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Parliament's Winter Session
doesn't hold much promise
IBNLive,
November 29, 2011
A look at the United
Progressive Alliance (UPA) government’s legislative performance
over the last three parliamentary sessions explains why everyone
seems to be up in arms against the breakdown of decision-making
at the Centre.
The
2010 winter session was a complete washout as the UPA kept
blocking the Opposition’s demand for a Joint Parliamentary probe
of the 2G scam, eventually relenting just before the budget
session began. Consequently, 31 non-financial bills went into
the freezer. In the Monsoon session, the house passed only 11 of
the 37 legislations planned. As a result, the legislative
performance of this government in 2011 has sharply dipped in
comparison to 2009 and 2010.
The UPA is facing
flak from members of civil society as well as the business
community. The civil society, which wants a tough
anti-corruption law and social welfare legislations, accuses it
of trying to ring-fence growth at the cost of development.
Meanwhile, the business community is unhappy with the
government’s inertia in moving on critical policy issues that
affects investments.
But the situation
may not be as bleak as it is made out to be. “I would like to
draw a distinction between the government’s normal functioning
and its success in piloting legislation,” says Chakshu Roy of
PRS Legislative Research.
Roy says the day to
day functioning of the government has not slowed down. There is
a long list of draft bills in the public domain — a good pointer
that the bureaucracy is working. Recently, the government has
announced many policies in quick succession to counter the
perception of a paralysis in decision-making. These include the
new manufacturing policy, the public procurement policy and
deregulation of interest rates on savings bank accounts, among
others.
According to
Jaipur-based think-tank CUTS International’s deputy executive
director Bipul Chatterjee, the real worry is the lack of
political will to clinch issues. “There is a general lack of
co-ordination and leadership,” says Chatterjee. “Given the
current scenario, I don’t expect much from the winter session.”
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