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Regulating Lobbying

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June 16, 2018

What is the issue?

  • Recently, the CBI alleged that AirAsia tried to influence India’s international flying regulations through lobbyists.
  • It is imperative to look at the varied issues in relation with the reality of lobbying.

What is lobbying?

  • Lobbying refers to the practice of influencing the policy decisions of the government.
  • It refers to the business classes' efforts to shape the policies to suit its needs.
  • The decisions may be benign such as urging subsidies for electric vehicles.
  • It could also be harmful like relaxing environment norms for coal-mining or having an impact on the national interest.
  • Lobbying is an inescapable characteristic of any economy with a vibrant business ecosystem.
  • This is particularly prominent in systems that function in a democratic polity.

How is lobbying in India?

  • The secretive habits of the licence raj still linger in terms of opacity in policy-making.
  • Amidst this, lobbying remains a grey area, which is neither recognised nor regulated.
  • Yet, the irony is that governments are subject to lobbying for sure.
  • There is absence of a specific statute or even “guideline” in this regard.
  • This is making way for a range of illegal activities which are hard to detect or control.

How have governments handled this?

  • Successive Indian governments have had middlemen in the defence business.
  • The Bofors scandal of the mid-1980s resulted in a blanket ban on middlemen for defence purchases.
  • However, middlemen still perform a service worldwide.
  • They enable the governments to evaluate a range of choices and negotiate optimum deals.
  • In 2014, the present government allowed middlemen back.
  • But it was cautious with their re-entry, by specifying various conditions.
  • These included delinking their commissions to the outcome of the negotiations.

How is it in other countries?

  • In the US and some western European jurisdictions, lobbying is subject to disclosure statutes.
  • They make it mandatory to register, declare their client lists, activities, fees and itemise expenditure.
  • These disclosure laws do not eliminate corruption.
  • However, they allow for a considerable level of transparency.
  • They make it possible for journalists and the general public to access information.
  • It provides on which lobbyists had been paid, by whom and for what cause.
  • It also allows tracking the outcome in terms of policy-making.
  • Evidently, many cases of corruption come to light simply by accessing public records.

What is the way forward?

  • India could consider emulating the best practices in other parts of the world.
  • This would work better, as against unrealistic restrictions on politicians and bureaucrats under Prevention of Corruption Act.
  • A clear lobbying law would introduce transparency at the intersection of business and politics.

 

Source: Business Standard

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