely in cash are suffering disproportionately compared to those with access to plastic money and mobile wallets. There is an attempt to normalise and standardise the way the effects of this expropriation are to be thought about by using this one word to describe the depth and diversity of suffering within the economy.

There is a breadth of literature on the impact of income shocks on those who are at the lower end of the poverty line. Income shocks push many just above the poverty line back into poverty. They also push many into debt, since their savings are not sufficient to sustain themselves. Small incidents like an unanticipated illness have an outsized impact on their long-term well-being and potential for growth. The current actions of the Government have administered just such an income shock on the poorest.

The Government should have taken much more aggressive measures to protect the worst affected economic classes in society, but calling this suffering an inconvenience allows it to paper over this failure. Had the Government instead defined the consequences of this measure as a "scarcity" of currency, corresponding actions may have been discussed, and some implemented. Government actions and popular discourse during times of scarcity are motivated by a desire to ensure everyone has adequate rations to sustain themselves.
 
Scarcity creates its own social dynamics. It creates new intermediaries in the market - when food is rationed, black marketeers emerge to supply food at above-market prices. After this expropriation, intermediaries are delivering white money for black for a commission. The war against corruption is creating new forms of corruption.

Mobile applications with horrifying names like "Book my chotu" are advertising hired help who can go stand in queues for those who can afford it. Most troublingly, scarcity changes relationships in society by creating new power dynamics. Hitherto bankers were service providers. Now they are agents of rationing. They have asymmetric power compared to those standing in the queues before them. It is a credit to them that they are still providing services under conditions of extreme difficulty. On the other hand, like any agent of rationing, they are now exposed to mob fury and mob violence. The customer has now become a beggar. His/her money is locked up in a bank. The psychological security gained from holding money that I alluded to earlier has vanished. Whereas earlier he or she could demand service, now they pray they get to exchange\withdraw money, and can suffer at the hands of a capricious banker.

Conclusion


Some have argued that even if the Government wanted to take this step, it could have been timed better. But what is a good time for extinguishing property rights? Any time is equally good and equally bad. Others have argued that the step has been implemented badly. But expropriatory actions are judged first and foremost by the validity of the expropriation itself. We have been too quick to assume the validity of this measure and debate its implementation. As long as the terms of the discourse are set by those who introduced the measure, we will also be confined to their predefined moral straitjacket of honesty versus corruption, sacrifice versus timidity and sincerity versus venality. Empathy will be a casualty.

The Government has framed this step against corruption as a moral question. Should we not ask a moral question of the Government: Is it ethical for any State to expropriate the predominant means of exchange from everyone in society, especially in a poor cash-dependent economy?



The author is a researcher at the National Institute for Public Finance and Policy.

Saturday, November 05, 2016

Constitutional law, Brexit and the Bhopal encounter

by Pratik Datta, Suyash Rai, Shubho Roy.


Your representative owes you, 
not his industry only, 
but his judgement; 
he betrays, instead of serving you, 
if he sacrifices it to your opinion. 



The UK has been a member of the EU since 1973. In June 2016 it conducted a referendum under the European Union Referendum Act, 2015 about whether it should withdraw from EU. The majority was in favour of withdrawal - commonly referred to as Brexit.

For many people with a simplistic understanding of democracy, that was that. The people had spoken, and democracy was supposed to reflect the will of the people. Theresa May's government intended to act on this majority will and withdraw from EU.

This would have affected rights of UK citizens (especially the minority anti-Brexit group) under the UK's domestic law - the European Communities Act, 1972 (ECA). Yesterday, the English High Court prevented this. In a major constitutional ruling, the Court held that UK Government (the executive) cannot initiate the formal Brexit process and affect rights of UK citizens under ECA. ECA rights were given to the UK citizens by the UK Parliament and only the UK Parliament can by vote take away those rights. This principle has immense relevance to India in light of the recent police encounters in Bhopal.

The question before the Court


For any EU Member to withdraw from EU, it has to give a notice to the European Council under Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU). Therefore, for UK to withdraw, it also needs to give a notice. The constitutional question before the Court was whether the Crown (the executive) can give this notice unilaterally, or whether this needed to be voted upon by the UK Parliament.

