A Study On The Civil Service Structure Civil Servants Training and An Overview of National Commission of Government Reforms in Pakistan
A Study On The Civil Service Structure Civil Servants Training and An Overview of National Commission of Government Reforms in Pakistan
fur Internationale
Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH
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A Study on the Civil Service Structure, Civil Servants
Training and an Overview of National Commission of
Government Reforms in Pakistan
Imprint
As a federal enterprise, GIZ supports the German Government
in achieving its objectives in the feld of international cooperation
for sustainable development.
Published by:
Support to Good Governance in Pakistan Programme
funded by the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)
and implemented through Deutsche Gesellschaft fr Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH
Support to Good Governance in Pakistan Programme
Administrative Reform Component
6-D (4), Park Avenue Road, University Town, Peshawar, Pakistan
T (+92 91) 585 2532, 584 2585, 584 2586
F (+92 91) 585 2531
I www.giz.de
Responsible:
Catherine Isabel Froehling, Head of Governance Programme
Dr. Detlef Barth, Principal Advisor, Administrative Reform Component
Author:
Shakeel Ahmed Imtiaz, Advisor Local Civil Service and Training, Administrative Reform Component
Layout:
Suleman Printers
Place and date of publication:
Peshawar, April 2013
The Deutsche Gesellschaft fr Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) was formed on 1 January 2011. It brings
together the long-standing expertise of DED, GTZ and InWEnt. For further information, go to www.giz.de.
All rights are reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced by any means without written permission
from GIZ. Reproduction for non-commercial purposes is permitted provided the source is named.
Preface
GIZ Governance Programme was launched in
Pakistan to lay and strengthen the foundations for
just, fair and equitable governance at the national
and sub-national levels in Pakistan. The GIZ
Governance Programme has three Components,
namely, Administrative Reform, Tax Reform and
Prevention of Violence Against Women.
The Local Government Elections and Rural
Development Department (LGE&RDD),
Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is the key
implementing partner of the Administrative Reform
Component. GIZ is supporting Local Council
Board of LGE&RDD in shaping local civil service,
particularly designing its structure, mode of operation
and strategic orientation and strengthening a training
system for lower cadres of civil service (including
Local Governance School) for LGE&RDD.
A competent, effective and neutral civil service is
the backbone of any countrys governance structure.
Countries that do not have an organized civil service
system are at a relative disadvantage in executing their
programs and policies.
Civil service refers to the body of government
offcials who are employed in civil occupations that
are neither political nor judicial. A well-functioning
civil service helps to foster good policymaking,
effective service delivery, accountability and
responsibility in utilizing public resources which
are the characteristics of good governance. The
importance of the civil service to governance stems
from the service presence throughout the country
and its strong binding character, administrative
and managerial capacity of the services, effective
policy-making and regulation, effective coordination
between institutions of governance, leadership at
different levels of administration, service delivery
at the cutting edge level and provide continuity and
change to the administration. The civil service, as the
primary arm of government, must keep pace with the
changing times in order to meet the aspirations of
the people.
The study on the civil service structure, civil servants
training and an overview of the National Commission
of Government Reforms in Pakistan provides
detailed information on structure of the Pakistans
civil bureaucracy, identifes overall training framework
in Pakistan at the federal, provincial and local levels
and examines succinctly, the civil service reforms
as recommended by the National Commission of
government reforms (NCGR) in 2008. The study
particularly examines the different tiers of the civil
service in Pakistan and had identifed various lacunas
in the implementation of the trainings of civil
servants of Pakistan. It is also heartening to see who
manages trainings at the federal, provincial and local
levels and how the training and development of the
civil servants could be improved.
Based on his International and National experiences,
Mr. Shakeel Imtiaz, Advisor Local Civil Service &
Training, Administrative Reform Component of
the GIZ Governance Programme has prepared this
very useful and comprehensive study for the Local
Government Elections and Rural Development
Department (LGE&RDD), in particular, and for
a broader audience in general to have a better
understanding of the civil service structure and civil
service trainings at the federal, provincial and local
levels. Im very much confdent and hopeful that
the LGE&RDD, GIZ and particularly the Local
Governance School (LGS) management and potential
trainees of the LGS will beneft from this study.
Dr. Detlef Barth
Principal Advisor
Administrative Reform Component
Governance Programme, Pakistan.
i
Executive Summary
A study on the civil service structure, civil servants
training and an overview of national commission of
government reforms in Pakistan provides succinct
information on civil service in Pakistan, overall
training framework at federal, provincial and local
levels and examines the national commission for
government reforms (NCGR) report on reforming
the government in Pakistan.
The frst chapter scrutinizes the structure of the
Pakistans civil bureaucracy at the federal, provincial
and local levels. The study shows that the existing
structure of the civil servants in Pakistan allows
posting of personnel from a variety of services and
departmental cadres of the federal as well as provincial
governments. Consequently, personnel from a variety
of services and cadres, such as All- Pakistan Unifed
Grades (APUG), Federal Unifed Grades (FUG),
Provincial Civil Service (PCS), Provincial Local
Councils Service (LCS) and departmental cadres of
the Provincial Government are found right down to
the local government offces. These are, in addition,
to the Servants of the Local Councils (SOLC), who
are the direct employees of the local governments.
The basis for establishment of various civil services
at the federal and provincial levels has been provided
in Article 240 of the Constitution of Islamic Republic
of Pakistan, 1973. Civil Servants Act, 1973 and the
Rules made there under provide the legal basis for
regulating the appointment to, and the terms and
conditions of an All Pakistan Service or a civil service
of the Federation or a post in connection with the
affairs of the Federation. It applies to all Civil servants
of the Federation wherever they may be, in federal
government, provincial government, local authority, a
corporation or a local body. The study highlights the
transaction of the business at the federal level and also
mentions federal and provincial secretariats. At the
provincial level, the study examines situation before
Local Government Ordinance (LGO) 2001, the LGO
2001 implications and changes brought about by the
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Local Government Act 2012.
A particular emphasis has also been placed on the
Local Government Elections and Rural Development
Department and the Local Council Board in Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa.
The second chapter on the training of civil
servants in Pakistan is aimed at providing a general
understanding on the overall training framework at
the federal, provincial and local levels. There are 24
training institutions under the various ministries that
impart trainings to the civil servants of Pakistan. At
the Provincial levels, departments have their own
trainings institutes such as health department has
Health Services Academy etc. At the local level, all
the provinces of Pakistan have local government
training institutes namely, Punjab Local Government
Academy Lalamusa, Balochistan rural development
Academy, Sindh local government and rural
development academy, Pakistan Academy for Rural
Development, Peshawar and National Centre for
Rural Development in Islamabad. The study also
throws some light on the selective training institutes
in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, for example,
Local Governance School of the Local Government
Elections and Rural Development Department,
Provincial Institute of Teacher Education (PITE),
Provincial Health Services Academy, the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Judicial Academy, Government of
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa etc. The study provides
common courses in all training programmes and also
identifes certain gaps in trainings in the training and
development of the civil servants of Pakistan. Finally,
the study mentions practical recommendations for
improving overall framework of the training of civil
servants in Pakistan.
The third chapter covers the restructuring of
Government at the Federal, Provincial levels,
strengthening of the district governments,
reorganisation of civil services, revamping of human
resource management policies and practices, re-
engineering of business processes. The report adds
value addition by; frstly, it systematically updates the
knowledge and a problem facing the Government
in the formulation and implementation of policies,
programmes and projects. Secondly, it provides
equality of opportunity to the majority of offcers
who are currently outside the occupational groups
and service cadres in matters of recruitment, training
etc on the basis of performance and achievements.
Thirdly, it recommends creation of District Services
under the control and management of the districts.
Fourthly, it provides the need to ensure that there is a
system where each district assigns young direct recruits
in thanas, tehsils, etc to be the frst point of contact
with a citizen. Fifthly, it provides holistic approach
towards human resource management of the civil
servant. Sixthly, it proposes E-Government for all
government rules, regulations, circulars, instructions,
manuals and latest editions of documents such as
the establishment manual, the ESTACODE etc.
and seventhly it presents ideas for improvement in
the delivery of essential public services: education,
health, police, and land revenue in the short term
ii
iii
Acronyms
APUG All Pakistan Unifed Grades
BPS Basic Pay Scales
CDS Comprehensive Development Strategy
CSA Civil Services Academy
CSP Civil Service of Pakistan
CSR Civil Service Reform
CSS Central Superior Services
CTP Common Training Programme
DCO District Coordination Offcer
DMG District Management Group
FATA Federally Administered Tribal Areas
FPSC Federal Public Service Commissions
FSA Foreign Service Academy
FUG Federal Unifed Grades
IBA Institute of Business Administration
ICS Indian Civil Service
IRS Inland Revenue Service
LCB Local Council Board
LGA Local Government Act
LGE&RDD Local Government Elections and Rural Development Department
LGO Local Government Ordinance
LGS Local Governance School
LGTIs Local Government Training Institutes
LUMS Lahore University of Management Sciences
MCMC Mid-Career Management Course
MTRI Municipal Training and Research Institute
NCGR National Commission for Government Reforms
NCRD National Centre for Rural Development
NDC National Defence College
NIM National Institute of Management
NMC National Management Course
NSPP National School of Public Policy
OPM Oxford Policy Management
PARD Pakistan Academy for Rural Development
PCS Provincial Civil Service
PER Performance Evaluation Reports
PILDAT Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency
PLGA Punjab Local Government Academy
PMS Provincial Management Service
PPSA Pakistan Provincial Services Academy
PPSC Provincial Public Service Commission
PSP Police Service of Pakistan
PUGF Provincial Unifed Group of Functionaries
RDA Rural Development Academy
REDC Rausing Executive Development Centre
SAS Subordinate Accounts Service
SDPD Strengthening Democracy through Parliamentary Development
SLGA Sindh Local Government Academy
SMC Senior Management Course
SOLC Servants of the Local Councils
STI Secretariat Training Institute
STP Specialised Training Programme
TMA Tehsil Municipal Administration
TMO Tehsil Municipal Offcer
TORs Terms of Reference
UC Union Council
iv
Table of Contents
Preface........................................................................................................................................................................................ i
Executive Summary.............................................................................................................................................................. ii
Acronyms................................................................................................................................................................................... iii
Chapter 1: Civil Service in Pakistan: Federal, Provincial, District and Union Council Levels
1.1 Introduction..................................................................................................................................................................... 01
1.2 Purpose............................................................................................................................................................................... 02
1.3 Objectives.......................................................................................................................................................................... 02
1.4 Methodology..................................................................................................................................................................... 02
1.5 Service Structure of the Civil Servants........................................................................................................... 03
1.6 Constitutional Provisions and Regulatory Mechanisms........................................................................ 04
1.7 Postings, Promotions and Performance Evaluation.................................................................................. 06
1.8 Organisation of Federal Government in Pakistan...................................................................................... 06
1.9 Transaction of Business at Federal Level...................................................................................................... 07
1.10 Federal and Provincial Secretariats............................................................................................................... 07
1.11 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Government Rules of Business 1985............................................................. 08
1.12 Recruitment Policy for the Provincial Services....................................................................................... 08
1.13 Transfers, Postings, Appointment by Promotion or Transfer
and Disciplinary action in Kyber Pakhtunkhwa....................................................................................... 10
1.14 Staff Strength of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Employees............................................................................... 10
1.15 Khyber Pakhtunkhawa Province Provincial Management Services Rules, 2007.................. 11
1.16 LGO: Before 2001, the 2001 and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Local Government Act 2012................................................................................................................................ 15
1.17 Local Government Elections and Rural Development Department,
Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa............................................................................................................. 17
1.18 White Paper 2012-2013, Finance Department, Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa...... 20
1.19 Local Council Board in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa........................................................................................ 22
1.20 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Reform Programme
and Capacity Building of FATA Secretariat.............................................................................................. 25
1.21 Conclusion...................................................................................................................................................................... 26
Chapter 2: Training of Civil Servants in Pakistan
2.1 Introduction...................................................................................................................................................................... 27
2.2 Purpose............................................................................................................................................................................... 28
2.3 Objectives.......................................................................................................................................................................... 28
2.4 Methodology..................................................................................................................................................................... 28
2.5 Training Levels............................................................................................................................................................... 29
2.6 Federal Ministry of Education and Training, Government of Pakistan.......................................... 30
2.7 Federal Government Training Institutions...................................................................................................... 31
v
2.8 The Management of Training and Selected Training Institutes of the
Provincial Departments in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa...................................................................................... 43
2.9 Local Government Training Institutions in Pakistan................................................................................ 48
2.10 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Local Government Act 2012................................................................................ 52
2.11 Common Courses in all Training Programmes......................................................................................... 53
2.12 Gaps in Training.......................................................................................................................................................... 53
2.13 Conclusion...................................................................................................................................................................... 55
2.14 National Commission for Government Reforms (NCGR) Recommendations........................... 56
2.17 References...................................................................................................................................................................... 57
Chapter 3: An Overview of the National Commission for Government Reforms (NCGR)
Report on Reforming the Government in Pakistan
3.1 Introduction...................................................................................................................................................................... 58
3.2 Purpose............................................................................................................................................................................... 58
3.3 Objectives.......................................................................................................................................................................... 58
3.4 Need for Reforms.......................................................................................................................................................... 59
3.5 Importance of NCGR Report.................................................................................................................................... 59
3.6 Broad Principles underpinning the reforms.................................................................................................. 60
3.7 The Existing System of Civil Service in Pakistan...................................................................................... 61
3.8 Proposed Changes in the Civil Service Structure...................................................................................... 65
3.9 Re-organising the Structure of Government................................................................................................ 72
3.10 Improving Human Resource Management and Development.......................................................... 73
3.11 Governance and Delivery of Essential Public Services....................................................................... 76
3.12 Re-organisation of Training and Policy Research Institutions....................................................... 77
3.13 Advisors........................................................................................................................................................................... 78
3.14 Conclusion...................................................................................................................................................................... 79
Annexures-I Civil Service Laws in Pakistan......................................................................................................... 80
Annexures-II Government Departments in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa............................................................ 82
Annexures-III Directorates/Attached Units in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.................................................... 83
Annexures-IV Local Government Structure........................................................................................................... 84
Annexures-V Administrative Structure in District under LG0 2001....................................................... 85
Annexures-VI Tehsil Municipal Administration Organisation under LGO 2001............................... 86
Annexures-VII Administrative Structure in Union Council under LGO 2001..................................... 87
Annexures-VIII List of Federal Training Institutes........................................................................................... 88
Annexures-IX List of Local Government Training Institutions.................................................................. 89
Annexures-X Selective of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Training Institutions.................................................. 90
Annexures-XI Composition of National Commission for Government Reforms............................... 91
Annexures-XII Terms of Reference (TORs) of National Commission
for Government Reforms................................................................................................................. 92
vi
CHAPTER 1
CIVIL SERVICE IN PAKISTAN:
FEDERAL, PROVINCIAL, DISTRICT
AND UNION COUNCIL LEVELS
1.1 Introduction
Civil service is a relatively new term used to describe
an old governmental feature that is becoming
increasingly important in modern political systems.
