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Growing IT Adoption to Improve Services and Cut Corruption in Pakistan

RiazHaq

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Haq's Musings: Pakistan Deploys Information Technology to Improve Services and Cut Corruption

IT projects ranging from automated meter reading and computerized land records management to online education and mobile banking are now at various stages of implementation across Pakistan. In a report released today, the World Bank calls these projects "unprecedented in the public sector in developing countries". The objective of thee efforts is to reduce corruption, increase productivity and improve service delivery in both private and public sectors. Here's a brief description of five key areas where information technology penetration is visible:


1. Automated Meter Reading:

Automatic Meter Reading (AMR) project has been rolled out across the country with the help of United States Agency for International Development (USAID). It is aimed at reducing power theft which accounts for 20-30% of all power generated in Pakistan. It will provide accurate electronic meter readings with little human intervention, using technology to transmit meter readings data via GSM/GPRS and Radio Frequency. It is expected to help power distribution companies (DISCOs) to monitor electricity consumption trends for different consumer categories, understand demand patterns, reduce electricity losses significantly and increase their revenues. Initial AMR pilots indicate significant reduction of power theft in Lahore.

In addition to automatic reading of consumer meters, smart meters have been installedwith the support of USAID on incoming and outgoing feeders at all nine government-owned electric utilities. These will help move toward building of a smart national grid to better manage power generation, transmission and distribution in the country.

2. Mobile Governance:

The Punjab government is deploying smartphone applications to crack down on absentee mobile government workers and their corrupt practices. As part of this project, the government employee must send his or her picture and a report of interaction with citizens along with GPS coordinates. For example, a agricultural pest control official required to visit farmers must file reports of his findings and actions in real time via a smartphone app.

An SMS soliciting feedback from citizens is sent out after each such visit or interaction. Responses from users are logged into a central database, and the data then analyzed and mapped. Call centers have also been trained to contact those who do not respond or are unable to read the text due to illiteracy.More than three million users of public services have so far been contacted since the summer of 2012, with both positive and negative feedback, according to the World Bank report. “Sir, we went to the hospital yesterday. They asked for 1500 rupees [in bribes]. We didn’t have the money so we left,” reads one of the reports about a hospital in Lahore, the provincial capital. The feedback is actively monitored by the office the Chief Secretary – the top civil servant in the province – to manage the performance of officials.

3. Computerized Land Records:

Provincial land departments in Pakistan regularly show up as the most corrupt in Transparency International surveys conducted every year. In fact, most Pakistanis refer to the culture of corruption in Pakistan as "patwari culture". For the uninitiated, a patwari is a low level official in the land department responsible for keeping land title records. Corrupt patwaris either deliberately misplace such records or delay issuing land title papers when citizens refuse to pay bribes. With digitization of such records, citizens will be able to check and confirm titles to lands on a computer screen by entering their computerized national identity card (CNIC) number. Corrupt patwaris are trying to undermine the computerization project.

4. Education and Training:

Pakistan has been at the forefront of using information technology to increase literacy and offer higher education. A pilot program in the country has demonstrated the effectiveness of pushing mass literacy through the use of cell phone text messaging capability.

A UNESCO has recently also started a post-literacy project in Pakistan based on mobile technology. The Mobile Based Post Literacy program is targeted at young rural women, aged between 15 and 25, by keeping them interested in literacy through the mobile phone.

The concept of virtual instruction is finding its way to K-12 education as well. Increasing number of Pakistanis are drawn to various online sites. Silicon Valley NEDians have launched Learntive, an effort to offer digitized lessons in high-school courses. Virtual Education for All is a local Pakistani initiative extending the concept to primary level.

Virtual University(VU) and Allama Iqbal Open University (AIOU) offer distance learning programs using information technology. Pakistan's Virtual University (VU) has won theOutstanding New Site Award 2012 for an Open CourseWare website which was created in 2011.

5. Mobile Banking:

Combination of growth of mobile phones and ease of mobile money transfers have enabled many Pakistanis to have access to financial services for the first time in their lives.

In a country where only 22% of the population owns bank accounts and more than 70% owns mobile phones, mobile banking is proving to be the fastest way to promote financial inclusion considered by experts to be essential to lift people out of poverty. Benefits include easy access for rural customers to banking services through agents in villages without bank branches, better documentation of the economy, enlarging of the tax-base and efficiency of economic transactions.

Summary:

Increasing use of computers and mobile phones is enabling broad adoption of information technology in Pakistan. It has the potential to increase transparency, enhance individual productivity and improve standards of living of ordinary citizens.

Haq's Musings: Pakistan Deploys Information Technology to Improve Services and Cut Corruption
 
IT, by itself, will do nothing to curb corruption. If anything, some crimes become easier with electronic transactions.
 
You've forgotten one of the most important aspects of computerization, and that is putting all tenders and contracts given above Rs 1 crore online. This will prevent corruption whilst dishing out contracts by the powers that be. Politician's cronies and their sons and daughters would then not be able to influence the process.
 
You've forgotten one of the most important aspects of computerization, and that is putting all tenders and contracts given above Rs 1 crore online. This will prevent corruption whilst dishing out contracts by the powers that be. Politician's cronies and their sons and daughters would then not be able to influence the process.

It's child's play to circumvent these safeguards.
Front companies, quid pro quo, etc. etc. etc.

Corruption is a refined art since the beginning of time. Computerization makes no difference.

Keep in mind, this is the same administration that openly declared to criminals that they have a free pass.