Basics of UK's constitution


As in any democratic state, in the UK, the State has three wings:

  1. Legislature: Which makes laws - UK Parliament
  2. Executive: Which implements laws - Crown
  3. Judiciary: Which adjudicates disputes regarding implementation of laws - Supreme Court, High Court etc

Unlike most other countries, UK does not have one written constitution. However, for the present purpose, three constitutional principles are well accepted:

  1. The UK Parliament is sovereign. It can write whatever law it wants to, unless it itself has restricted its own power to write such a law.
  2. The Crown (the executive) has prerogative powers if there is no Parliamentary law on that subject. Prerogative powers cannot be used by the Crown to alter Parliamentary law.
  3. The Crown can exercise its prerogative powers to enter into or withdraw from treaties.

When the Crown enters into international treaties, it imposes international obligations on UK. Such obligations could affect the rights given to UK's citizens under UK's Parliamentary laws. But the constitution says that the Crown cannot use its prerogative powers (treaty making powers) to alter UK's Parliamentary laws. Therefore, a treaty entered into by the Crown cannot affect rights given by UK Parliament to UK citizens, unless it is ratified by the UK Parliament.

EU laws v. UK laws


EU laws are of two types:
  1. Directives: These require Member States to amend their domestic laws.
  2. Regulations: These automatically override the domestic laws of Member States.

Before joining the EU, the UK Parliament was sovereign and UK Parliamentary laws were supreme. But the condition precedent for joining EU was to allow EU laws to override the UK Parliamentary laws. Otherwise, that would be breach of the EU Treaty. Therefore, to allow EU laws to override UK Parliamentary laws, the UK Parliament passed the European Communities Act, 1972 (ECA). The ECA enabled EU laws to be treated as domestic UK laws which could override contrary UK Parliamentary laws.

The issue with Brexit


The ECA is a UK Parliamentary law. It gives UK citizens certain rights by incorporating the EU laws into UK's domestic laws. For example, UK citizens could enjoy reciprocal rights of movement in other EU member states. UK citizens also had the right to seek reference to EU Commission to take regulatory action in relation to a violation of competition law in UK.

If a notice for Brexit is given, the UK will no more be an EU Member and UK citizens will lose the above rights. For example, if UK is no more part of EU, a UK citizen cannot enjoy the reciprocal treatment in another EU member state or to refer a matter to the EU Commission. Now, if the Crown issued this notice initiating Brexit and abolishing the rights of UK citizens, it would effectively amount to the Crown altering the rights given to the UK Citizens by the Parliamentary law - ECA. In other words, if the Crown uses its prerogative power to trigger the Brexit process, it will effectively alter the rights given to British citizens under UK Parliamentary law. And that would be unconstitutional!

Consequences of the judgement


Although the High Court's decision may be challenged, the judgement is well grounded in constitutional law jurisprudence and is very well drafted. There is a high probability that the Brexit issue may now be voted upon by the UK Parliament. And the Parliament will not be bound by the decision in the referendum; it will only be advisory in nature.

On the face of it, the judgement defeats the popular will of the people expressed in the Brexit referendum. But in spirit, it is a major win for rule of law and democratic institutions in UK.

Relevance for India


This cardinal principle of constitutional democracy has much relevance for contemporary India. Too often, in India, people fail to see the concepts of a representative democracy as opposed to a direct democracy.

Recently, the Madhya Pradesh police shot dead eight under-trial prisoners after they allegedly escaped from a jail in Bhopal. Media reports suggest that the policemen had orders to kill the under-trials. There was no intention to arrest them. A section of the Indian population feels such extra-judicial encounters are justified. And legal procedures like CrPC are unnecessarily cumbersome.

What they tend to overlook is that a representative democracy is not the same as rule by majority. In a representative democracy, citizens elect their representatives for every five years or so. The representatives are accountable to their respective constituencies and that shapes their individual decisions. But once in Parliament, they are not mere ambassadors from their constituencies. The Parliament is a deliberative assembly of one nation, with one interest - that of the whole. In Parliament, the representative must apply his own judgement and take a decision not for local purposes but for general good. That is why in a representative democracy, direct referendums on all issues are neither required nor desired.

And once such elected representatives have made a law in Parliament, that law binds every citizen. The majority of citizens may not like a law but they cannot directly vote and override it. Similarly, the executive may not like a law, but it cannot override it either. Both the executive and the majority cannot override a law made in Parliament by the elected representatives. To do so, they have to elect the appropriate representatives who will change the laws in Parliament.

India is a representative democracy with a constitution. The elected representatives in the Indian Parliament chose to enact laws and give certain rights to under-trial prisoners. The executive (including police) acting on majority will cannot take away those rights. For that, the majority has to act through its representatives in the Parliament and get the law amended. The Brexit judgement reiterates this fundamental principle of a representative democracy.