The phrase was frst used in British administration in
India and was popularised by Sir Charles Trevelyan
a little more than a century ago. When the principle
of open competitive examination was introduced
in Great Britain in 1854, the phrase civil service
was also carried over and was applied to the offcials
serving the state in a professional capacity, except for
those in the military and judicial services
1
.
Traditionally, civil service refers to the body of
appointed offcials who carry out the functions
of government under the direction of the Head
of Government. This is true in democracies,
dictatorships, monarchies and republics alike.
Historically, administrative reform and civil service
reform have been used almost interchangeably. The
components of structure, system, processes and
procedures were all organically related to recruiting
and maintaining competent, motivated staff. Recently,
governance has been used as an all-inclusive
framework not only for administrative and Civil Service
Reform (CSR), but as a link between CSR and an all-
embracing framework for making policy decisions
effective within viable systems of accountability and
citizen participation. Administrative reform focuses
on rationalising structures of government. It creates
strategic mechanisms and processes for policy and
decision making coordination; for literally re-forming
institutions for the delivery of services, sometimes
through contractual arrangements with civil society
and private sector organisations; for improving
delivery mechanisms within core public sectors and
broader contexts; and for other means to strengthen
processes and procedures for effective, effcient,
economical and ethical management. Governance
reform tends to refer to the improvement of legal and
policy frameworks to create proper decision making
environments; participatory systems for elements of
civil society to become actively involved in policy and
programme formulation and their implementation;
and an effective and transparent system and process
for control and accountability in government
activities. In both administrative and governance
reforms, civil service reforms are essential to
reshaping the behaviour of human beings in initiating
and managing all these changes sustainably
2
.
Pakistans civil bureaucracy has its origins in the
Indian Civil Service (ICS). The ICS was established
on the recommendations made by the Aitcheson
Commission, which was set up in 1886 to create a
scheme to reform the public service in imperial India.
Until then, public service employees were divided
into those with regular contracts, which specifed the
nature and terms of service, and those without such
agreements. Contractual appointees (the Covenanted
Civil Service), were exclusively British until growing
demands for local participation led to the creation
of a Statutory Civil Service, in which one sixth of
the positions previously reserved for the Covenanted
Civil Service were flled by Indians nominated by
local governments and subsequently approved by the
governor general. The Aitcheson Commission laid
the foundations for the cadre system that was later
incorporated virtually wholesale into independent
Pakistan. The ICS cadre became the Civil Service of
Pakistan (CSP), with minor modifcations; the Indian
Police Service became the Police Service of Pakistan
(PSP); and the External Affairs, Commonwealth
Relations and Political Departments eventually
became the Pakistan Foreign Service (PFS).
With the inception of civil service reforms of 1973,
the elite CSP cadre, which dominated civil service
positions at all levels of the administration federal,
provincial and district was abolished; service
distinctions were terminated; and all civil service
cadres were labelled occupational groups. The rank
hierarchy that divided civil servants into four classes
ranging from offcer-level Class-I to menial positions
in Class IV was replaced by a system of 22 national
pay grades known as Basic Pay Scales (BPS), covering:
workers performing unskilled tasks under BPS-1-4;
various categories of clerical personnel under BPS-5-
15; superintendents under BPS-16; and offcers under
BPS-17-22.
With the Civil Services Reforms of 1973, a new
system of Common Training Programme (CTP) was
introduced and all of these occupational groups (12
at that time) were required to go through a mandatory
combined training at Civil Services Academy (CSA),
Lahore. The batch of offcers who attended CSA
in 1973 is recognised as 1st Common. Up till 5th
Common the allocation of occupational groups was
1
Civil Service: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences 1968. Please visit: http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/civil_service.aspx
2
MDGD Civil Service Reform Paper. Available at: http://unpan1.un.org/intradoc/groups/public/documents/un/unpan001183.pdf
01
02
done after the culmination of Common Training
Programme but from 6th Common onwards this
task has also been assumed by FPSC. Even till
this day, it is an offcial procedure that once the
Probationary Offcers successfully complete their
CTP, then they undergo some further Specialised
Training Programme (STP) in their own professional
academies.
The public servants can be sub-divided into three
categories: civil servants, judicial offcers and
legislators. The most powerful group is civil servants,
considered as most knowledgeable and belonging
to services of high calibre. They hold a controlling
position in the administrative structure of the country.
They enjoy an elitist status. Absence of democracy
and disruption of democratic process hinder the
growth of strong institutions. Civil servants become
more powerful and key players under a political
system. The Rules of Business, by declaring heads
of Divisions as Principal Accounting Offcers, make
them the effective heads of Ministries.
The purpose of this study is to thoroughly examine
the civil service structure, appointment, recruitment,
transfer and promotion at the federal, provincial,
districts and union levels in Pakistan with particular
focus on the Local Government system in Pakistan
and to in-depthly examine the Local Government
Elections and Rural Development Department of
the Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
1.2 Purpose
The research design is qualitative in nature. Patton
(2002)
3
posits that, . qualitative methods
typically produce a wealth of detailed data about
a much smaller number of people and cases
(p.227). The literature for this study included civil
service laws, rules at the federal and provincial
levels, Local Government Ordinance 2001, Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Local Government Act 2012,
International reports and journals, Government
of Pakistan notifcations such as notifcation on
Inland Revenue Service. In fne, this study is based
on generalisation and not particularisation.
1.4 Methodology
The study has following objectives:
To understand the structure of civil service at the
federal, provincial, districts and union levels in
Pakistan.
To comprehend constitutional provisions and
regulatory mechanisms relating to the civil service
in Pakistan.
To examine the Local Government system before
2001, the 2001 and Post-2010.
To provide an overview of the Local Government
Elections and Rural Development Department of
the Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
1.3 Objectives
3
Patton, M. Q. (2002). Qualitative research and evaluation methods (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
1.5 Service Structure of the Civil Servants
Service Structure
According to Baseline Research on Executive
Education in Pakistan. Governance Institutions
Network International report (2009):
Administrative Reforms of 1973 abolished all classes
among the civil servants, merged all services and
cadres into a single unifed graded structure and
prohibited the use of service labels. The following
three unifed grades were created under the new rules
(framed on the basis of Civil Servants Act, 1973)
which continue to this day.
All Pakistan Unifed Grades (APUG)
The APUG offcers are posted to Federal as well as
Provincial Governments, including Districts, mostly
on posts reserved for them. The APUG comprises
the following occupational groups/services
i. District Management Group (DMG) (BPS-17 to 22)
ii. Police Service of Pakistan (PSP) (BPS-17 to 22)
iii. Secretariat Group (BPS-19 to 22)
Federal Unifed Grades (FUG)
As a rule, the FUG offcers are posted to the Federal
Government posts only. The FUG consists of the
following occupational groups:
Accounts Group.
Commerce and Trade Group.
Customs and Excise Group.
Foreign Service of Pakistan.
Income Tax Group.
Information Group.
Military Lands & Cantonment Group.
Offce Management Group.
Postal Group.
Railways (Commercial and Transportation)
Group.
Economist & Planners Group
Creation of Inland Revenue Service
A new cadre was created namely Inland Revenue
Service by the Government of Pakistan, vide
notifcation No: 2412-M-IA/2010, dated 16th
November, 2010. Now the cadre of Inland Revenue
Service (IRS) and Pakistan Customs Service come
under the Administrative Control of the Federal
Board of Revenue.
Besides the above occupational groups, personnel
belonging to the following categories also form part
of FUG:
Ex-Cadre Offcers (BPS-17) and above
There are a large number of Federal Government
offcers who are called Ex-Cadre. These offcers
mainly belong to technical and professional categories,
e.g. specialised positions in Ministries of Education,
Science & Technology, Food & Agriculture, Population
Welfare, Special Education, Communications and a
host of Attached Departments, Subordinate Offces,
Bureaus, Commissions, Research Organisations,
etc. Although they account for 80-90 percent of
the offcers positions in the Federal Government,
the ex-cadre offcers enjoy relatively limited career
progression compared to occupational groups
mentioned above.
Subordinate Staff of BS-l to BS-16
Subordinate staff of BS-l to BS-16 are ministry/
division/department-specifc employees with the
exception of Subordinate Accounts Service (SAS)
personnel who are routinely posted across ministries/
divisions /departments. Almost 95 percent of the
positions in the Federal Government ministries/
attached departments/subordinate offces, etc are
occupied by the subordinate staff.
Recruitment Policy
Recruitment to the federal services/posts is regulated
by Civil Servants (Appointment, Promotion and
Transfer) Rules, 1973; and Federal Public Service
Commission (Functions) Rules, 1978. Recruitment to
all federal services/posts at the entry point is made
on provincial/regional quota basis, through:
Federal Public Service Commission for employees
of BS-17 and above.
Ministry / Division / Department Recruiting
Committees - for employees of BS-l to BS-16.
03
04
1.6 Constitutional Provisions and Regulatory Mechanisms
Under Article 240 of the 1973 Constitution of
Pakistan, civil service appointments and their
terms and conditions are determined by an act of
parliament: in this case the Civil Servants Act of 1973.
According to Article 240, all provincial civil service
posts are determined by Acts passed by provincial
assemblies. The Acts promulgated by the four federal
units, which regulate the appointment and terms of
service of provincial civil servants, are essentially
replicas of the federal Civil Servants Act of 1973.
A number of other legal instruments also regulate
the functioning of the civil bureaucracy, within the
rubric of these federal and provincial acts. The Civil
Establishment Code (ESTACODE), especially a vast
compendium of laws, operating procedures, and rules
and regulations, governs every aspect of the civil
service. Of particular importance to civil servants are
laws and rules pertaining to:
Terms and conditions of service: Articles 240 and
241 of the Constitution and the Civil Servants Act
of 1973;
Appointment/recruitment, seniority and
promotions: Civil Servants (Appointment,
Promotion and Transfer) Rules, 1973;
Conduct and discipline: Government Servants
(Conduct) Rules, 1964; and Government Servants
(Effciency and Discipline) Rules, 1973;
Postings and transfers: Section 10 of the Civil
Servants Act of 1973; and
Appeals, petitions and representations: Section 22
of the Civil Servants Act of 1973 and the Civil
Servants Appeal Rules, 1977
Under Article 242 of the Constitution and Section
3 of the Federal Public Service Commission
(Composition and Condition of Service) Regulations,
1978, the FPSC is responsible for direct recruitment
to offcer level positions in the federal bureaucracy.
The FPSC conducts tests and examinations to
all federal posts of and above a specifed level of
seniority. Each of the provinces has its own Public
Service Commission, constituted along similar lines
to the FPSC and responsible for recruitment to the
Provincial Civil Service.
Article 212 of the Constitution mandates the creation
of special administrative bodies known as service
tribunals to exercise exclusive jurisdiction over issues
relating to the terms and conditions of service of
civil servants, including disciplinary matters. Thus,
the Federal Services Tribunal hears appeals made by
a civil servant against any order by a departmental
authority regarding his or her terms and conditions
of service. Upon such an appeal, the tribunal may
confrm, set aside or modify the order. Each of the
four provinces has a similarly constituted provincial
services tribunal, with equivalent functions.
Another important regulatory body is the offce
of the Wafaqi Mohtasib, or federal ombudsman,
authorised under the Wafaqi Mohtasib (Ombudsman)
Order 1983 to diagnose, investigate, redress
and rectify any injustice done to any person
through maladministration by any governmental
agency. Thus, while the Federal Services Tribunal
adjudicates cases of alleged injustice by departmental
authorities against civil servants, the offce of the
federal ombudsman investigates complaints by
citizens against governmental agencies. The federal
ombudsman may summon offcials, compel them to
produce documents, receive evidence on affdavits
and recommend the concerned agency to initiate
disciplinary proceedings against an offcial found
guilty of maladministration. These recommendations
are non-binding. Each of the four provinces also has
a provincial ombudsman to hear complaints against
provincial government agencies.
The Civil Servants Act of 1973
The Civil Servants Act of 1973 regulates the
appointment of persons to, and the terms and
conditions of service of persons in, the service of
Pakistan. According to section 2 (b) of the CSA 1973:
Civil servant means a person who is a member of
an All-Pakistan Service or of a civil service of the
Federation, or who holds a civil post in connection
with the affairs of the Federation, including any such
post connected with defence, but does not include:
i. A person who is on deputation to the Federation
from any Province or other authority.
ii. A person who is employed on contract or on work-
charged basis or who is paid from contingencies
or
iii. A person who is a worker or workman as
defned in the Factories Act, 1934 or Workmans
Compensation Act 1923.
Appointment
Under section 5 of CSA 1973, appointments to
an All-Pakistan Service or to a civil service of the
Federation or to civil post relating to the affairs of the
Federation, including any civil post connected with
defence, shall be made in prescribed manner by the
President or by a person authorised by the President
in that behalf.
The Civil Servants (Appointment, Promotion and
Transfer) Rules of 1973 provide following framework
for the appointment of civil servants in Pakistan:
Channels of Recruitment
There are four channels of recruitment to Pakistans
Federal Bureaucracy:
Direct recruitment:
Candidates can enter the bureaucracy through the
Central Superior Services (CSS) examination, an annual
nation-wide competition conducted by the Federal
Public Service Commission. Successful candidates
are assigned to their respective occupational groups
based on a combination of their overall position and
regional/provincial quotas calculated on the basis of
population.
Direct induction of military offcers
Since the 1980s, there has been an annual 10 percent
induction of military offcers, generally at the rank
of captain and equivalent ranks from the navy and
air force. Military inductees do not have to take
the CSS examination or any other entry test, and
are instead simply nominated by their respective
military hierarchies and then subject to an interview
by the FPSC. They are then assigned to one of the
three most coveted services: the police, the district
management cadre and the Foreign Service.
Advertisements
Advertisements against listed vacancies in ministries
and departments.
Ad hoc recruitment
Ad hoc recruitment by departments or ministries for
temporary vacancies
S# Basic Pay Scale of Posts Appointing Authority
1 Posts in Basic Pay Scales 20 and above or
equivalent
Prime Minister
2 Posts in Basic Pay Scales 17 to 19 above or
equivalent
Secretary of the Ministry or Division Concerned
3 Posts in Basic Pay Scales 16 or equivalent An offcer notifed by the Secretary of the
Ministry or Division Concerned
4 Posts in Basic Pay Scales 3 to 15 or equivalent An offcer notifed by the Secretary of the
Ministry or Division Concerned
5 Posts in Basic Pay Scales 1 and 2 or equivalent An offcer notifed by the Secretary of the
Ministry or Division Concerned
05
1.7 Postings, Promotions and Performance Evaluation
Under the Civil Servants (Appointment, Promotion
and Transfer) Rules of 1973
i. Promotions and transfer to posts in basic pay
scales 2 to 18 and equivalent shall be made
on the recommendation of the appropriate
Departmental Promotion Committee and
ii. Promotions and transfer to posts in basic pay
scales 19 to 22 and equivalent shall be made on
the recommendation of the Selection Boards.
Promotions to BPS-22, the highest grade, are
decided by the Prime Minister.
These promotions are generally based on four criteria
Minimum length of active service;
An unblemished disciplinary record;
The required threshold in performance evaluation
reports (PERs); and
Successful completion of the mandatory training
course
Although training courses are mandatory for
promotions, successful completion is the only
requirement. Performance has no bearing on their
promotion prospects, thus offering no incentive to
improve. Diversity of experience does play a role in
promotion but there are no clear guidelines. These
should be framed and incorporated in promotion
policies. Diversity should be rewarded and the
civil service career framework should encourage
offcers to broaden their experience and credentials.
