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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, September 05, 2001 |
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Quotas as incentives
THE TWO RECENT rulings by the Supreme Court (S.C.) in the matter
of admissions to post-graduate medical courses serve as timely
reminders on establishing norms and special procedures that must
govern selection criteria. When it upheld the Rajasthan
Government's decision to increase the percentage of seats
reserved for Government doctors to post-graduate courses, the
S.C. merely reinforced the rationale behind the time-tested
scheme of offering incentives for enrolment in Government
service, namely, the promotion of the public interest that such a
measure would serve. Alternatively, in quashing the scheme of
reservations to post-graduate courses in the All India Institute
of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) for its former students, the apex
court underscored the necessity to adhere to the elementary
principle of fair play in admission procedures. That an
institution's policy aimed to preferentially treat its alumni
without regard to merit is a gross violation of the norms of fair
competition hardly needs emphasis. The anomaly is all the more
glaring considering that the AIIMS is one of the premier medical
institutions in the country with a national representation.
Turning to the larger question of quotas for in-service
candidates, this was created as an incentive to retain young
medical graduates in Government service. Accordingly, practising
doctors who enrolled for post-graduation through such a quota
were expected to serve in Government hospitals for a period of
about five years subsequent to the completion of the degree. The
disrepute that the service quota system has fallen into is
clearly on account of the failure of the state to enforce
relevant rules. Perhaps non-enforceability was built into the
terms of the contract, since its premature termination through
devious means always remained a possibility once the candidate
obtained the degree. In that case, the current policy should be
revised so as to commit young doctors first to a minimum period
of service in the Government as a prerequisite to securing a seat
for post-graduation under this quota.
The need to attract fresh graduates to serve in state-run
hospitals can hardly be over-emphasised in the current climate of
rapid privatisation of health services. The fact that the
philosophy that underlay the scheme of incentives which came into
vogue a few decades back runs counter to the rationale that
informs cuts in health expenditure by the state is of course a
separate matter. But to the extent that the state will continue
to remain a key player in the health care delivery system, the
quality of service conditions in Government hospitals would have
to be addressed on a priority basis. For only these are the
avenues open to those imbued with hope and idealism to renew the
Nehruvian pledge to redeem the teeming millions of India from
disease. Moreover, a recognition of the imperative to gear up the
public health care machinery would further lend credence to the
fundamental case for liberalisation, i.e., to retain core
services in basic health and education as a responsibility of the
state, while allowing the market to step into other arenas. On
the practical side, rules and regulations that have room for
abuse built into them should not be allowed to jeopardise sound
principles premised upon loftier objectives. For, the need for
qualified professionals in remote regions cannot be wished away
simply because doctors do not feel inclined to rough it out.
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