What is the issue?
Social audits can potentially become a powerful democratic tool to ensure a citizen-centric mode of accountability.
What is social audit?
- Social audit is where information is to be proactively shared amongst people.
- They can, in turn, “performance audit” a service or programme.
- It involves people in planning, implementation and evaluation phases.
- Sharing information, recording comments and acting on findings are the processes involved.
What is the current need?
- The breakdown of credibility in various public institutions in the recent past has become a concern.
- This has highlighted that democracy and especially public funds need eternal public vigilance.
- Democratic governance needs the citizen to be legally empowered.
- The Citizen should be able to ask questions, file complaints, and be a part of the corrective process.
- Social audit could be a solution towards this end.
How is Rajasthan's Jan Sunwai a model?
- It was conceptualised in the mid-1990s by the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan (MKSS).
- Jan Sunwais are village-based public hearings on development expenditure.
- The Jan Sunwai campaign was organised in 5 different development blocks of central Rajasthan.
- It helped establish the Right to Information (RTI) as a potent, usable people’s issue.
- Public readings of informally accessed development records had dramatic outcomes.
- Information - The Jan Sunwai facilitated the reading of information and recorded the people’s response.
- Information and facts inconsistent with reality were exposed.
- E.g. Information about payments made to dead people and non-workers
- Unfinished buildings without doors, windows or a roof were shown as audited and ‘complete’.
- Local residents could immediately become aware of these and reacted to it sharply.
What was the outcome?
- The people made four sharply focussed demands and circulated them in a pamphlet:
- full and open access to records of development expenditure
- presence and accountability of officials who are responsible to answer people’s questions
- immediate redress of grievances, including the return of misused money to its intended purpose
- mandatory ‘social audits’
- The effective institutionalisation of this platform gave people and communities real monitoring powers.
What is the concern?
- The RTI Act brought into effect the first prerequisite for social audits.
- Thus, information became the core of people's empowerment in Jan Sunwais.
- However, it became obvious that information itself is not enough.
- It gave access to government records and ordinary people were armed with information.
- But it led to frustration when they were unable to obtain any redress.
How do social audits address this?
- Social audits facilitate acting upon the inconsistent facts.
- It transfers the power of scrutiny and validation to the people.
- It thus essentially facilitates a citizen-centric mode of accountability.
- By this, transparency can be combined with an institutionalised form of accountability to the people.
- It shifts the relationship between the powerful and the powerless from patronage to rights.
What are the legal backings to social audit?
- Nationally, institutionalised social audits have begun to make real progress only recently.
- MGNREGA was the first law to mandate social audit as a statutory requirement.
- In 2017, Meghalaya became the first State to pass and roll out a social audit law to cover all departments.
- CAG - The Office of the CAG developed social audit rules for the MGNREGA in 2011.
- It conducted a performance audit in 2015.
- A year later, it formulated social audit standards in consultation with the Ministry of Rural Development.
- The standards could ensure that the social audit process is viable, credible and true to first principles of social accountability.
- Supreme Court - The SC has recently passed a series of orders, giving social audits the infrastructural framework they need.
- It has ordered that the CAG-formulated Social Audit Standards be applied.
- Accordingly, it ordered setting up truly independent state-supported State Social Audit units.
- It has also ordered that social audits be conducted of Building and other Construction Workers Cess.
- It is also required for the implementation of the Juvenile Justice Act.
What lies ahead?
- Despite the above, there has been no delivery on legal accountability frameworks.
- These include the Lokpal Bill and the Whistle Blowers Protection Bill.
- The system of social audits needs an endorsement and a push by multiple authorities.
- This is essential to establish an institutionalised framework which cannot be undermined by any vested interests.
Source: The Hindu