Favourable performance evaluation reports (Annual
Confdential Reports) are also a major criterion for
advancement. Mechanisms must be put in place to
ensure that promotions take place solely on merit and
in accordance with rules and regulations. Promotions
policy should be reframed to include measures
such as objective, performance- related criteria,
linking promotions to management and leadership
potential demonstrated during training programmes;
and integrating diversity of experience into career
advancement frameworks.
06
The Rules of Business-1973 defne the function
of ministries, ministers and secretaries and also the
methodology of conducting the administrative and
other businesses of the Federal Government.
Central Secretariat
For the proper functioning of the Federal
Government and administering the subjects
falling within the jurisdiction of federation, there
are ministries, divisions, attached departments,
subordinate offces, autonomous and semi-
autonomous bodies. The detail is as under:
Ministry
A ministry is a division or group of divisions
constituted into a ministry or it may comprise one
or more divisions for the conduct of business
of Federal Government in a specifed sphere as
declared by the Government. Each ministry is
headed by a Cabinet Minister and a Secretary is the
administrative in-charge of the ministry.
Division
It also performs functions like Ministry to formulate
policies and to ensure their implementation. It is
headed by a Minister for State and administrative
in-charge is Secretary or Additional Secretary.
Attached Department
An attached department in the Federal Government
has a direct relation with Ministry or Division. These
departments provide assistance to the Ministry in
the formulation and execution of the policies and
they are under the control of Ministry or Division.
Subordinate Offces
Each attached department has many subordinate
offces, which are known as feld offces. They are
under the attached department and perform specifc
duties. They are responsible for the execution of all
the fled activities of attached departments. They
are headed by an administrator or Director.
Autonomous/Semi-Autonomous Bodies
Certain Ministries or Divisions have a number of
autonomous, semi-autonomous bodies representing
the trend of decentralisation for arriving at speedy
decisions. The main sectors, under which these
bodies are working, are Finance, Education and
Banking.
1.8 Organisation of Federal Government in Pakistan
1.9 Transaction of Business at Federal Level
Prime Minister
At the top of the hierarchy of Federal Government is
Prime Minister, who has authority and responsibility
for the transaction of the business.
Federal Minister
A Federal Minister or Minister for State is to assist the
Prime Minister in the formulation of public policy.
Secretary
A Secretary in-charge of Ministry or Division is a
senior civil servant, and administrative head of his
ministry or division. He has to assist his Minister
or Minister for State in policy formulation, keep the
Minister generally informed of the working of the
Ministry or Division.
Additional Secretary
Additional Secretary is also a senior civil servant and
assists Secretary in a ministry, some time; he works as
in-charge of the division and performs the functions
like a Secretary in the ministry.
Joint Secretary
Joint Secretary is junior to the Additional Secretary, In
Ministry, he works at the third level of administrative
hierarchy, while in Division he assists the additional
secretary in charge as second in command. He
performs the duties as assigned by Secretary/
Additional Secretary.
Deputy Secretary
A division/ministry is divided into wings and a wing
is further divided into sections. Administrative head
of a group of sections is called Deputy Secretary.
Section Offcer/Under Secretary
Section offcer is the in-charge of a section. He is an
offcer at the lowest ebb of the hierarchy. He controls
the offcials of his section, i.e. assistant, clerks, record
keepers, steno-typist, etc.
07
1.10 Federal and Provincial Secretariats
Secretariats form the nucleus of civil administration at
the centre and provinces, with federal and provincial
ministries maintaining their own. Every ministry is
divided into one or more administrative divisions.
While:
An elected parliamentarian heads each ministry,
A senior civil servant with the rank of Secretary
heads each of the ministrys divisions.
Immediately below the Secretary in order
of seniority are Additional Secretaries, Joint
Secretaries and Deputy Secretaries.
In the provinces, the highest ranking member of the
civil administration is
i. The Chief Secretary, who supervises the
administrative functioning of all provincial
ministries and acts as the primary link between the
provincial political executive the Chief Minister
and the provinces civil administration.
ii. Each administrative division in the centre and in
the provinces consists of a:
Central Secretariat.
Attached departments and subordinate offces,
and
Affliated autonomous and/or semi-autonomous
organisations.
iii. While there is no fxed rule determining the
relationship between attached departments or
autonomous organisations with their parent
secretariats, autonomous organisations generally
tend, as their name suggests, to be under less
direct control of, and encounter comparatively
limited interference by, their respective central
secretariats.
iv. This Secretariat system distinguishes between:
Staff Offcers (those working in the Secretariats)
and
Line Offcers (in attached departments/
autonomous organisations).
Staff Offcers, such as Secretaries, set the policy
direction for programmes, are responsible for
staffng and training of offcers, and serve as the link
between administrative institutions. Line offcers only
08
implement projects. Thus, Secretariat Offcers, who
are primarily generalists, are ranked higher than line
offcers, who are specialists or technocrats. The career
progression of Secretariat Offcers is also much more
clearly defned, with most progressing from Deputy
Secretary to Joint Secretary within fve to seven years,
subject to the availability of posts.
The four Provincial Public Service Commissions
(PPSCs) function identically to the Federal Public
Service Commission (FPSC) by directly recruiting
offcers to the provincial bureaucracy. These recruits
are selected after taking a test similar to the CSS
examination and serve exclusively in their respective
provinces. While provincial recruitment occurs
through parallel channels to the federal services, there
is one notable exception: the absence of a quota for
military inductees.
Composition of departments and allocation of
business
The Secretariat shall comprise of the Departments.
The Chief Minister may, in consultation with the
Governor, wherever he may deem ft, constitute
new Departments or vary the composition or
number of the Departments.
Organisation of Departments
Each Department shall consist of a Secretary
to Government and of such other offcials
subordinate to him as Government may
determine: Provided that the same person may
be Secretary of more than one Department.
The Secretary shall be the offcial head of the
Department and shall be responsible for its
effcient administration and discipline, and for
the proper conduct of business allocated to the
Department.
The Secretary shall, by means of standing
orders, distribute the work of the Department
among the offcers, branches and/or sections.
Such order may specify the cases or class of
cases, which may be disposed of by an offcer
subordinate to the Secretary
1.11 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Government Rules of Business, 1985
4
1.12 Recruitment Policy for the Provincial Services.
Recruitment to posts in BPS-16 and above as well as
the posts of Assistant Sub-Inspectors of Police, Naib
Tehsildars, Zilladars and Sub-Engineers will continue
to be made through the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Public
Service Commission. However, the Commission
may make efforts to fnalise the recruitment within
six months of the receipt of the requisition duly
completed from the Administration Department.
Recruitment to posts in the various Government
Departments as indicated below will also henceforth
be made by the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Public Service
Commission.
Initial recruitment to posts in BPS-15 and below
other than the posts in the purview of the Public
Service Commission, in all the departments, shall
continue to be made in accordance with Rule 10, 11
and 12 (Part-III) of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Civil
Servants (Appointment, Promotion and Transfer)
Rules,1989, the criteria as laid down in S&GAD letter
No. SORI(S&GAD) 4-1/75,dated 11.2.1987 and
the zonal allocation formula contained in S&GAD
notifcation NO.SOS.III(S&GAD)3-39/70, dated
2.10.1973 as amended from time to time.
Transfer of Offcers
In terms of Rule-17(1) and (2) read with Schedule-III
of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Government Rules of
Business 1985, transfer of offcers shown in column 1
of the following table shall be made by the authorities
shown against each offcer in column 2 thereof:
4
For detailed information on the North-West Frontier Province (now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa) Government Rules of Business, 1985, please
visithttp://www.khyberpakhtunkhwa.gov.pk/Gov/Rule-of-Business.php
OUTSIDE THE SECRETARIAT
1 Offcers of the all Pakistan Unifed
Group, i.e DMG, PSP including Provincial Police
Offcers in BPS-18 and above.
Chief Secretary in consultation with Establishment
Department and Department concerned with the
approval of the Chief Minister.
2 Other offcers in BPS-17 and above to be posted
against scheduled posts, or posts normally held
by the APUG, PCS (EG) and PCS(SG).
-do-
3 Heads of Attached Departments and other offcers
in B-19 & above in all the Departments.
-do-
09
To streamline the postings/transfers in the District
Government and to remove any irritant/confusions
in his regard, the provision of Rule 25 of the
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa District Government Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Rules of Business 2001 read with
scheduleIV thereof is referred.
As per schedule-IV the posting/transferring
authorities for the offcers/offcials shown against
each are as under:
IN THE SECRETARIAT
1 Secretaries Chief Secretary with the approval of the Chief
Minister.
2 Other offcers of and above the rank of Section
Offcers:
i. Within the Same Department
ii. Within the Secretariat from one Department
to another.
Secretary of the Department concerned.
Chief secretary/Secretary Establishment.
3 Offcials up to the rank of Superintendent:
i. Within the same Department
ii. To and from an Attached Department
iii. Within the Secretariat from one Department
to another
Secretary of the Department concerned.
Secretary of the Department in consultation with
Head of Attached Department concerned.
Secretary (Establishment)
S# Offcers Authority
1 Posting of District Coordination Offcer and
Executive District Offcer in a District.
Provincial Government.
2 Posting of District Police Offcer. Provincial Government
3 Other Offcers in BPS-17 and above posted in the
District.
Provincial Government
4 Offcials in BPS-16 and below Executive District Offcer in consultation with
District Coordination Offcer.
10
According to the White Paper 2012-2013, Government
of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Finance Department the
Pay Bill of the Provincial Government is increasing
at an alarming rate. The strength of human resource
has risen from 300,849 to 385,518 posts over 7 years;
between the fscal year 2006-07 and 2012-13, which
can be seen at the following table:-
It is important to mention here that increase in creation of posts at such a rate leaves little room for the
Provincial exchequer to set aside adequate funds for operation, maintenance and developmental sector.
As per Rule 25(2) of the Rules mentioned above, the
District Coordination Department shall consult the
Government if it is proposed to:
Transfer the holder of a tenure post before the
completion of his tenure or extend the period of
his tenure.
Require an offcer to hold charge of more than
one post for a period exceeding two months.
1.14 Staff Strength of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Employees
1.13 Transfers, Postings, Appointment by Promotion or Transfer and
Disciplinary Action in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Transfer and postings of offcers and staff in the
Secretariat are made by the authorities specifed
in Rule 17 of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
Government Rules of Business, 1985.
All cases of promotion or appointment above the
rank of Naib Qasid or Daftari in the Secretariat
including those which:
Relate to temporary appointment in leave or
other vacancies; or
Require an offcer to hold charge of more than
one post shall be referred to the Establishment
& Administration Department.
The Offcers specifed under the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa. Removal from Service (Special
Powers) Ordinance 2001 shall be the competent
authorities for the purposes of the Ordinance
in effciency and discipline cases in respect of
Government Servants working in the Secretariat
Departments.
Registrations submitted by the ministerial staff
shall be forwarded to the Secretary, E&AD for
fnal orders with the remarks of the Secretary
concerned.
Year Provincial District Total
2006-07 81,651 219,198 300,849
2007-08 95,209 226,783 321,992
2008-09 105,384 224,328 329,712
2009-10 118,213 225,926 344,139
2010-11 144,716 231,219 375,935
2011-12 140,006 237,126 377,132
2012-13 140,564 244,954 385,518
11
1.15 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province Provincial Management
Service Rules, 2007
5
Method of recruitment
i. The method of recruitment, minimum
qualifcation, age limit and other matters related
thereto for the Service shall be as given in
Schedule-I.
ii. Fifty per cent of posts in BPS-17 shall be flled
in by initial recruitment through Commission
and remaining by promotion. Ten percent of
Secretariat posts in BPS-17 to 19 shall be reserved
for offcers of technical departments on reciprocal
basis. Government may reserve twenty per cent
posts for leave, deputation and training etc in each
pay scale.
iii. Posts specifed in Schedule-II shall be flled in
by Offcers borne on Provincial Management
Service and All Pakistan Unifed Group in the
ratio prescribed in Schedule-III.
Training
On appointment to the post borne on the service in
BS-17, whether by initial recruitment or by promotion,
every offcer so appointed shall successfully complete
one and a half years mandatory training including one
year training at the Provincial Services Academy as
per Module specifed in Schedule-IV and six months
training attachment as specifed in Schedule-V.
The training will be followed by Departmental
Examination to be conducted by the Provincial
Services Academy.
Appointing Authority
The Chief Minister, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa shall be the
appointing authority for posts borne on the Provincial
Management Service specifed in Schedule-I.
5
The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province Provincial Management Service Rules, 2007. Available at:
http://www.hmcpeshawar.com.pk/data/ManagementServiceRules2007.pdf
No Nomenclature
of posts
Minimum
qualifcation
for
appointment
by Initial
recruitment
Age limit
for initial
recruitment
Method of recruitment
1 PMS(BS-17) as
per detail at
Schedule-II
2nd Division
Bachelor
Degree from
a recognized
University.
21-30 year i. Fifty per cent by initial recruitment on the
recommendations of the Commission based
on the result of competitive examination to
be conducted by it in accordance with the
provisions contained in Schedule VII.
ii. Subject to rule 7, by promotion in the following
manner:
Twenty per cent from amongst Tehsildars, who
are graduates, on the basis of seniority cum-
ftness, having fve years service as Tehsildar
and have passed the prescribed Departmental
Examination; and
Twenty per cent from amongst Superintendents
/Private Secretaries on seniority-cum ftness
basis, who are graduate and have undergone a
training course of 9-weeks at the Provincial
Schedule-I
12
Management Academy/Provincial Staff
Training Institute. A joint seniority list of the
Superintendents and Private Secretaries shall be
maintained for the purpose of promotion on the
basis of their continuous regular appointment to
the respective posts.
iii. Ten per cent by selection on merit, on the basis of
competitive examination, to be conducted by the
Commission in accordance with the provisions
contained in Schedule-VII, from amongst persons
holding substantive posts of Superintendents,
Private Secretaries, Personal Assistants,
Assistants, Senior Scale Stenographers,
Stenographers, Data Entry Operators, Computer
Operators, Senior and Junior Clerks who possess
post graduate qualifcation from a recognized
University and have at least fve years service
under Government.
2 PMS(BS-18) as
per detail at
Schedule-II
NIL -
By promotion, on seniority-cum-ftness basis, from
amongst the offcers of PMS in BS-17 having at least
fve years service and have passed the prescribed
Departmental Training or Departmental Examination.
3 PMS(BS-19) as
per detail at
Schedule-II. NIL -
By promotion, on the basis of seniority-com-ftness,
from amongst PMS offcers holding posts in BS-18
and having at least 12 years service against posts
in BS-17 and above and have passed the prescribed
Departmental Training/ Examinations.
4 PMS(BS-20) as
per detail at
Schedule-II.
NIL -
By promotion on the basis of selection-on-merit,
from amongst PMS offcers holding posts in BS-19
and having at least 17 years service against posts
in BS-17 and above and have undergone Advance
Training Course from NIPA (now Senior Management
Course) or any other training course prescribed by
Government.
