Article on Citizens Charter Bill

Bharat Choudhary Reply 11:30 AM

The Right of Citizens for Time Bound Delivery of Goods and Services and Redressal of their Grievances Bill, 2011” is a step forward towards good governance. The salient features of the Bill are:

Right to Citizens

  • It confers right on every individual citizen to time bound delivery of goods and provision for services and Redressal of grievances.

Publication of Citizens Charter

·         It requires every public authority to publish, within six months of the commencement of the proposed legislation, aCitizens Charter specifying therein the category of goods supplied and services rendered by it, the time within which such goods shall be supplied or services be rendered the name and addresses of individuals responsible as designated officers for the delivery of goods or rendering of services.
Information and Facilitation Centre
·         It requires every Public Authority to establish information and facilitation centre for efficient and effective delivery of services and redressal of grievances.
Grievance Redress Officer
  • It requires every public authority to designate Grievance Redress Officers in all public authorities of the Central, State, district and sub-district levels, municipalities, Panchayats etc. to enquire into and redress any complaints from citizens in a timeframe not exceeding thirty days from the date of receipt of the complaint.
Designated Authority
  • It provides that any individual aggrieved by a decision of the concerned Grievance Redress Officer may, within thirty days, prefer an appeal to the Designated Authority who shall dispose of such appeal within thirty days from the date of receipt of such appeal.  The Designated Authority shall be from outside the concerned public authority.
State/Central Public Grievance Redressal Commission
  • It provides for constitution of the State Public Grievance Redressal Commission and the Central Public Grievance RedressalCommission consisting of Chief Commissioners and other Commissioners. 
  • It also provides that any person aggrieved by the decision of the Designated Authority falling under the jurisdiction of the State Government may prefer an appeal to the State Public Grievance Redressal Commission and any person aggrieved by the decision of the Designated Authority falling under the jurisdiction of the Central Government may prefer an appeal to the Central Public Grievance Redressal Commission.

Penalty and compensation

  • It confers power upon the Designated Authority, the State Public Grievance Redressal Commission and the Central Public Grievance Redressal Commission to impose a lump-sum penalty, including compensation to the complainant, against designated official responsible for delivery of goods and services or Grievance Redress Officer for their failure to deliver goods or render services to which the applicant is entitled, which may extend upto fifty thousand rupees which shall be recovered from the salary of the official against whom penalty has been imposed.
  • It also provides that on the imposition of the penalty, the appellate authority may, by order, direct that such portion of the penalty imposed under the proposed legislation shall be awarded to the appellant, as compensation, not exceeding the amount of penalty imposed, as it may deem fit.

Disciplinary action against erring officials

  • It provides that if any public servant is found guilty of offence, the disciplinary authority shall initiate  disciplinaryproceedings against such officer of the public authority, who if proved to be guilty of a mala fide action in respect of any provision of this Act, shall be liable to such punishment including a penalty as the disciplinary authority may decide.

Action against corrupt practices

  • It provides that where it appears to the Designated Authority or the State Public Grievance Redressal Commission or  theCentral Public Grievance Redressal Commission that the grievance complained of is prima facie indicative of a corrupt act or practice in terms of the Prevention of Corruption Act 1988, on the part of the responsible officer of the public authority complained against then it shall record such evidence as may be found in support of such conclusion and shall refer the same to the appropriate authorities competent to take cognizance of such corrupt practice.

Appeal to Lokpal/Lokayukta

  • It provides that any person aggrieved by the decision of the Central Public Grievance Redressal Commission or  the State Public Grievance Redressal Commission, which contains the findings relating to corruption under Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, may prefer an appeal to the Lok Pal or Lokayukta, constituted under the Lokpal and Lokayukta Act, 2011. (PIB)
*Inputs from Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances & Pensions, Department of  Administrative Reforms & Public Grievances
 

Article on External Debt: Definitions and Concepts

Bharat Choudhary Reply 11:28 AM
Shamima Siddique, Director (Media & Communication)  

External Debt

·         Gross external debt, at a point in time, is defined as “the outstanding amount of those actual current, and not contingent, liabilities that require payment(s) of principal and/or interest by the debtor at some point(s) in the future and that are owed to non-residents by residents of an economy” (External Debt Statistics -Guide for Compilers and Users, International Monetary Fund (IMF), 2003).

Original and Residual Maturity
                         
·         Original maturity is defined as the period encompassing the precise time of creation of the financial liability to its date of final maturity.
·          Debt by residual maturity (or remaining maturity) includes short term debt by original maturity of up to one year, combined with medium to long term debt repayment by original maturity falling due within the twelve month period following a reference date. External debt is commonly expressed in terms of original maturity.

 Long and Short-term

·         One way of classifying external debt is into long and short-term. Long term debt is defined as debt with an original maturity of more than one year, while short term debt is defined as debt repayments on demand or with an original maturity of one year or less.
·         The coverage of short-term was redefined from 2005-06 by including supplier’s credit upto 180 days and FII investment in the Government Treasury Bills and other instruments and further in March 2007 by including external debt liabilities of the banking system and the investment in the Government securities by the foreign central banks and the international institutions.
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