Second
dimension of our Earned behaviour is Kin
selection. It refers to our preferences for own kin, which may be
biological in nature (like his or her offspring, near and dears or blood
relatives). However, it may also include people from own community, tribe or
any other socially recognized identity such as caste. As a
public servant, he may be inclined to shower benefits to his own kin and treat
him as ‘more equal’ than others. Sociologists call this behaviour pattern as Nepotism and are considered as another
form of corruption and so is punishable.
This
kind of Nepotic behaviour is widely prevalent in almost all societies, both
visible and invisible manner. Some of its manifestations are neither illegal
nor prohibited by law but is considered as immoral and tasteless. For example,
a father-political leader makes his son as ‘inheritor’ of his political career
or film star father facilitates entry of his son in to acting. However, some of
its manifestations are plainly illegal (like recruiting own son in government service
or giving government contract to own men etc).
Kin
selection happens because people would like to see themselves as ‘helping’
their own people. These acts are considered as a social virtue and so have a
moral sanction. Recall how people despise men who did not do ‘anything for our
own people’ despite being able to do so and how he ‘forgot’ his own men. People
like to see their ‘own’ men in positions of authority so that he can get the
‘things done’. They refuse to trust ‘others’ and expect him to be sympathetic to his own men rather than being an impartial administrator.
In a
way, kin selection is a kind of Nepotic altruism. This is because; being Nepotic, is reciprocal
in the sense that he is favoring a man of his own kin because he finds that
the same altruism will be reciprocated in one way or other. This is also
because, to reciprocate his altruistic behaviour, he needs some identifiable
signals and hence kinship forms a signalling mechanism.
Both
these earned behaviours, ie Reciprocal altruism and Kin selection, are hard
wired in to human brain since time immemorial and was believed to be one of the prime reason
for the physical survival of our Hunter gatherer forefathers. Only those men
and women who could exhibit these behaviours were able to pass their gene to
their next generation so these behaviours persisted over thousands of
generations.
Men
seek reciprocity because human beings are motivated by self interest (which is
not same as selfish interest). A deeper understanding of self interest and
hidden motivations will help us to tailor an incentive structure that focuses
on intrinsic rewards and discourages illegal ones. In order to reduce, if
not eliminate, corruption from public life, we have to understand the true
nature and implication of this pre-modern behaviour pattern of human race.
Based on insights from this understanding, following policy measures can be
adopted in order to have more probity in public services.
a)
Introduce markets wherever feasible. We have
seen how corruption got completely eliminated in Telephone allocation and
Airline ticket booking. This is because, people stopped viewing these transactions
as ‘altruistic’ and realized that they are market transactions and gets
incentivised as such.
b)
Reducing discretions and rent seeking powers
will help public authorities to see their acts not as an act of altruism but as
a part of their ‘job’ for which they are paid for. For this to happen, rules and
procedures may have to re-engineered and effective monitoring and supervision
have to be instituted.
c)
Beneficiaries should not be made to physically
present in the vicinity of public servant and all their communications should
be in faceless manner. In other words, public servant should work behind a
‘veil of ignorance’. This will help public servant to see his acts as not as
‘altruistic’ but as part of his job for which he gets remuneration.
But
much of the policy making aspects of governance cannot be fitted in to these categories. A public servant has to take discretionary
decisions, have to meet individuals and groups who may be benefited (or
adversely affected ) by his action. Most
of the functions of the government are of the nature of ‘market failures’ and
hence can’t be replaced with market forces. So how to go about under these circumstances?
Bribery
as an extrinsic ‘reward’ is sought mainly because intrinsic reward mechanisms
have either failed or proved inadequate. Without fixing this failure, any move
towards curbing corruption would be ineffective. Our excessive focus on disincentives and
negative rewards like anti corruption watchdogs, punishment mechanisms etc are
of limited impact. Primary focus of our anti corruption efforts should be on
how we can institute an intrinsic reward mechanism which will obviate any
temptation for seeking any extrinsic rewards. Public servants in least corrupt
countries are motivated by the intrinsic rewards and recognition. These
intrinsic rewards make them non- reciprocal altruists. On the other hand,
officers in a highly corrupt country will be satisfied mostly by rewards in
tangible forms and are not ready to be altruistic without any reciprocal (tangible)
benefits.
In
conclusion, I would like to summarize my argument like this. Our earned
behaviours don’t make us honest to the extent we wish to see us in a modern
civil society. It is our learned behaviours that help us make honest public
life and efficient functioning of civil society possible. Societies differ mainly
because they differ the in way which they learn new behaviours and attitudes.
Key to eliminate corruption in public life lies in understanding the true
nature and implications of our earned behaviour and understand the way in which
this behaviour pattern can be changed by introducing learned behaviours on the
top of it.
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