5 PMS(BS-21) as
per detail at
Schedule-II.
NIL -
By promotion, on the basis of selection-on-merit
from amongst PMS offcers holding posts in BS-20
and having at least 22 years service against posts
in BS-17 and above and have undergone Course
from Pakistan Administrative Staff College/National
Defence College or from any other training Institute
prescribed by Government.
13
S.No. Name of posts Basic Scale No. of posts Total No.
1 Chief Secretary 21/22 1
9
2 Additional Chief Secretary. 21 2
3 Senior Member Board of Revenue. 21 1
4 Chairman Sarhad Development Authority 21 1
5 District Coordination Offcer, City District. 21 1
6 Secretaries, Chairman Governors Inspection Team/
Provincial Inspection Team.
21 3
7 Secretaries (Settled/FATA) 20 32
74
8 Member Board of Revenue-I & II 20 2
9 Member, Governors Inspection Team 20 1
10 Member, Provincial Inspection Team 20 1
11 Director Staff Training Institute 20 1
12 Member Public Service Commission 20 1
13 Member Service Tribunal 20 2
14 District Coordination Offcer. 20 23
15 Presiding offcer Revenue Appellate Court 20 2
16 Vice Chairman Provincial Economy Commission 20 1
17 Project Director National Urban Development Project. 20 1
18 Director (Finance) Sarhad Development Authority. 20 1
19 Managing Director, Small Industries Development
Board.
20 1
20 General Manager (Finance & Admn.) Forest
Development Corporation.
20 1
21 Director General cum-Secretary Provincial Earthquake
Rehabilitation & Reconstruction Authority.
20 1
22 Director General Special Development Unit. 20 1
23 Projector Coordinator Provincial Management Unit. 20 1
24 Director General Community Infrastructure Project. 20 1
25 Additional Secretary 19 34
75
26 Chief of Section 19 5
27 Member, Governor Inspection Team. 19 1
28 Member, Provincial Inspection Team 19 1
29 Executive District Offcer(Finance & Planning) 19 24
Schedule-II
14
30 Deputy Director, Provincial Services Academy 19 1
75
31 Presiding Offcer Revenue Appellate Court 19 3
32 Director General, Prosecution. 19 1
33 Director Food. 19 1
34 Director, Civil Defence. 19 1
35 Registrar, Cooperative Societies. 19 1
36 Secretary Provincial Election Commission 19 1
37 Deputy Relief Commissioner 19 1
38 Political Agents. 18 7
171
39 Settlement offcers. 18 2
40 Secretary Public Service Commission. 18 1
41 Secretary Board of Revenue. 18 2
42 Director Land Record. 18 2
43 Administrator Afghan Refugees Organization 18 2
44 Deputy Secretary. 18 71
45 Assistant Chief, Planning & Development 18 8
46 Director Anti-Corruption Establishment. 18 1
47 Deputy Director Staff Training Institute 18 2
48 District Offcer (Revenue & Estate) 18 24
49 Assistant Coordination Offcer. 18 24
50 District Offcer (Finance) 18 24
51 Secretary Provincial Transport Authority. 18 1
52 Section Offcer 17 200
478
53 Assistant Political Agents. 17 25
54 Deputy District Offcer (Revenue.) 17 50
55 Deputy District Offcer (Judicial) 17 30
56 Human Resource Development Offcer. 17 24
57 Secretary District Public Safety Commission 17 24
58 Deputy District Offcer (Finance) 17 48
59 Tehsil Municipal Offcer. 17 54
60 Secretary District Regional Transport Authority 17 24
Total 807
15
Note
i. The share of other services of the Province in the Secretariat posts will be 10@ in BPS-17 to BS-19 on
reciprocal basis which mean that the offcers of PMS will also be entitled for posting against equivalent
posts @ 10% as reserved for the offcers of other services in Secretariat.
ii. The Government may reserve 20% of posts in BS-17 and above for deputation/training/ leave.
iii. Government may resize the Schedule from time to time
6
.
GRADE/BPS APUG PROVINCIAL OFFICERS
B-21 65% 35%
B-20 60% 40%
B-19 50% 50%
B-18 40% 60%
B-17 25% 75%
Schedule-III
The share for distribution between APUG & PMS Offcers is as under:-
6
Note III added vide Establishment Department Notifcation No. SOE-III(E&AD)3-5/2007/(PMS) Dated 12.11.2007
7
This section is taken from the report The Governance Landscape of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Administrative Reform Component of the
GIZ Governance Programme, April, 2011.
1.16 LGO: Before 2001, the 2001 and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Local Government Act 2012
Local Government System Before 2001
7
The Local Government system prior to introduction
of the LGO 2001 was regulated by Local Governments
Act 1979. Under this Act, the local areas were divided
in to two categories, i.e Urban and Rural. Two different
models were used for management of these areas.
While the urban areas were managed through Town
Committees, Municipal Committees and Municipal
Corporation depending on their size and population,
the rural areas were managed through District
Councils. The urban Councils (Town Committees,
Municipal Committees and Municipal Corporation)
for the purpose of management were further sub-
divided into Wards. The Head of urban Council was
named as Mayor while elected Councillors from each
Ward formed the Council. The District Council was
headed by a Chairman while elected Councillors from
each Union Council formed the Council. The Mayor
of Urban Councils and Chairman of District Council
were elected by the elected Councillors. The areas
falling in the jurisdiction of Urban Councils were
subjected to imposition of urban taxes such as urban
immoveable property tax, professional tax, etc. In lieu
of such taxes, the residents were provided Municipal
Services, i.e potable water, solid waste management,
streetlights, etc by the respective Urban Council.
In case of rural areas, such taxes were not collected
by the District Councils and as such the residents in
the jurisdiction of District Councils were deprived
of the services provided by Urban Councils. The
Administrative Head of Urban Councils was called
as Chief Offcer, who used to be an offcer of PUGF
cadre. The Chief Offcer was supported by Municipal
Engineer, Health Offcer, Taxation Offcer, sanitary
and other support staff. In case of District Council,
the Administrative Head was known as Director who
was supported by District Engineer and other staff
for implementation of development works. In case
of urban areas, building control regulations were
applicable requiring approval of building plans by the
Urban Council while in rural areas, building control
regulations were not applicable.
16
8
ibid.
The Secretariat of Local Councils was Local Council
Board and the Secretary Local Government Elections
and Rural Development Department (LGE&RDD)
was Chairman of the Board. The Board exercised
administrative and fnancial control over the Local
Councils in the fnancial and technical matters beyond
limits prescribed in the Act/Rules of Business.
Local Government System After 2001
Under the Local Government Act 2001, the urban-
rural divide was eliminated and all Union Councils in
a Tehsil and District were represented in District or
Tehsil Councils. Thus all areas in the jurisdiction of
a Council were entitled to same level of Municipal
services. Contrary to that, local taxes were not
levied and collected from the erstwhile Rural Union
Councils. Thus the human and fnancial resources of
Local Governments were distributed in larger areas
without any signifcant increase in the revenue. The
building control regulations were also not applied
across the board. The Head of District or Tehsil
Government was renamed as Zilla or Tehsil Nazim
elected by the Councils comprising of representative
of each union Council. Unlike the 1979 Act, the
number of Departments and functions were
devolved to the District and Tehsil Governments.
However, the Local Government under the LGO
2001 remained dependent on the transaction from
the Provincial Government. Signifcant improvement
in delivery of services was also not observed due to
weak fnancial base and thin spreading of resources.
The Administrative Head and other functionaries
in District or Tehsil Governments were made
answerable to the elected Nazims. Compared to LGA
1979, the elected councils in District and Tehsil were
more autonomous and the Local Council Board had
limited role in administrative or fnancial matters.
The LGO 2001 was protected to an extent that even
the Provincial Government could not make any
amendment without prior approval of the then Chief
Executive of Pakistan. However, after the transfer of
power to the Civilian Government in 2008, a number
of amendments were made to allow role of Provincial
Governments in the affair of Local Governments.
After expiry of the tenure, fresh elections were not
held and Nazims were replaced with Administrators
appointed by the Provincial Governments.
8
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Local Government Act 2012
On commencement of this Act, the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Local Government Ordinance, 2001
(Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Ord. No. XIV of 2001) shall
be repealed and all Local Government created under
the said law shall stand dissolved.
On the commencement of this Act, all Local
Governments established or continued under the
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Local Government Ordinance,
2001 (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Ord. NO. XIV of 2001),
shall be succeeded-
i. in the case of City District Government and
the Towns Municipal Administration created
in City District of Peshawar by the Municipal
Corporation, Peshawar to the extent of notifed
urban areas and functions assigned to the
Corporation under this Act;
ii. in the case of Local Area Development Authority
by the Local Government Elections and Rural
Development Department, Government of
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa;
iii. in the case of Tehsil Municipal Administration in
all other districts of the Province by the respective
Municipal Committees to the extent of notifed
urban areas, if any, in the respective districts
and to the extent of functions assigned to the
Municipal Committees under this Act;
iv. in the case of District Governments, including
City District Government Peshawar, by the
respective District Councils to the extent of rural
areas and to the extent of functions assigned
to district councils under this Act and by the
Municipal Corporation to the extent of notifed
urban areas of Peshawar;
v. in the case of Union Councils except for urban
union councils, by the respective Union Councils
to the extent of functions assigned to Union
Councils under this Act; and
vi. in the case of Union Councils falling in the
notifed Urban Areas of Peshawar, their respective
Urban Union Councils to the extent of functions
assigned to Union Councils under this Act.
17
1.17 Local Government Elections and Rural Development
Department, Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
9
The Local Government system and institutions since
creation of Pakistan have been subject to numerous
innovations and experiments. The system of Basic
Democracies was introduced during Ayub Khans
era in the mid-60s. The 1973 Constitution adopted
by the National Assembly provides for establishment
of Local Governments through direct elections.
The subject of Local Governments was thus placed
under the ambit of the Provincial Governments. In
pursuance of the constitutional provision, the Local
Government Ordinance 1979 was promulgated
by the Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to
regulate the affairs of local government system in the
Province. Similar ordinances were also issued by other
Provincial Governments as well. The 1979 Ordinance
was replaced with Local Government Ordinance
2001. Major changes in the governance structure of
local government system were introduced through
LGO 2001. After assumption of power by the current
government, yet another bill has been introduced to
repeal LGO 2001 and its replacement with LGO
2010. Some of the major changes in the proposed
Act include replacement of District Governments
and Tehsil Municipal Administrations with Municipal
Committees for Urban areas and District Councils for
rural areas. The bill is pending before the Provincial
Assembly for approval.
Another signifcant aspect of the local governments
in the country is that all elections to the local
governments were held during the military rules and
elected governments at the centre and provinces
could not manage a single local government election
in the country. It is often alleged that military rulers
were supportive of the local government system to
prolong their own tenure in the helm of affairs, while
the elected government at the centre and provinces
have a kind of rivalry with the local representatives.
In the absence of elected local councils, their affairs
are managed by the administrators appointed by
the Provincial Governments. Thus, the Provincial
Government exercises direct control over the
9
ibid The Governance Landscape of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, pp: 9-12.
Local Areas
i. The Local Areas shall be-
in the case of rural areas, a Union Council and a
District Council;
in the case of urban areas, except Peshawar, a
Municipal Committee; and
in the case of Urban areas of Peshawar, a
Municipal Corporation and Urban Union Council.
ii. Government may, by notifcation, extend, curtail
or otherwise alter the limits of a Local Area and
declare that any area shall cease to be a Union,
District or City, as the case may be.
iii. Government may, for the purpose of delimitation
of local councils, establish an authority to be
known as Delimitation Authority with powers and
functions to be prescribed.
Delimitation of a Union
A Union shall be an area comprising one or more
mauza or, in the case of an area where settlement
under the law has not been taken, one or more villages,
notifed as such by the Government: Provided that as
far as m.1
i. the area of a Union shall be a territorial unity;
ii. the boundaries of a Union shall not cross the
limits of a Revenue Sub Division in a district;
iii. the area of a union shall comprise a whole number
of patwar circles, or a patwar circle may contain a
number of whole Unions;
iv. in the case of Urban Union Council, a whole
Patwar circle or census block; and
v. the population of Unions within a district shall,
more or less, be uniform;
Provided further that in a specifc case, the
Government may, for the reasons to be recorded,
waive the aforesaid conditions.
18
resources and powers of these institutions used many
times for promotion of their own political agenda.
The commoners, however, suffer in the absence of
elected local government representatives and have to
approach the Members of Provincial Assemblies to
settle their demands of local nature.
After the 18th Amendment to the 1973 Constitution,
the Ministry of Local Government at Federal level
has been abolished. All powers related to legislation
and regulation of the Local Governments has been
transferred to the Provincial Governments.
The role and functions of the LGE&RDD are
prescribed in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Government
Rules of Business 1985 and as amended from time
to time. Fifty-three (53) functions are assigned
to the Local Government Department, including
matters related to the Administration of Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Local Government Ordinance 2001,
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Public Property Act 1977,
Muslim Family Law Ordinance 1962, Conciliation
Code Ordinance 1961, Special Marriage Act 1872,
matters related to Kachi Abadis, Local Council
Reforms/Local Government Commission, Census,
matters relating to referendum on a National Issue,
Rural Uplift Programme, Development Programme
assisted by UNICEF, World Food Programme and
other Donors, Local Taxation, Urban Property
Tax, Local Government Research Statistics and
Evaluation, Service matters except those entrusted to
the Establishment Department, etc.
The Local Government affairs in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
are managed by the Local Government Elections
and Rural Development Department (LGE&RDD)
and the Local Council Board (LCB). The Secretary
LGE&RDD by virtue of his position also acts as
Chairman of the LCB. The Secretary LGE&RDD is
assisted by Special Secretary, Secretary Delimintation
Organogram of Local Government Elections and Rural Development Department
Local
Governance
School
Director
Training
Offcer
Secretary/Chairman LCB
MINISTER
Local Areas
Authorities
Support Cells
Secretary LCB
Senior
Architect
Local Council
Board
Secretariat LCB
District Councils
Municipal Corporation Peshawar/
Municipal Committees
Deputy Secretaries
Dy: Secy-I
Administrative Offcers
AO
BPS-17
AO
BPS-17
AO
BPS-17 AO
BPS-17
AO
BPS-17
Dy: Secy-II
Dy: Secy-III Dy: Secy-IV
Watsan Cell
Computer Cell
Planning Offcer
Secretariat
Additional
Secretary
Secretary
Delimitation
Authority
Special
Secretary
Section
Offcers
Section
Offcers
SO (G) SO (II)
SO (I) SO (III)
Deputy Secretaries
Dy: Secy-
(Admin)
Dy: Secy-
(Dev)
Peshawar Development Authority
Mardan Development Authority
Galiyat Development Authority
Swat Development Authority
Kohat Development Authority
Bannu Development Authority
Dera Development Authority
Abbottabad Development Authority
Suspervisors
UC (Secretary Union Council)
Directorate
Director
Assistant Directors
(District Level)
Director
General
Deputy Directors
Progress Offcers
Chief Coordination Offcers Chief Municipal Offcers
19
Authority, an Additional Secretary, two Deputy
Secretaries, two Section Offcers and a Computer
Programmer. The Secretary LGE&RDD and other
offcials in the department are appointed/posted by
the Provincial Government. Their emoluments and
operational cost is met from the provincial exchequer.
