V Narayanasamy is an earnest man. The Minister of State looking after the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) shot off a note last week asking officials to fast-track a proposal to increase the mandatory 'cooling' period of bureaucrats from the existing one year to three years from the date of retirement.
Apparently, the minister is angry with the sharp increase in the number of ex-bureaucrats joining the private sector -- the entities they 'regulated' while in service -- almost immediately after their retirement.
This, the minister feels, is a blatant violation of the conflict of interest clause. The immediate trigger of Narayanasamy's action was the controversy regarding a former telecom regulator joining a high-flying corporate lobbyist firm that allegedly had a big role to play in the 2G scam controversy.
Narayanasamy's sincerity is not in doubt. But where the minister seems to have faltered is his almost-innocent belief that law can change men's minds.
There is already an elaborate rule that states that no bureaucrat can take up a 'commercial job' for one year from the date of his retirement. But the devil lied in the details -- as with all government rules.
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