Adam Jacobson had mentioned an interesting article
available on the Web to Tanjam Jacobson who kindly sent me an email about it.
It is a six-year old article. A search indicates that it has been widely read
and discussed in many countries starting in 2011. However, I am sure that the
paper would remain relevant to India till at least the year 5,000 A. D! The
article is:
Why,
for a Class of Bribes, the Act of Giving a Bribe should be Treated as Legal,
Kaushik Basu, March 2011, Chief Economic Adviser, Ministry of Finance,
Government of India, New Delhi – 1
http://www.kaushikbasu.org/Act_Giving_Bribe_Legal.pdf
Kaushik Basu, March 2011, Chief Economic Adviser, Ministry of Finance,
Government of India, New Delhi – 1
http://www.kaushikbasu.org/Act_Giving_Bribe_Legal.pdf
It is interesting to go to Basu’s website http://www.kaushikbasu.org and read more about him and
his other interests.
Now back to Basu’ proposal on the act of giving a bribe –
he suggests that if the bribe is given under fear of harassment by a public
servant, the giver should not be subject to criminal liability. Decriminalizing
the act of giving a bribe would encourage the giver to complain about, or
testify to, the bribe-taker’s crime of demanding and receiving it. Further,
says Basu, we should return to the bribe-giver the bribe amount recovered from
the bribe-taker.
Basu quotes from Kautilya’s Arthashastra: “Just as it is
impossible to know when a fish moving in water is drinking it, so it is
impossible to find out when government servants in charge of undertakings
misappropriate money”. I would suggest that it is equally difficult to separate
ill-gotten wealth of a “neta” from the black money raised for his/her party!
Basu recognizes that his proposal, if implemented, could
make public servants vulnerable to blackmail and false charges of bribe-taking.
His suggestion for preventing this is to increase the punishment for blackmail
and false accusation.
Let me now share my thoughts about Basu’s proposal. In
the first place, the proposal ought to be implemented; there is no doubt about
that. However, that may not be enough. A lot more would need to be done. Let me
mention a couple of issues that would need to be considered.
One problem is that legal solutions to Indian problems
get buried under pending cases. Read the article titled Twenty-three
years after accepting a bribe
Wealthy criminals hire lawyers who exploit every weakness in the legal system to get the final decision delayed by a few decades. During this time, the problem gets solved for the accused as witnesses die, or undergo a miraculous change of mind. In some cases, the accused themselves die of old age before all possibility of appeals and adjournments is exhausted. I wonder if the Indian judicial system would have been better if no possibility of appeal had existed for the cop in the news item mentioned above. He would have gone on to serve one year in jail and could have lived the rest of his life, hopefully, in some sensible manner.
Wealthy criminals hire lawyers who exploit every weakness in the legal system to get the final decision delayed by a few decades. During this time, the problem gets solved for the accused as witnesses die, or undergo a miraculous change of mind. In some cases, the accused themselves die of old age before all possibility of appeals and adjournments is exhausted. I wonder if the Indian judicial system would have been better if no possibility of appeal had existed for the cop in the news item mentioned above. He would have gone on to serve one year in jail and could have lived the rest of his life, hopefully, in some sensible manner.
There is another problem – proportionality of punishment.
Times of India had reported a case in which a constable was dismissed from
service for receiving Rs 100 from a passenger at the Indira Gandhi Airport in
New Delhi:
HC relief for constable sacked over graft charges (The
Times of India, New Delhi Edition, 31 Jan 2010, Abhinav Garg, Abhinav.Garg@times-group.com).
Visit http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/delhi/HC-relief-for-constable-sacked-over-graft-charges/articleshow/5518515.cms
The constable’s appeal was heard fifteen years after the
conviction. In comparison, consider a public servant elected or otherwise, against
whom a five Crore bribery charge is proved. The bribe taker would have surely
caused a loss to the public exchequer worth many times the bribe amount. What
is loss involved? Can we measure it in terms of lives that could have been
saved with it? Prof Robert Black at Johns Hopkins has calculated the cost
of saving a life. You can read the news report on his work
and calculate for yourself how many lives we can save in India with Rs 5
Crores. My estimate is that we can save at least 5,000 lives. What is the
punishment for gobbling up that much, or more, of public wealth! The Prevention
of Corruption Act provides that the offence be punishable with “imprisonment
for a term which shall be not less than six months but which may extend to five
years and shall also be liable to fine”. Note that the law does not
specify rigorous imprisonment.
I would vote for the punishment to be enhanced to a life
imprisonment at least, without any possibility of remission or parole, if the
bribes taken add up to Rs five Crores or more.
Justice is always implemented with human decisions. It
cannot be 100% satisfactory in all cases. We make practical compromises in
framing the law, to minimize unfairness. However, the question is who the
compromises benefit? Who are left in the lurch? I feel that legislation that
simplifies the system and speeds up justice would do more good than harm.