The Local Council Board (LCB), on the other hand,
is managed by the employees of the Local Council
Service Provincial Unifed Group of Functionaries
(PUGF) . The LCB is comprised of a Secretary,
fve Deputy Secretaries, an Architect, and fve
Administration Offcers, besides other support staff
as well. The emoluments of staff in the LCB and
its operational cost are paid from the contributions
made by the Local Councils.
Local Government Structure at the Federal,
Provincial, District, Tehsil and Union Council
Levels
The local governments in each province and district
vary by size, population and taxable capacity. But the
same three-tier system was present in each of the
four provinces. At the upper tier in this system was
the District Government (DG) and its Zilla Council.
As per section 14 of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
LGO 2001, 30 departments like education, health,
roads, agricultural extension, (including community
development/ social welfare and industrial
development) and others related to delivery of
social services, have been kept in 11 groups. These
have been administratively and fnancially devolved
to district governments. The districts have been
created from the pre-decentralisation of provincial
departments. The district governments have been
assigned specifed sources of own revenue generation.
In every Tehsil and Town there is a Tehsil/Town
Municipal Administration which is a body corporate
and headed by elected Tehsil Nazim. The Tehsil
Municipal Offcer is acting as co-ordinating, Principal
Accounting offcer and administrative offcer in-
charge of the following Tehsil Offcers and their
allied staff responsible for routine work of the
municipal services:
Tehsil Offcer (Municipal Regulations) who
shall be responsible for licensing, management
of municipal lands, estates, properties, facilities
and enterprises and enforcement of relevant
municipal laws, rules and bye-laws.
Tehsil Offcer (Infrastructure and Services) who
shall be responsible for water, sewerage, drainage,
sanitation, roads, other than Provincial and district
roads, streets and street lighting, fre fghting, park
services.
Tehsil Offcer (Planning) who shall be responsible
for spatial planning and land use control, building
control and coordination of development plans
and projects with Union Administration, Village
Councils and other local governments.
Tehsil Offcer (Finance) who shall be responsible
for budget, revenue and accounts.
As per LGO 2001, there was Union Administration
for every Union which shall be a body corporate and
consist of Union Nazim, Naib Union Nazim and
not more than three Union Secretaries and, where
required, the members of ancillary staff.
But in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, there is only one
Secretary and one Class-IV employee in each UC. The
Union Nazim is head of the Union Administration.
The Union Secretary is coordinating and facilitating
in community development, functioning of the
Union Committees, delivery of municipal services
and is also principal accounting offcer for the union
fund
10
.
10
This information is taken from Muhammad Khaliq, Adviser Local Governance, Administrative Reform Component, Report on
Local Government System in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: A Historical Analysis, December 2012.
20
1.18 White Paper 2012-2013, Finance Department, Government of
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
The Province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, spreads over
an area of 74,521 sq km, and has a population of over
22 million. Nature has gifted Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
with rich cultural and tourism friendly environment.
The Province is blessed with resources which can
help to increase the provinces share of GDP growth
ratio.
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is largely dependent on the
transfers from Federal government in the system of
fscal federalism. Share of the Provincial Receipts in
lieu of the 7th NFC Award, during the FY 2011-12
from the federal divisible pool has been lesser, than
anticipated.
Budgetary allocations for fscal year 2011-12, refects
heightened priority to income generation sector i.e.
Hydel generation, oil and gas exploration, tourism,
mineral development, agriculture and water. The
development of growth sector is complemented with
sizeable commitment of resources to Social Services
in Education, Health and Population welfare.
With the passage of 18th Constitutional Amendment
Act 2010 in the Constitution of Islamic Republic
of Pakistan and the omission of Concurrent
Legislative list, many subjects have been transferred
to the Province. This development in itself presents
a formidable challenge for the Province as transfer
of these functions is likely to intensify the spending
pressures on the provincial government.
A rising trend in the fscal allocations has been
analyzed. The current budget of the Province has
been increased by 29% in 2012-13 from year 2011-
12. The salary budget has increased at an alarming
rate of 34% because of the intensifed recruitment.
Allocation of pension has shown an increase by 35%.
The operational budget of the Government has
increased by 27%, whereas, debt servicing has been
reduced by 10%.
Revenues Transferred to District Governments
In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, District Governments were
functioning in 25 Districts for devolved functions
under the Local Government Ordinance 2001.
The Provincial Finance Commission (PFC) was
assigned to recommend formula for determination
of share of Local Governments based on which a
three years PFC Award was announced in 2008-09.
The Award provides for annual review by the PFC.
At present PFC does not exist due to expiry of its
tenure and completion of other legal requirements.
Keeping in view the provision of sub-section 7 of
Section 120D of the Local Govt. Ordinance, 2001,
the Government has decided to continue with the
existing recommendations for further period of one
year with amendments on the pattern of Provincial
Budget as follows:
5% increase was awarded in Salary Component
over Revised Estimates of the current year.
This will cover the normal growth. Besides, Rs.
11,811.890 million has been provided as Block
Allocation for Salaries to cover the expenditure on
a/c of posts transferred to district as a result of
18th Amendment and expected increase in salary.
10% increase has been made over the revised
estimates of Non-Salary Allocation like Others
to cover the essential need of the District
Governments.
Electricity Charges has been allocated on the basis
of fgure provided by the Energy Monitoring Cell,
Finance Department.
10% increase has been worked out on Octroi
Share.
The share of Zilla Tax of current fnancial year
2011-12 has been repeated for the next fnancial
year 2012-13.
Rs. 500 million has been allocated as Grant for
weak TMAs and Rs. 500 million has been allocated
for Matching Grant for TMAs. This grant will
be available for those TMAs who will generate
additional resources.
A separate allocation of Rs. 100 million has been
made as Conditional Grant.
Special provision of Rs. 500.000 million each for
M&R and Electricity has been made.
10% increase has been worked out on
Development Share of Districts.
21
(Rs. in Billion)
S.# Description R.Es
2005-06
R.Es
2006-07
R.Es
2007-08
R.Es
2008-09
R.Es
2009-10
R.Es
2010-11
R.Es
2011-12
1 Salary 19.396 23.204 24.000 28.000 33.193 45.000 56.501
2 Non Salary 1.650 2.249 3.408 3.417 4.033 7.805 7.387
3 Development 0.963 0.963 1.204 1.246 1.342 1.500 1.520
4 Octroi and ZillaTax Grant 0.996 1.081 1.285 1.435 1.679 1.949 2.931
Total 23.005 27.497 29.897 34.098 40.247 56.254 68.339
Funds provided to Local Governments during the last 7 years are tabulated as under:
(Rs. in Billion)
S.# Item Allocation
1 Salary 71,138.443
2 Non Salary 9,164.714
3 Development 1,672.330
4 Octroi and Zilla Tax Grant 3,536.107
Total 85,511.594
The allocation made for Local Governments for the fnancial year 2012-13 is tabulated
as under:
A Grant of Rs. 1.000 million each on account of
Octroi Share has been made for newly established
03 TMAs one in District Swabi and 02 in District
Tor Ghar.
Rs. 500 million has been allocated as Lump sump
provision at the disposal of Finance Department
under Octroi to cover the unforeseen requirement
of the districts.
1.19 Local Council Board in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
The Provincial Government in 1988 established
Local Council Board, which is responsible for all
service related matters like hiring and fring of the
Local Council Service Provincial Unifed Group of
Functionaries (PUGF) and non-PUGF employees of
the Union Council. The Local Councils in Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa are manned by operational staff
from four mainstreams of Local Council Service
including Administration, Regulation, Finance and
Infrastructure Services. These groups are made up of
PUGF and Servants of the Local Councils.
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Local Council Board
(Constitution and Conduct Of Business) Rules
1988
Some of the rules are given below:
According to section 3 of the rules
i. The Board shall comprise of a Chairman and not
less than three and more than six members to be
appointed by Government.
ii. The Secretary of the Government of Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa LGE&RDD shall be ex-offcio
Chairman of the Board.
iii. Government may remove any member from the
membership of the Board at any time without
assigning any reason.
iv. Government may fll up any casual vacancy of a
member at any time it considers necessary.
v. There shall be a Secretary of the Board to be
appointed by Government amongst the members
of the Service to deal with the day to day
administration of the Board and perform such
other functions as may be assigned to him by the
Board.
Conduct of Business of the Board:
The business of the Board shall be conducted in
its ordinary meeting:
Provided that the Chairman may call a special
meeting to consider and decide any matter of
immediate importance.
An ordinary meeting of the Board shall be held at
least once in every month on such date and time
as may be fxed by the Chairman.
Provided that in case of unavoidable circumstances
to be recoded in writing by the Chairman, the
holding of an ordinary meeting in any month may
be dispensed with.
The meeting shall be presided-over by the
Chairman and in his absence by a member
nominated by the Chairman for the purpose.
Intimation for the date and time of an ordinary
meeting and a special meeting shall be sent to the
members at least seven days and three days in
advance respectively.
A vacancy in the membership of the Board
shall not restrain it from holding meeting and
transacting the business relating to its functions.
Provided that at least two members excluding the
Chairman are present in the meeting.
All decisions by the Board shall be taken majority
of votes of the members present
Provided that in case of equality of votes the
Chairman shall have a second or casting vote.
The minutes of a meeting shall be approved by
circulation within 7 days from the date to which
such meeting takes place and shall be confrmed
by the Chairman.
The minutes of the previous meeting shall be
circulated by the Secretary in the next meeting for
the information of the Board.
Functions of the Board
The Board shall be responsible for:
Administration of all service matters in respect
of the employees, including their appointment,
promotion, transfer etc.
Conducting departmental examination, if any,
prescribed for the employees.
Arranging training facilities, seminars and
conferences etc to improve the working and
effciency of the employees
Arrange the funds of the Board and
Performing such other functions as may be
assigned to it by Government.
22
Executives Powers of the Board
The executive powers of the Board with regard to
the following matters shall vest in and be exercised by
the Chairman directly or through offcers subordinate
to him:
Execution of contracts and works on behalf of
the Board
Powers to appoint, promote, transfer, suspend
and punish persons borne on the establishments
of the Board in B-16 and above
Power to grant leave, joining time etc and to
sanction pension/gratuity to the employees of
the Board
Receipt of all money on behalf of the Board
Defence of suit and all other legal proceedings by
or on behalf of the Board
Execution of resolutions of the Board and
Such other powers and functions as may from
time to time be delegated by the Board.
Provisions of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Local
Government Act 2012 relating to The Local
Council Service
Section 71 of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa LGA
2012, relates to the Composition of Local Council
Service and provides that the Local Council Service
shall comprise the Provincial Unifed Group of
Functionaries and Servants of Local Councils:
Provided that the service and seniority matters of
employee of erstwhile Local Government, Election
and Rural Development Department and such other
Departments devolved to the Tehsil Municipal
Administration under Section 52 and 53 of the Local
Government Ordinance, 2001 shall be deemed to be
protected under this Act.
Section 72 of the Act relates to Provincial Unifed
Group of Functionaries and states that:
i. Government may constitute a Provincial Unifed
Group of Functionaries of Local Councils
comprising such pay scales and grades in such
manner and subject to such conditions as may be
prescribed.
ii. Government may, from time to time, specify the
posts in the Local Council which shall be flled
by persons belonging to the Provincial Unifed
Group of Functionaries.
iii. Notwithstanding the provisions of sub-section
(2), the members of the Local Council Service
constituted or servants appointed under any law
relating to Local Councils may be absorbed in the
Provincial Unifed Group of Functionaries if they
possess the prescribed qualifcations; provided
that the terms and conditions of servants shall
not be less favourable than the existing terms and
conditions.
Section of the Act 73 relates to Servants of Local
Councils. It says that
A Local Council may, and if so required by
Government shall, on the prescribed terms and
conditions, employ such servants as are deemed
necessary for the effcient performance of its
functions under this Act:
Provided that Government may classify certain
posts in the prescribed manner as tenure posts
and the term of such posts shall coincide with the
term of the offce of a Local Council.
If in the opinion of Government, the number
of servants employed by a Local Council under
sub-section (1) or the remuneration fxed for any
of them, is excessive, the Local Council shall on
being required by Government to do so, reduce
the number of its servants or the remuneration of
any of them, as the case may be.
23
24
Organogram of Secretariat of Local Council Board
11
Actual position of the available PUGF staff
12
Secretary LGE&RDD/
Chairman LCB
Secretary
Local Council Board
Admin
Offcer
B-17
Account
Offcer
B-17
Admin
Offcer
B-17
Admin
Offcer
B-17
Admin
Offcer
B-17
Admin Offcer
Architect
B-18
Deputy
Director (IT)
B-18
Deputy
Secretary
B-18
Deputy
Secretary
(Regualtion)
B-18
Deputy
Secretary
(Accounts)
B-18
Deputy
Secretary
(Admin)
B-18
Deputy
Secretary
(Training)/
Director
(LGS) B-19
BPS Total Posts Existing / flled up
19 17 15
18 10 07
17 82 65
16 60 55
11 80 58
Total 249 200
i. Administration Cadre
11
This Organogram is provided by LCB, LGE&RDD.
12
This data is provided by LCB, LGE&RDD.
BPS Total Posts Existing / flled up
18 18 10
17 85 68
16 47 46
11 190 95
Total 340 219
BPS Total Posts Existing / flled up
18 9 6
17 8 1
16 35 33
11 67 43
Total 119 83
ii. Engineering Cadre
iii. Accounts Cadre
Total Number of Provincial Unifed Group of Functionaries (PUGF) posts= 708
Total Number of Existing /Filled up PUGF posts = 502
25
1.20 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Reform Programme and
Capacity Building of FATA Secretariat
Summary
13
Oxford Policy Management (OPM) has been
contracted by DFID to design and implement
a programme of governance reform for the
Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province
(GoKP) and the Federally Administered Tribal
Areas (FATA) Secretariat of Pakistan. The 8.3m
governance programme is enhancing GoKP and
FATA-S capacities to design and deliver effective
and sustainable public services. The programme has
delivered improvements in the following areas, all of
which are now being implemented by government:
i. Public fnancial management
A Macro-Fiscal model to enable government
to test revenue fow assumptions and their
implications for the budget over the medium-
term.
A Medium Term Budgeting Framework, including
the introduction of a Budget Strategy Paper
as part of the regular budget cycle to provide
the a basis for strategic consideration of policy
priorities relative to the resources available.
Performance Based Budgeting at department-
level, linking resources directly to service delivery
outputs and outcomes.
Improved engagement with civil society
on budgetary issues. This has involved the
involvement of external stakeholders in pre-
budget workshops, as part of the budget
prioritisation and preparation process.
Audit of government payroll and pensions,
13
http://www.opml.co.uk/news-publication/nwfp-provincial-reform-programme-and-capacity-building-support-federally-administer
26
achieving real recoverable savings for government.
ii. Human Resource Management
Revision of Job Descriptions for senior
government employees across all departments
of the provincial government, as a basis for
improving effciency and accountability, and
development of a toolkit to enable government
to review job descriptions on an on-going basis.
