Political-Bureaucratic Nexus in Bihar: The Genesis of Corruption
Manuscript Title
Political-Bureaucratic Nexus in Bihar: The Genesis of Corruption
Narendra Kumar
Ph.D. Researcher, Public Administration, Veer Kunwar singh University Ara., Bihar.
Email- narendraacp86@gmail.com
Abstract
This article studies the political-bureaucratic nexus in Bihar as a historically embedded and institutionally reproduced cause of corruption. Corruption in Bihar cannot be understood merely in terms of individual illegal transactions. It emerges out of the interaction of political patronage, bureaucratic discretion, weak accountability, caste-discriminated access to state resources and differential implementation of administrative reforms. Using a doctrinal and analytical approach based on secondary data, the study draws on corruption theory, the Indian public administration literature, Bihar-specific governance scholarship, government reports, audit documents, legislation, and official websites. The article presents an analysis of the principal-agent theory, collective action theory, rent-seeking theory, patron-client theory and institutional theory to clarify why corruption exists irrespective of formal law. It subsequently follows colonial revenue administration’s historical origin of corruption on account of Bihar, the post-independence growth of development, land relations, welfare administration and the politicisation of postings. Major mechanisms analysed in the study are transfer-posting politics, public procurement, welfare scheme diversion, land-police-revenue administration and caste-based patronage network. The evaluation also looks into vigilance institutions, Lokayukta, Right to Public Services, grievance redressal, e-procurement and CAG audit in Bihar. Bihar’s corruption issues are structural rather than just behavioral, it concludes. The reforms entail following actions transparent transfer policy for officers; enactment of e-procurement; digitisation and verification of records; tougher vigilance and Lokaayukta laws; social audits; safeguards for honest and studious officers in public procurements; and transparency in political financing. To weaken a nexus that feeds corruption over the years, we need a citizen-centric, rule-based and accountable administrative state.
Keywords: Political-bureaucratic nexus; corruption; Bihar; public administration; governance; patronage politics; state capacity; bureaucratic accountability.