what i can do for corruption free india
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my thoughts on corruption.
Disclaimer:- I do not endorse or encourage corruption and certainly a corruption free country would be good but everything is not a piece of cake.
So, lets take a scenario that you are waiting for an ice-cream in a really long queue on a hot summer day, just then you think about skipping the queue and paying a bit more extra to the ice-cream seller and get your ice-cream instantly! That certainly is a great prospect for you provided you have that extra money,isn't it?
U are now corrupt! Corruption is greatly the result of immense competition(long queue), insecurity(enough ice-cream left?), external factors (too hot day to wait on queue), comfort-level, and many other things.
Apply this on a larger scale and you get what is called as corruption. Simply put corruption is the desperate measure taken for self survival and many a times profit.
Like in example no country can be corruption free as the laws and the government policies will not be accepted or beneficial for the whole of the country's diaspora.
But to minimize corruption and its adverse effects amplified on the society :
Middlemen must be removed or should be compensated adequately
Human resource development must be taken seriously
Bureaucracy must be minimized
Adequate supply of goods or services to reduce competition and in turn corruption
increase in salary of government employees,teachers and other service men alike
Disclaimer:- I do not endorse or encourage corruption and certainly a corruption free country would be good but everything is not a piece of cake.
So, lets take a scenario that you are waiting for an ice-cream in a really long queue on a hot summer day, just then you think about skipping the queue and paying a bit more extra to the ice-cream seller and get your ice-cream instantly! That certainly is a great prospect for you provided you have that extra money,isn't it?
U are now corrupt! Corruption is greatly the result of immense competition(long queue), insecurity(enough ice-cream left?), external factors (too hot day to wait on queue), comfort-level, and many other things.
Apply this on a larger scale and you get what is called as corruption. Simply put corruption is the desperate measure taken for self survival and many a times profit.
Like in example no country can be corruption free as the laws and the government policies will not be accepted or beneficial for the whole of the country's diaspora.
But to minimize corruption and its adverse effects amplified on the society :
Middlemen must be removed or should be compensated adequately
Human resource development must be taken seriously
Bureaucracy must be minimized
Adequate supply of goods or services to reduce competition and in turn corruption
increase in salary of government employees,teachers and other service men alike
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was in the month of August in the year 1942 that the “Quit India” slogan was chanted by the nation asking the British to leave India. The slogan had charged the entire country and five years later the British actually quit India. It is in the same month of August some 70 years later that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has given a clarion call to rid India of corruption and other vices that still continue to plague it. What is important is that corruption is persisting since the British days. No wonder the first Prime Minister of India had emphatically said that the corrupt would be hanged by the nearest lamppost. That was more than half a century ago and Jawaharlal Nehru was talking about hoarders, profiteers and black marketers making a fast buck and holding the poor to ransom.
That it remained just a cliché can hardly be doubted as global rating agencies continue to rate India as among the most corrupt countries in the world. It was this prevalent corruption that made the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India make a historic observation around a decade ago that everyone wants to loot the country and the only way to rid the country of the corrupt is to “hang a few” of them by the nearest lamppost. With the number of such people rising in geometric progression, we will certainly run short of those lampposts if hanging them was exercised as an option. That notwithstanding, the fact remains that the corruption is rising and the corrupt are thriving despite Prime Ministers expressing their concern time and again. The irony is that corruption has consumed Government after Government, but the phenomenon continues to exist. The 1974 Jayaprakash Narayan movement was against corruption epitomised by the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi-led Government.
The VP Singh Government came on high moral grounds challenging corruption at high places. The then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi himself talked about corruption eating at the foundation of the country as he called the Congress the party of power brokers and was anguished at the “fence eating the crop”. Successive Governments fell prey to corruption, including the last one. But corruption did not end, making the present Prime Minister give a call to end corruption. Why is it so? And is there a way out? We need to look for answers beyond changing Governments. When corruption charges were levelled against Indira Gandhi, she put up a brave front saying corruption is a global phenomenon.
That her party was wiped out from almost entire North India was just a cosmetic change if what followed her fall is analysed. A frustrated electorate brought her back. Corruption may or may not be a global phenomenon, but it certainly is a human phenomenon. The answer then must come from the people. They must change. The post-modern India is too materialistic and self-centred to ponder over corruption. Everyone wants to make a fast buck. And with minimum efforts. Some make money in the process and most lose out for their lust and greed. Sensitising people against corruption needs to be looked into. People don’t look down on corruption because they have accepted it as a way of life. Honesty is treated as outdated and not in tune with times. We need to make honesty as the new fashion and the scenario will change.
That it remained just a cliché can hardly be doubted as global rating agencies continue to rate India as among the most corrupt countries in the world. It was this prevalent corruption that made the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India make a historic observation around a decade ago that everyone wants to loot the country and the only way to rid the country of the corrupt is to “hang a few” of them by the nearest lamppost. With the number of such people rising in geometric progression, we will certainly run short of those lampposts if hanging them was exercised as an option. That notwithstanding, the fact remains that the corruption is rising and the corrupt are thriving despite Prime Ministers expressing their concern time and again. The irony is that corruption has consumed Government after Government, but the phenomenon continues to exist. The 1974 Jayaprakash Narayan movement was against corruption epitomised by the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi-led Government.
The VP Singh Government came on high moral grounds challenging corruption at high places. The then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi himself talked about corruption eating at the foundation of the country as he called the Congress the party of power brokers and was anguished at the “fence eating the crop”. Successive Governments fell prey to corruption, including the last one. But corruption did not end, making the present Prime Minister give a call to end corruption. Why is it so? And is there a way out? We need to look for answers beyond changing Governments. When corruption charges were levelled against Indira Gandhi, she put up a brave front saying corruption is a global phenomenon.
That her party was wiped out from almost entire North India was just a cosmetic change if what followed her fall is analysed. A frustrated electorate brought her back. Corruption may or may not be a global phenomenon, but it certainly is a human phenomenon. The answer then must come from the people. They must change. The post-modern India is too materialistic and self-centred to ponder over corruption. Everyone wants to make a fast buck. And with minimum efforts. Some make money in the process and most lose out for their lust and greed. Sensitising people against corruption needs to be looked into. People don’t look down on corruption because they have accepted it as a way of life. Honesty is treated as outdated and not in tune with times. We need to make honesty as the new fashion and the scenario will change.
patel16:
please mark as brainy answer
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