Review and revision of HR information
systems in response to the future needs of the
administration.
Development of a Training Strategy for the
Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and
FATA-Secretariat.
iii. Policy and Planning
Preparation of a multi-year Comprehensive
Development Strategy (CDS) that presents
governments vision for the future of the
province, covering all areas of government policy
and programmes.
Linked to the CDS, development of an Economic
Growth Strategy targeting the need for growth
and economic development in the Province.
Establishment of a Strategic Planning Unit
within the centre of government to support the
formulation of strategies and policies, and their
implementation and monitoring.
Preparation of an Annual Strategy Review
process looking at the strategic alignment between
provincial policy and budgetary allocations.
Preparation of a detailed functional and
organisational reform plan for the Planning
and Development Department to strengthen
the policy and planning functions within the
administration.
iv. Monitoring and Evaluation
Design of an M&E framework, including
organisational reforms, to monitor policy and
budget implementation across the administration.
The M&E framework is being implemented,
including the preparation of regular quarterly
M&E reports, and a three-year Evaluation Plan.
Support to government in the involvement of
civil society and communities in the assessment
of public service delivery impacts and results.
Establishment of capacity to monitor capital
expenditures within the Annual Development
Programme.
For FATA
Support to FATA-Secretariat, with a focus on
harmonising donor support behind the FATA
development plan, resource management capacity
to track government and donor resources to avoid
duplication and Public Finance Management to better
align budgets behind development priorities.
1.21 Conclusion
The study mainly provides the conceptual
understanding of the civil service in Pakistan.
Administrative Reforms of 1973 abolished all classes
among the civil servants, merged all services and cadres
into a single unifed graded structure and prohibited
the use of service labels. The three unifed grades
were created under the new rules (framed on the basis
of Civil Servants Act, 1973) which continue to this
day, namely All Pakistan Unifed Grades (APUG,
Federal Unifed Grades (FUG) and Ex-Cadre
Offcers (BPS-17) and above. The subordinate staff
of BS-l to BS-16 are ministry/division/department-
specifc employees with the exception of Subordinate
Accounts Service (SAS) personnel who are routinely
posted across ministries/divisions/departments.
The study also conceptualises the constitutional and
regulatory mechanism relating to the civil service in
Pakistan and highlights the Acts promulgated by the
four federal units, which regulate the appointment
and terms of service of provincial civil servants. In
addition, the study mentions the Local Government
Structure at the Federal, Provincial, District, Tehsil
and Union Council Levels. In addition, the study
encapsulated the PMS rules and Provincial Reform
Program for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
CHAPTER 2
Training of Civil Servants in
Pakistan
2.1 Introduction
If you believe there is no possibility of change,
you guarantee there is no possibility of change.
- Noam Chomsky
Training is defned as the skill, knowledge, or
experience acquired by one that trains
14
.
Underdeveloped countries have had to face the
opposite problem with their civil services. After
the World War-II, many such countries became
independent before they had developed effective
administrative structures or bodies of trained civil
servants. Few of the colonial powers had trained
indigenous administrators suffciently. The British left
a viable administrative structure in India and a partly
Indianised civil service, but the newly independent
Pakistan had few experienced civil servants. Civil
servants from the old colonial powers often found
new masters uncongenial. The resulting exodus
of many such civil servants worsened matters, for
indigenous civil servants were seldom an adequate
substitute
15
.
The need for fundamental reforms in the
administrative machinery of Pakistan was expressed
in the First Five Year Plan (1955-60) in these words:
The defects as well as the merits of the existing
administrative system stem largely from the fact
that it is a heritage from a colonial power, which
reared upon certain indigenous institutions, a super-
structure adapted to the needs of ruling subject
country. The combination yielded a system of Public
Administration admirably suited to the requirements
of a government engaged largely in the primary
functions of collection of revenue, administration
of justice, and maintenance of law and order. Under
the stress of social and economic change, some
alternations were made in this system from time to
time, but, fundamentally and broadly, the methods
and outlook of the public service, the tasks they
performed, and the procedures they followed
remained unchanged. The inevitable result has been
that, with the independence and the shift of emphasis
from regulating the life of the community to positive
action for promoting its welfare, the system has
become outdated and seriously inadequate. (First Five
Year Plan, P. 91)
With this fve year plan, the need for pre-entry
and in-service training of civil servants and Public
Administration education at the university level was
recognised. The United States, under its technical
assistance programme, extended elaborate help to
Pakistan in setting up various Public Administration
education and training institutions. By the mid-1960s,
the following Public Administration educational and
training institutions were fully operational:
Department of Public Administration, University
of Punjab, Lahore.
Administrative Staff College, Lahore for training
of senior offcers.
The Civil Service Academy of Pakistan.
Finance Offcers Training Academy.
The Academies for Village Development.
National Institutes of Public Administration in
Lahore and Dacca for training of Mid-career civil
servants (Second Five Year Plan)
16
.
For the past many years, Pakistan has experienced a
steady decline in governance including poor delivery
of public services like education, health and water
supply and sanitation. In the search of explanations
for this unacceptable state of affairs, questions have
also been raised about the quality of education and
the training institutions for the executives and lower
cadres delivering these services. One of the reasons
for low quality of public service delivery is the lack
of quality training institutions, despite the fact that
training had always been part of the system.
The government nominates trainees for various
courses and the institutions simply accept and train
them. In the public sector training institutions the
physical infrastructure was found to be good. There
are not many institutions which have a Curriculum
Development Approach. Only the National School
of Public Policy (NSPP) has moved in this direction.
14
Training is also the act, process, or method of one that trains. For more defnitions on training, please see: http://www.merriam-webster.
com/dictionary/training
15
Public Administration, For more information, please visit:
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/482290/public-administration/36937/Developing-nations
16
Jadoon M.Z. I & Jabeen .N . Public Administration Education in Pakistan: Issues, Challenges and Opportunities. Pakistan Vision Vol. 11
No. 1. Available at: http://pu.edu.pk/images/journal/studies/PDF-FILES/Artical%20No-6.pdf
27
Most other public sector training institutions do
not have this incentive. The NSPP has formulated
a strategy to overcome this dichotomy. All offcers
selected for public service have a certain level of
education but lack training.
The training institutions, in general, have been
failing to address the development requirements of
the country, and with the exception of the National
School of Public Policy, they lack the appropriate
faculty and infrastructure necessary to turn executives
with a generalist education background into effective
deliverers of public services. As a matter of fact,
there is lack of a vision for translating development
agenda into the training programmes of the executive
offcials. There is no clear national policy and the
training institutions have deteriorated, in general.
These offcials must follow a set course of action laid
down in rules of business, with a spirit of service
instilled in them by sound training institutions. Their
task is to achieve desired results sometimes in the
absence of adequate information and in extremely
controversial situations requiring neutrality. Their
actions affect a large number of people. Therefore,
the public servant requires calibre, knowledge and
a proper skill set. These skills affect the quality of
government, delivery system and cost of running
business. Good governance and sound institutions
are important to induce behavioural and structural
change in the fabric of the society.
There are 24 training institutions under various
Ministries that are engaged in training of civil
servants of all kinds. An equal number of training
and skill up-gradation institutions exist, which mainly
cater to ex-cadre public servants. The baseline for
training of civil servants in Pakistan draws attention
to a critical set of gaps on the supply side, more in
terms of software than hardware
17
.
17
Tahir. P, Saleem. N, Bashir. S(2009). Baseline Research on Executive Education in Pakistan. Governance Institutions Network
International, Islamabad.
The purpose of the study is to provide succinct
information on the overall framework of training
of civil servants in Pakistan at the federal,
provincial and local Levels and to identify gaps
in training, highlights common courses in all
training programmes and suggest practical
NCGR recommendations for improving training
framework in Pakistan.
2.2 Purpose
The study mainly relies upon qualitative data.
The research has also been based on the authors
previous experience with the National School of
Public Policy in Balochistan and Punjab Provinces
of Pakistan. For the preparation of this study,
secondary data of training institutions websites and
signifcant literature on the training of civil servants
in Pakistan has been meticulously scrutinised. The
unit of analysis included both individuals as well as
public sector organisations. Succinctly, the study is
the frst of its kind describing the training of civil
servants at the federal, provincial and local levels in
the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, to the best
of authors knowledge.
2.4 Methodology
The study has following objectives:
To understand the historical perspective of training
of civil servants in Pakistan.
To theoretically discuss various levels of trainings
in Pakistan
To provide overall framework under which the
training of civil servants operates in Pakistan.
To provide gaps in trainings of civil servants at the
federal, provincial and local levels.
To identify common courses in all training
programmes.
To provide concrete NCGR recommendations for
pertaining to training of civil servants in Pakistan.
2.3 Objectives
28
2.5 Training Levels
Management training for civil servants takes three
main forms:
i. Pre-Service Training
ii. In-Service Training and
iii. Foreign Training.
Pre-Service training
The pre-service training is arranged at the time of
induction in job. A general type of training, it has
a very important role in attitudinal development of
the public servants. In the past, it hardly translated
into specifc public service delivery. For the executive
offcers in BS-17, those who have qualifed CSS, pre-
service training includes:
Common Training Programme (CTP) and
Specialised Training Programme (STP).
CTP is for Grade-17 offcers appointed as
probationers to the Central Superior Services (CSS) at
the Civil Service Academy (CSA), Lahore. The CSA
also holds a 20-week STP for District Management
Group probationers.
In-Service training
National Management Course (NMC): Two
highest level courses annually for federal and
provincial government servants in BS-20.
Successful completion required for promotion.
Senior Management Course (SMC): Two strategic
management level courses annually for federal and
provincial government servants BS-19. Successful
completion required for promotion.
National Institutes of Management (Lahore,
Karachi, Peshawar, Islamabad and Quetta):
Mid-Career Management Courses for Grade-18
offcers are mandatory for promotion.
In-Service training is offered at Secretariat
Training Institute (STI):
In-Service Training for direct recruits and
promoted offcers: Pakistan Provincial Services
Academy (PPSA):
Training for provincial service offcers of the four
provinces and for offcers and staff of federal
autonomous bodies. Punjab & Sindh have now
also made their own arrangements.
Pakistan Academy for Rural Development
(PARD) Peshawar-In-Service 8 weeks training
on selected issues for federal and provincial
government offcers.
National Defence College (NDC) also provides
training to selected Civil Servants.
Foreign Training
Presently participation in foreign training courses
funded by foreign governments/agencies or by
Government of Pakistan has no linkage with an
offcers career advancement or progression. Public
servants have to go for training at various levels
18
.
Generally, individual ministries or divisions arrange
trainings in foreign universities and institutes. Under
the World Bank-fnanced Public Sector Capacity
Building (2004- 2009), BPS-17-19 grade offcers were
sent abroad to attain masters degrees in relevant
disciplines, while BPS-20-21 grade offcers attended
Harvard Universitys Kennedy School of Government
under the Executive Development Programme
19
.
Under Technical Assistance Programmes, Economic
Affairs Division receives, processes and coordinates
various offers of trainings, scholarships and
opportunities to participate in international seminars
and conferences. These facilities aim at capacity
building, human resource development and enabling
Pakistan to participate in international events and
present its position
20
.
At the provincial level, the Planning and Development
Department of the Province coordinates the
nominations, fnalizes the participant list and sends it
to the Economic Affairs Division.
According to Pakistan Institute of Development
Economics survey, majority of the civil servants
gave the answer that foreign training is superior
to domestic training. The three major reasons for
the superiority of foreign training, according to
respondents, include better methodology, richer
content and better instructors.
18
ibid
19
Reforming Pakistans Civil Service (2010): International Crisis Group, Asia Report N185 - 16February 2010Islamabad/Brussels.
20
Foreign Trainings. http://www.ead.gov.pk/gop/index.php?q=aHR0cDovLzE5Mi4xNjguNzAuMTM2L2VhZC9mcm1EZXRhaWxzL
mFzcHg%2Fb3B0P W5ld3MmaWQ9NQ%3D%3D
29
2.6 Federal Ministry of Education and Training, Government of Pakistan
21
In the wake of 18th Amendment in the Constitution
of Pakistan, the concurrent list stands abolished.
Subjects of Education, Labour & Manpower, Social
Welfare, Special Education, Culture & Tourism,
Youth affairs and Health no longer remain within the
purview of the Federal Government. However, Entry
16 of Part I of Federal legislative list envisages that
professional and technical training is the responsibility
of the Federal Government. Therefore, the Federal
Agencies and Institutes imparting professional and
technical training and research have been retained by
the Federal Government so that training, research,
career planning and regulation of professionals
may be given a focused attention. Accordingly, the
Ministry of Professional and technical Training was
constituted with the responsibilities to plan, supervise
and coordinate professional, vocational and technical
training in the country and to pay focused attention
to this important task for the beneft of the people
of Pakistan. Ministry of Professional and technical
Training is renamed as Ministry of Education and
Training vide Cabinet Divisions Memorandum
No.4-10/2011-Min.I dated 24th July, 2012.
Vision
Making Pakistan a developed and prosperous
country by attaining full potential of its citizens,
through demand driven training.
Mission
Planning, coordinating and directing efforts to
provide quality professionals and skilled technicians
through dynamic and standardized training.
The Ministry will endeavour to make available an
integrated national pool of highly trained manpower,
in consonance with indigenous needs of socio-
economic development, leading to transform Pakistan
from a developing to a developed nation.
Functions of The Ministry
i. Policy, Plans and Programmes for ensuring mass
education and integrated professional, vocational
and technical training in sync with national needs
and international standards.
ii. Proposal for legislation, rules and code of
conduct for offcial business concerning
education, professional development, skill
development and trainings.
iii. To make proposals/ recommendations for
increased public expenditure on mass education,
professional development and vocational &
technical training.
iv. To administer and regulate the affairs of the
following attached departments, sub ordinate
offces and autonomous organizations
National Vocational & Technical Training
Commission (NAVTTC).
Akhtar Hameed Khan National Centre for
Rural Development (AHK NCRD).
National Training Bureau (NTB).
Pakistan Manpower Institute (PMI).
National Talent Pool (NTP).
Academy of Education Planning & Management
(AEPAM).
Federal Board of Intermediate and Secondary
Education (FBISE).
National Commission for Human Development
(NCHD).
National Education Foundation (NEF/BECS).
National Education Assessment System (NEAS).
National Internship Programme (NIP).
Higher Education Commission (HEC).
Pakistan National Commission for UNESCO
(PNCU).
Youth Centres and Hostels.
v. Promote, Coordinate, Regulate and facilitate
education/ certifcates professional development,
trainings and skill development.
vi. To nominate/recommend award of suitable
national honours for eminent persons in the
professional and technical training felds.
vii. To coordinate with other ministries/
organisations for optimal utilization of
21
Ministry of Education and Training, Introduction. For further information, please visit: http://moptt.gov.pk
30
2.7 Federal Government Training Institutions
National School of Public Policy (NSPP)
22
The National School of Public Policy is a prestigious
institution for training of civil servants in Pakistan. It
aims at building their capacity for undertaking tasks
of policy formulation and implementation at tactical,
operational and strategic levels. This is achieved in an
environment of intellectual freedom so as to generate
in them an investigative urge, spirit of rational
enquiry and a genuine desire to seek knowledge.