Money whitening: Nawaz unveils amnesty plan for industrialists – The Express Tribune
 
IT, by itself, will do nothing to curb corruption. If anything, some crimes become easier with electronic transactions.

There is no silver bullet.

But I expect these IT projects to reduce the most common form of widespread corruption by patwaris in land dept and force absentee field workers to do their job by going out and helping citizens.

These projects will also reduce the major problem of power theft which is crippling the economy by discouraging new investments.

Cynicism is not the answer to everything. We must applaud any steps in the right direction.
 
There is no silver bullet.

But I expect these IT projects to reduce the most common form of widespread corruption by patwaris in land dept and force absentee field workers to do their job by going out and helping citizens.

These projects will also reduce the major problem of power theft which is crippling the economy by discouraging new investments.

Cynicism is not the answer to everything. We must applaud any steps in the right direction.

Every electronic system has mechanisms to alter data -- simply because the humans operating them are fallible and need a way to correct mistakes.

The cause of corruption in Pakistan is not pen and paper; it is the utter lack of enforcement and accountability. That culture of nepotism and "connections" will not change just by replacing paper with a computer.

Without addressing the enforcement angle, it's a false sense of security to believe that computerization will solve corruption.
 
Lets just hope it sets a precedent for full spectrum E-Government. With mobile phone penetration pushing to a 100%, 4G network and ever cheaper and better mobile devices, its bound to improve efficiency.

For instance you'd have to pay baboo yaqoob 1000 rupees for drivers license renewal, because you don't want to stand in the line now you' can pay through your cell phone using bank debit card or easypaisa....baboo yaqoob and his contact in the licensing office bao hamid are now 'out of business'.
 
Adoption of IT will improve in reducing corruption. I see a brighter future for me in Pakistan.. :cheesy:
 
contact in the licensing office bao hamid are now 'out of business'.

bao hamid will simply raise his fees for clearing speeding fines or passing driving tests. Even legitimate driving tests will require "convincing" to pass.

Technology is merely a tool. If the will isn't there to enforce the law, criminals will simply find new ways to exploit, or work around, the technology. In the worst case, even if caught, contingency options will be in place to have the charges dropped and to get back to business.

The reason developed countries have less corruption has less to do with technology, and more with law enforcement and proper salaries for public workers.
 
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Every electronic system has mechanisms to alter data -- simply because the humans operating them are fallible and need a way to correct mistakes.

You can also build plenty of safeguards against human maliciousness. Every change to the system can be audited, a revision history can be maintained so alterations can be rolled back, data can be encrypted and spread across various servers to avoid data loss. IT security is currently the most active field in IT. This will force the enforcers to do their jobs as well - paper trails are easy to lose. Data will hold them accountable as they know it's not going to go away. They can be required to comments on case progress and reminders configured to keep them on their toes.

Like RiazHaq said, there's no silver bullet to corruption. The key is to make corruption more difficult and less cost-effective for criminals. While enforcement is crucial, IT solutions provides much needed tools for enforcers to do their jobs. A lot of cases are thrown out because of lack of evidence, that's where IT comes in. Proper implementation of IT solutions can provide some impressive results.
  1. You can build in algorithms to detect patterns that lead to criminal activity, banks do it for consumer banking security. A lot of modern large scale applications do it to protect malicious use of their client's accounts.
  2. Aggregate data and chart them into various metrics, it's much easier for people to detect anomalies visually. Right now, that data sits inside vast network of paper file cabinets uselessly.
  3. Maintain a blacklist of known criminals and their associates. If the name shows up on land records, forward to investigators. In paper format, this process would take weeks and most likely ignored.
Also, IT projects work best when they start small and gradually evolve in mature, stable, useful solutions. So in the long run, these are the kind of solutions that will provide useful information for policy makers.

Pakistan has a so many areas where automation can be successfully implemented, we just don't have the electricity to count on it.


Do this, give me a challenge - give me a few cases of corruption and I'll try to see if IT solutions could've helped.

Technology is merely a tool.

Merely a tool? You severely underestimate the importance of tools. Without tools, mankind will be back in caves.
 
enforcement is crucial

All of your points are valid, but negated by this simple acknowledgement.

Does anyone seriously believe that the endemic corruption within Pakistani society is due to lack of evidence to convict criminals? Everyone, from the high and mighty to the ordinary Joe on the street, has adapted their life around corruption. Despite the talk, most ordinary people use corruption. You pay to get your kid into a good school; you pay off the policeman, the passport clerk, the phone guy, the tax guy.

All the evidence in the world will be useless if there is no political will to seriously tackle corruption. The people of Pakistan made it crystal clear where corruption lies on their list of priorities by electing Nawaaz Sharif.

Merely a tool? You severely underestimate the importance of tools. Without tools, mankind will be back in caves.

Computers are a tool, just like handcuffs are a tool.

At the end of the day what matters is the people using that tool and how committed/honest they are to enforce laws.
 
http://pakrail.com/seatavailability.php

Pakistan Railways e-ticketing

PAKISTAN: An agreement for the roll-out of e-ticketing was signed by Pakistan Railways and United Bank Ltd on August 10.

Passengers will be able to pay for travel using credit or debit cards, and the UBL Omni mobile banking app. PR will then send an SMS e-ticket, containing the ticket number, train date and time, coach and seat number and the passenger’s national identity card number.

Railways Minister Khawaja Saad Rafiq said the agreement was the result of 1½ years of work, and he hoped it would help to stop the sale of tickets on the black market.

http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/.../pakistan-railways-e-ticketing-agreement.html
 
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