The overarching aim of the NSPP is to improve
the quality and effectiveness of public policies and
management in Pakistan, by improving the quality of
pre-service and in-service training and education of
all those engaged in Public service.
Under the umbrella of National School of Public
Policy, training at various levels is imparted at
its integral and constituent units, i.e. from initial
induction of Grade-17 level to strategic policy level
for Grade-20 offcers.
i. Initial Common Training Programme (CTP) is
conducted at Civil Services Academy (CSA), which
is followed by a Special Training Programme (STP)
at respective departments training institutions.
ii. Next is the Mid-Career Management Course
(MCMC) for Grade-18 level, which is of tactical
level and is held at National Institutes of
Management (NIMs) at Lahore, Karachi, Quetta,
Peshawar and Islamabad.
iii. Grade-19 offcers are put through Senior
Management Course (SMC), focusing primarily
on the operational level, at Senior Management
Wing of the National Management College
(NMC).
iv. Finally, Grade-20 offcers attend the strategic
policy level course, National Management Course
(NMC), at National Management Wing of the
National Management College. This progressive
training structure affords opportunity to trainees
to gradually develop their capabilities from tactical
to strategic levels.
Scope
To further expand to include education and research
functions. The idea has been conceived with the
objectives of:
Improving and building upon the existing structure
of public sector training institutions.
Upgrading the skill/capacity of public service
to meet the demands of a modernising and
progressive state.
Providing mechanism for induction of the needed
skills, where/when such skills are not available,
particularly at the higher policymaking level.
Vision
To be a recognised center of excellence for the study
of public policy, management and related research
and analysis, so as to improve the quality of decision
making and its effective implementation in the
governance of Pakistan.
22
For detailed information on the National School of Public Policy, its integral units, its constituent units, training courses etc. Please visit
http://www.nspp.gov.pk/
professionals and trained manpower
viii. International aspects of education and trainings
including liaison with donors, international
partners and collaborators.
ix. To coordinate scholarships/ fellowships/
trainings and international assistance in
professional, vocational and technical courses
x. To maximize dividends from the demographic
transition in the coming years, through providing
required skills
xi. To maintain a data bank of highly qualifed and
skilled professionals & technicians, through
National Talent Pool
xii. To facilitate and provide trained and skilled
manpower in consultation with public and
private stakeholders
31
Mission
To improve the quality and effectiveness of public
policies and management in Pakistan, by improving
the quality of pre-service and in-service training and
education of all those engaged in public service.
The institution also aims at progressive personality
development so as to foster an attitudinal change
that motivates the trainees to work for public interest
which would catalyze socio-economic development,
create and deliver public value and win public trust.
Main Functions
To provide for instruction, tuition, training, research,
demonstration and service in such branches and
disciplines of Public Administration, Public Policy,
Law, Economics, Finance, Management Sciences and
any other relevant discipline as the Board may, from
time to time, determine.
To introduce, suspend or abolish any of the
disciplines or to establish and support other facilities
for education, training and research.
To formulate and prescribe courses of study and
training.
To determine teaching methods and strategies as well
as co-curricular activities in order to ensure the most
effective educational and other related programmes.
To design and organise training courses, workshops
and such other activities in the relevant felds.
To provide pre-service and in-service training to
undertake research, consultancy and advisory services.
To prescribe criteria and conditions of admission and
examination of student.
To admit and examine students and to determine and
charge fees and other charges.
To develop standards, conduct examinations and
to award Degrees, Diplomas, Certifcates and other
academic distinctions to persons who have been
admitted to and have passed its examinations under
prescribed conditions.
To serve as a research institute for the Federal
Government on matters of public policy and to
advise the Federal government on such policy matters
as are referred to it
To do such other acts and things, as may be considered
necessary in order to advance the objects of the
School under this Ordinance.
BOG
Rector
Academic Council
Executive Committee
Integral Units Constituent Units
National Institute of Public Policy
Executive Development Institute
National Management College
Headed by the President
NIM
Lahore
NIM
Karachi
NIM
Peshawar
NIM
Quetta
NIM
Islamabad
CSA
Other Civil Training Institutions
Under Federal Government
Renamed: National Institute of Management (NIMs)
Organogram of National School of Public Policy
32
Training Courses at NSPP
Executive Development Course BS-21 & above
National Management Course (NMC) BS-20
Senior Management Course (SMC) BS-19
Mid-Career Management Course (MCMC)
BS-18
Specialised Training Programme (STP) for DMG
BS-17 at Civil Services Academy, Lahore
Common Training Programme (CTP) BS-17
Executive Development Institute (EDI)
The Executive Development Institute (EDI) of the
NSPP is engaged in capacity building and training of
public leaders and senior executives of the private
and public sector to help meet challenging public
policy issues of the country. Executive Development
Programmes at EDI envision encompassing major
areas of Public Policy. It seeks to meet the learning
needs of senior leaders of public and private sector
engaged in legislature, law, business, executive,
industry, journalism and academia, through dynamic
lectures from high quality speakers and the faculty,
case studies, and small group interactions, to enhance
their contribution to the national debate and real
understanding of the current issues.
Programme Objectives
Programmes at Executive Development Institute aim
at enhancing understanding of the senior executives
of the public and private sector in the realm of
policymaking and its implementation. It is to optimise
their effectiveness as leaders, and to prepare them for
their future responsibilities and new management
roles. The Executive Leadership Programmes
sensitise them to manage changes at the policy level
in the renewed organisational restructuring.
Curriculum
Through free interaction of the major actors of Public
Policy formulation, Programmes and workshops
explore the essential factors of Public Policy, to
envisage new dimensions and solutions in a changing
world environment and Pakistan so as to work out
better methodology of implementing and to position
them for future responsibilities. Each programme will
include a mix of the following areas, as appropriate.
Participant Mix
These Programmes are especially designed for
senior civil servants (BS-21 & above), members of
legislatures (Senators, MNAs, MPAs), Judges of the
High Courts & Session Judges, leading industrialists/
Businessmen, senior members of Legal community,
Media and Academia.
National Management Course (NMC)
The aim of the National Management Course is to
enable senior offcers of the Federal and Provincial
Civil Services, friendly countries (allied participants),
armed forces and senior executives from the private
sector to understand factors bearing on formulation
and implementation of public policy, with a view to
preparing them for assignments at national policy
level.
Scope
Sensitise the participants to concepts and issues
in modern statecraft and public policy; and to
the methodology and processes of public policy
formulation; and enhance their abilities to think
strategically and appreciate how various factors,
internal as well as external, impinge upon the policy
process.
Sensitise the participants to concepts and issues
in modern statecraft and public policy; and to
the methodology and processes of public policy
formulation; and enhance their abilities to think
strategically and appreciate how various factors,
internal as well as external, impinge upon the policy
process.
Enhance participants understanding of geo-
political and geo-economic trends in a globalising
world and;
Identify challenges and opportunities for Pakistan;
analyse determinants of foreign policy and major
international issues and their impact on Pakistan;
and establish linkages between domestic and
international compulsions for Pakistan, enabling
the participants to give rational inputs for
formulation of a pragmatic policy framework.
Enhance participants comprehension of strategic
economic concepts and issues in a globalising
world, enabling them to provide inputs for
formulating and implementing viable and pragmatic
economic policies to meet challenges of growth
33
and development.
Enable the participants to comprehend and deal
effectively with strategic issues of Public Finance
and Financial Management in Pakistan.
Enhance understanding of the participants
in concepts relating to strategic management,
leadership and issues in governance and their
inter-relationship in public policy formulation and
implementation.
Enable participants to undertake policy related
research and analysis as an input for policy
formulation
Through Inland Study Tours, add to participants
knowledge of practical problems and issues of
public policy formulation, implementation and
governance; and through Foreign Study Tours,
gain knowledge about public policy planning and
formulation processes of selected countries.
Encourage co-curricular activities, particularly
sports and cultural events.
Senior Management Course (SMC)
Aim
Enhance knowledge; and improve their attitudes,
skills and leadership ability. Develop skills and
methods of public policy implementation, improved
service delivery and operationalsing policy/strategy at
all government levels. Develop skills for evaluating/
monitoring the implementation of operational plans
to provide feedback for their timely mid-course
corrections.
Scope
Familiarise the participants with the national
environment so as to understand the interplay of
external and internal dynamics and their infuence
on governance in Pakistan.
Develop participants understanding of the
diversity in Pakistani society (sociocultural values,
beliefs and attitudes) and its relevance to policy
implementation and governance.
Provide in-depth knowledge of governance and
administrative structures of Pakistan along with
relevant policy processes and implementation
strategies.
Enable the participants to apply concepts
and techniques of management, operational
and technical implementation in the Pakistani
environment.
Enhance participants comprehension about
operationalising economic policies at the micro
level and familiarise them with macro-economic
factors that infuence economic management and
its future trends.
Equip participants with research and analytical
skills for enhanced performance on the job.
Through study tours, expose the participants to
issues and practical problems of the Pakistani
society and state along with impact of various
policies and management practices on the people
of Pakistan.
Facilitate participants good health and introduce
variety in their course routine through co-curricular
activities.
Mid-Career Management Courses (MCMC)
Mid-Career Management Courses (MCMC) are being
conducted in National Institute of Management
(NIM) in Lahore, Peshawar, Quetta, Karachi and
Islamabad.
NIM Lahore
After the inception of National School of Public
Policy (NSPP), the erstwhile NIPA Lahore
became the Senior Management Wing of National
Management College Lahore for conducting the
Senior Management Course for BS-19 offcers at
one locale. The need for conducting Mid-Career
Management Course for BS-18 offcers at Lahore was
felt and also for utilising facilities available at Executive
Development Institute which were remained pending
to utilise/run Public Policy Workshops for senior
political, bureaucratic and civil society leaders due to
prevailing environment. The frst MCMC at Executive
Development Institute, Lahore commenced on 8th
June, 2009 with intake of 46 participants.
NIM Karachi
The National Institute of Public Administration
(NIPA) was established in 1961, in Karachi as an
autonomous government organisation under the
Establishment Division. Prior to its merger with
NSPP, this institute conducted 82 Advanced Courses
for Public Sector Management (ACPSM). These
days it is playing a pivotal role in training of the civil
34
servants of BS-18, and conducts MCMC course with
a vision to Introduce excellence in public service
delivery through capacity building and inculcation
of skills and values essential for good governance.
A host of facilities await the participants which
include the computer laboratory, sports, gymnasium,
telephone, internet, E-mail, fash-drives, postal
arrangement, laundry, medical, mosque, transport
and car-park, etc.
NIM Peshawar
The campus comprises of all the training facilities
including, auditorium, library, computer labs, etc.
Allied facilities such as hostels, cafeteria, guest-houses,
residences, mosque, dispensary, sports complex
are also available for participants and offcers. All
model classrooms with state-of-the-art facilities have
been separately set-up for Mid-Career Management
Course. Hostel rooms have been renovated recently
with air-conditions and attached bathroom facilities
along with a PC with internet connection in each
room. All physical facilities are jointly shared by three
institutions, i.e. National Institute of Management,
Pakistan Academy for Rural Development and
Pakistan Provincial Services Academy in the most
cost effective manner. This feature makes it a unique
training complex, housing three training institutes
of diverse, yet compatible training programmes.
The main library is jointly used by these institutions
and is collectively supported by them for its physical
infrastructure, collection of books, development,
services and facilities.
NIM Quetta
Establishment Division, Government of Pakistan,
approved National Institute of Public Administration
(NIPA), Quetta in March 1980. The Institute started
functioning at Quetta in 1987, in a rented building at
the Airport Road. During the last 20 years, the NIM-
Quetta has conducted 38 Advanced Courses in Public
Sector Management and a number of short courses
with participants numbering 1,925. A need was felt to
establish an independent campus of NIM-Quetta. A
7-acre plot on Sumungli Road, Quetta, was acquired
for the construction of NIPA Quetta Complex. It
comprises Academic and Administration blocks, an
Auditorium for 450 persons, two Hostels (3x17 each)
having 100 fully furnished single-rooms, a residential
block for the offcers and staff of NIM, dispensary,
mosque, squash courts and a gymnasium.
The NIM-Quetta will be the only self-suffcient
and high standard, civil service training institute in
Balochistan once the complex is completed
NIM Islamabad
For operational purposes, National Centre for
Rural Development (NCRD) has been attached as
Constituent Unit of NSPP to conduct Mid-Career
Management Course (MCMC) for BS-18 offcers
who are likely to be promoted to BS-19.
Civil Services Academy, Lahore
The Civil Services Academy was established in 1948
for the training of fresh entrants to the Pakistan
Administrative Service (PAS). Since then, it has
undergone many changes in organisational structure
and location. After the Administrative Reforms
of 1973, it was decided to organise a Common
Training Programme (CTP) for all fresh entrants to
various Central Superior Services (CSS) (renamed as
Occupational Groups). Presently, the Academy has
one campus at Walton, which is used exclusively for
the CTP. The other Campus, located at Shahrah-e-
Quaid-i-Azam, is used for the Specialised Training
Programme (STP) of the District Management
Group (DMG) probationers.
Civil Services Academy - Walton Campus, Lahore
The aim of the CTP is to transform the college
students into civil servants, to enable them to perform
their duties judiciously, effectively and economically
in accordance with the law. This fundamental rigorous
training is imparted with the objective:
To promote harmony amongst the probationary
offcers belonging to various regions and federal
service of Pakistan.
To facilitate an understanding of the social,
political, economic, administrative and national
security related issues that confront Pakistan.
To equip the probationary offcers with basic
knowledge and administrative skills required for
their future responsibilities.
To sensitise the probationary offcers about the
need for integrity, discipline and effectiveness
for optimisation of public value and providing
improved service delivery to the people, particularly
the poor and the disadvantaged.
To enable the probationary offcers to play their
35
role as future leaders within the Civil Service of
Pakistan.
National Defence Course
The National Defence Course is one of the
most prestigious courses being offered for senior
level offcers in the country. Although not as
comprehensive in terms of subject coverage as the
National Management Course being offered at the
National Management College, the NDC comprises
the basic subjects which are essential for training in
public policy formulation.
Participants
There are four categories of participants in the
NDCserving Military offcers (Brigadier rank or
equivalent), civil servants (Grade-20 equivalent),
Allied offcers (military offcers from friendly
countries), and private sector participants.
Syllabus
The core subjects include Comprehensive National
Security (including economic security, food security,
energy security, water security, human security,
strategic assets security, border security, internal
security, etc.), Public Policy Formulation and
Implementation and Governance. The focus is not
Defence but national security in the broadest sense.
Methodology
The methodology includes Lectures, Panel
Discussions, Seminars and Workshops, Syndicate
Discussions, Classroom activities, including Q &
A, Simulation Exercises, country-wide Internal
Study Tours, Foreign Study Tours, Thesis Writing
(Individual Research Paper) as a qualifying
requirement for the degree award, Group Research
Paper, and several other written as well as practical
assignments, requiring research, analysis and debate.
Source of Funding: Government of Pakistan
Faculty: High calibre facultyintegral as well as
visiting, including politicians, members of the
parliament, high ranking civil and military offcers,
retired members of the judiciary, strategic analysts,
business leaders, industrialists, agriculturists, media
persons, civil society representatives, university
professors, academicians, social workers, and foreign
visiting speakers. The NDU has a close liaison with
the NDU of the United States and holds regular
interactive sessions in which NDC participants take
part.
Curriculum Development
A regular Course Review is carried at the end of
each ND Course by the course participants. In
addition, external input is also utilised for curriculum
refnement. New topics are included each time as
the changed environment demands, and old and
redundant topics are excluded.
Profle of the Foreign Service Academy
The Foreign Service Academy (FSA) is the training
institution of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
Government of Pakistan. This is one of the several
Specialised Training Institutions (STIs), serving
specifc needs of various occupational groups in the
civil services. Since its establishment in September
1981, the Foreign Service Academy has organised
26 courses for young offcers of Foreign Service of
Pakistan (FSP), out of which 14 courses included
Foreign Service offcers from other countries. After
the extension of its activities, the Academy arranged
18 Advanced diplomatic courses for Mid-Career
African diplomats, 16 courses for diplomats from
Central Asian Republic (CAR), SAARC, African and
other countries, one for Afghan diplomats, one for
Iraqi diplomats and two for FSP Mid-Career offcers.
However, as far as Governance is concerned, the
Academy does not focus on it as its core subject. When
they were asked about their core focus area, it was
informed that Diplomacy and International Relations
are their central subjects as it is their specialised
training institutes for the Foreign Service of Pakistan.
Methodology: lectures discussion, presentations and
written exercises are the general method used in the
training methodology. The Foreign Service Academy
also conducts internal study tours as part of their
curriculum.
Profle of the Secretariat Training Institute (STI)
The STI was established in 1956 at Karachi as a part
of the Establishment Division. It still is an Attached
Department of Establishment Division in Islamabad.
The Institute plans and organises in-service and pre-
service training courses for the employees of the
Federal Government and its departments to enhance
the professional skills of the trainees by giving them
a thorough working knowledge of the Secretariat
Procedures and Practices. The pre-service training is
provided to the Probationary Offcers of the Offce
36
37
Management Group (OMG) and the Section Offcers
selected through Promotional Examination by the
FPSC or through the competitive CSS Examination.
Mandatory Course
The role of STI as a training Institute has been
expanded since the Government decision to impart
mandatory promotion related capacity building
programmes to offcers of OMG and Secretariat
Groups (BS-17 to BS-19).
Duration
The duration of this training is eight weeks for
the trainees on the promotional Exam but the
Establishment Division may change the duration
for the Probationers of the CSS (Competitive)
Examination.
Syllabus
The subjects of Specialized Training are Secretariat
Instructions, Rules of Business, Human Resource
Management, Service Laws & Rules, Secretariat
Noting & Drafting & Financial Rules & Budgeting
added with E-Government and Public Administration
courses. Like the FSA, the STI also does not have
Governance as it core subject.
Profle of the National Police Academy
The National Police Academy (NPA) was established
in 1978 with the Commandant having his offce in
Islamabad in a rented building and the training wing
with ASPs offcers Mess, 31 kilometres away at Soan
camp, the training left a lot to be desired. The National
Police Academy with meagre resources available could
barely train the ASPs, while very few courses were
offered to senior police managers due to dearth of
training facilities and lack of professional trainers. In
1989, the then government, appreciating the need for
a proper academy for the Police directed the planning
and construction of National Police Academy. Things
began to change in 1993 when the caretaker Prime
Minister, Mr. Moeen Qureshi, made an initial grant
of Rs5 million from his discretionary fund. Since
then there has been progressive improvement in its
curriculum and quality of training.
Syllabus
The subject which attracts most attention is internal
security and the operational methodology of
countering the internal threats. Terrorism has recently
been added as an important subject. However,
NPA too is a Specialised Training Institution, and
Governance as such does not fgure as its central
subject, though in the context of National Security it
gets some attention.
Profle of Governance & Public Policy Course at
Islamic University
Syllabus: The syllabus is in an evolving stage.
Governance, according to Dr. Ansari, is a concept
borrowed from the western theory and practice.
In Pakistan, its indigenous conceptualisation is
still not clear. In case, Rule of Law is taken as the
basis of effective Governance, Educational and
Training institutions are not clear whether they
should teach Shariah Law or the Constitutional Law
as the foundation for the Rule of Law. Even within
our constitution, according to Dr Ansari, there are
unresolved issues. The Objective Resolution, for
example, contradicts a few other provisions of the
constitution, which need to be resolved through an
open debate in the parliament. Policy Formulation
and Implementation is also an essential part of this
course. One critical topic taught in the curriculum is
the Element of Public Choice.
Methodology
This course also has Lectures and Panel Discussions,
Seminars and Workshops and written assignments.
Six Credit Hours are dedicated for Field Project.
Further, the methodology includes Policy Analysis,
where Equity, Effciency and E-Governance (IT),
identifcation of the problem and ability to fnd a
solution in the light of new knowledge are practiced.
Areas of Concern
Following areas of concern were highlighted in the
teaching of Governance and Public Policy:
i. As Rule of Law is non-existent, teaching
Governance is an activity in a vacuum. The system
is incorrect. Justice is not available to all on an
equal basis. To achieve values of good governance
in a coordinated way, we need Rule of Law frst.
The forum for ensuring Rule of Law is not the
Education and Training institutions, but the
Legislature. Till the legislators are not sensitised of
the need for justice and Rule of Law, Governance
will be taught only as a western theoretical precept
without any scope for its application in real life.
ii. Constitution-making itself is motivated by
need for concentration of power, and self-
perpetuation. Articulation of ideas and concepts
of Governance are neither defned nor are they
part of constitution-making.
iii. Curriculum needs to be redefned in the context
of Social Sciences, by keeping the idea of man
as a moral being, and not as an object to be
manipulated as in the western capitalist systems.
For this, the Legislature needs to be sensitised and
educated.
iv. Among the students, there is a general lack of
innovative ideas and the spirit of inquiry, which is
an outcome of our school system. Questions are
not encouraged and answers are not given right
from the primary school through the secondary
level education. This system focuses on producing
followers and not leaders, and hence Governance
remains only a theoretical construct with an acute
dearth of Governors.
Profle of Existing Legislatures Training
Programmes
Pakistan has a federal structure with a bicameral
legislature consisting of Senate and National
Assembly at the federal level and four Provincial
Assemblies. In addition, there are two special status
assemblies of Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan
23
.
Neither the executive nor the legislative branch
itself has put in place any formal training set up at
the offcial level. After every election though, ad hoc
orientation sessions are arranged for members. These
sessions focus largely on legislative procedure and
very little on the enormity of legislative business. A
formal training set up does not exist at the offcial
level. Since the restoration of the Parliament in 2003,
the non-government sector has attempted to fll this
void.
Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development
and Transparency (PILDAT)
The most prominent initiative is the Pakistan Institute
of Legislative Development and Transparency
(PILDAT). It works for strengthening democracy and
democratic institutions in Pakistan by building the
capability of and instituting non-partisan monitoring
framework for the elected representatives and
legislatures. Its mission is to strengthen democracy
and democratic institutions in Pakistan. PILDAT was
registered as a non-proft entity under the Societies
Registration Act XXI of 1860, Pakistan on September
19, 2002.
PILDAT has been actively engaged in building
the capabilities of elected Legislators towards a
better discharge of their functions of Legislation,
Representation and Oversight. Regular trainings/
briefngs workshops and sessions for Legislators
belonging to the National and Provincial Assemblies
as well as the Senate have been conducted. As a
non-partisan political research institution, PILDAT
regularly prepares well-researched briefng/
background papers and Case Studies for Pakistani
Parliamentarians, Parliamentary Staff and politicians
on crucial policy issues. The PILDAT State of
Democracy Report, the fagship publication of
PILDAT in its democracy watch programme,
carries an in-depth quarterly review of democratic
development for the local and international audience.
PILDAT also facilitates the formulation of issue-based
caucuses across parties in the Legislatures. Finally,
PILDAT sensitises the civil society organisations to
lobby effectively with legislators on policy related
issues, while the E-democracy programme looks at
ways and means to build better network between the
public and parliamentarians.
PILDAT works to strengthen democracy and
democratic institutions under the following
programmes.
Political Research Programme
In this area, political research is carried out in the
shape of Briefng Papers, Background Papers, Case
Studies, Reports and Directories for the beneft of
legislators, legislative staff, political parties, the media,
civil society organisations and the public.
Public Legislative Forum
The forum is a means to sensitise civil society and the
public to get involved in democratic decision making
and legislative issues and gauge and gather public
38
23
Gilgit Baltistan (formerly known as the Northern Areas) of Pakistan, is a self-governed region in the north of Pakistan. It is governed
through a representative Government and an independent judiciary.
For more information, please visit: http://www.gilgitbaltistan.gov.pk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=58&Itemid=1
39
input. Through this forum, opinions of various
sections of society are channelled to the Parliament
and Provincial Assemblies. It involves holding
of public discussion and dialogue on legislative
performance of the Parliament and Provincial
Assemblies and legislation under consideration or
passed by the legislatures.
Legislative Strengthening Programme for
Legislators and Legislative Staff
Through this programme, legislative capability-
building and strengthening efforts are made
using tools such as technical and policy issues-
based Briefngs, Training Workshops; Roundtable
Discussions and Legislative Study Tours.
Civil-Military Relations Programme
In the peculiar background of the political role played
by the military, this programme includes creation of
avenues of pluralistic political discourse and dialogue
on areas such as civil military relations. Major areas
under this programme include a Track-2 Civil-Military
Dialogue, efforts towards Parliamentary Oversight of
the Security Sector and sharing of International Case
Studies and Best Practices to achieve the objective.
Democracy Watch Programme
This programme ventures into its legislative
transparency focus areas. With a major quarterly
and annual publication on the State of Democracy
in Pakistan, the programme also places emphasis on
areas such as committee reports, proceedings, web
and Senate and Assemblies.
Political Parties Programme
Focused on strengthening political parties for
a strengthened democracy in the country, this
programme undertakes national and international
training and sensitisation of political party offce-
bearers and personnel, and provides avenues for
dialogue and briefngs in this regard.
Organisation and Funding
PILDAT is managed by a Board of Directors
and is advised by a Board of Advisors of eminent
persons of diverse backgrounds and specialisations.
It was founded through the seed money by a group
of overseas Pakistanis and has been supported by
British Council, DFID, UK, International Republican
Institute IRI, The Asia Foundation, World Bank,
UNDP and USAID.
Profle of Strengthening Democracy through
Parliamentary Development
This is actually a technical assistance project supported
by the United Nations Development Programme
and the Inter-Parliamentary Union. It focuses on
Parliamentarians orientation and staff training. It has
the following six components:
Improving the organisational structures of the
Secretariats of both Houses.
Strengthening legislative functions of Parliament
through enhanced lawmaking skills, improved
procedures and adequate staff support.
Strengthening procedures to promote more
effective oversight and legislative scrutiny by the
Senate and the National Assembly.
Improving parliamentary information services for
the Senate and the National Assembly, the media
and the public.
Improving the participation of women Members
in all activities of both Houses, ie, both the quality
and the frequency of their participation.
Strengthening mechanisms for regular and productive
interaction between civil society and the Parliament.
Parliamentarians Orientation
A large part of the work of SDPD is an orientation
programme for Members of Parliament. Many
Members come from a background of local politics
and need to gain knowledge and information to
become national legislators. Towards this purpose,
SDPD has held a large number of training sessions.
These are listed below.
S# Topic
1 Roundtable of Women Standing Development Committee with INGAD.
2 An Orientation Workshop For Honourable Parliamentarians On Gender Responsive Budgeting
Technical Training to Parliamentary Staff
SPDC is not just working with Parliamentarians: the project also provides technical training to Parliament staff.
The table below gives some of these trainings.
40
3 Analysis of Budget Document and Briefng Session for the MPs at the National Budget 2007-08.
4 Introductory Seminar on Legislative Drafting Skills for MPs held on 26th June, 2007
5 Launching Ceremony on Performance Report of National Assembly of Pakistan held on June 28,
2007
6 Why Democracy
7 Education Policy: Gaps and Lacunae
8 Parliamentary Procedures
9 Power of Positive Attitude & Motivational Leadership
10 Focus Group Discussion
11 Orientation Session for NEWLY ELECTED MNAs
12 Economic Challenges Confronting Pakistan Today
13 Importance of Parliamentary Research & Information Service
14 Parliament and the Sate in Pakistan: Case for Constitutional Reforms
15 Orientation Session on Budget and Gender Responsive Budgeting
16 Pre-Budget Meeting with Mr. Naveed Qamar
17 Role of Parliament in Budget Process
18 Draft Educational Policy
19 Land Reforms
20 Motivational Lecture for Parliamentarians
21 Personality & Communication for Leaders
22 Personality & Communication for Leaders
23 Personality & Communication for Leaders
24 Focus Group Discussion on Labour Policy
25 Focus Group Discussion on Housing Policy
26 Focus Group Discussion on Industrial Policy
27 Women Development Policy
28 7 habits of Highly Effective People (Franklin Covey)
29 Leadership and Management Skills of Effective People
30 Focus Group Discussion on Agriculture Policy
31 7 habits of Highly Effective People (Franklin Covey)
32 Senate Orientation
33 Parliament Orientation Programme on Poverty Reduction Strategy in Pakistan
34 Orientation Session on Parliament and International Agreements
35 Provincial Level Consultation on Six Policy Issues
S# Topic
1 Orientation of Staff on National Rules of Procedures.
2 Training Course on Communication & Writing Skills for the Parliamentary Staff
3 Effective Business Writing Skills*
4 Role of Research in Policy Formulation*
5 Teams Work*
6 Legislative Drafting
7 Offce Administration-I Day to Day Administration and Record Keeping
8 Air Travel Logistics for IPR (For National Assembly)
9 Quantitative Data Analysis
10 Offce Administration-II (Procurement/Purchase/Logistics Management)
11 Offce Administration-III (Offce Maintenance Management/Organising Work)
12 Enhancing Secretariat Skills
13 ESTACode Rules for the Establishment Branch
14 Travel Management
15 How to Develop an ACR for the Establishment Branch
16 Technical Report Writing Skills
17 Advance Offce Management Programme for Secretariat Staff
18 Offce Management Skills Secretariat for Parliament Staff
19 English Language & Report and Minutes Writing Skills
20 Leadership and Management Skills of Effective People
21 Protocol & Mannerism for the Secretariat Staff of the Parliament
Organisation and funding
The project management is led by a senior offcial
of the Senate Secretariat and includes a group of
professionals recruited from the non-government
sector. The main source of funding is the UNDP.
Profle of Institute of Business Administration
IBA was established in 1955 with initial technical
support provided by the Wharton School of Finance,
University of Pennsylvania; later, the University of
Southern California set up various facilities at the
Institute and several prominent American professors
were assigned to the IBA. In 1957, an Evening
Programme was started to cater to the needs of the
numerous working executives and managers who
were interested in furthering their careers through
part-time business studies.
Executive Education at the IBA
The Institute combines with its programme of formal
management education, an elaborate programme of
management training for executives and professionals.
These specialised programmes are conducted by the
newly established Centre for Executive Education
(IBA-CEE). The IBA-CEE provides opportunities to
executives working at different levels in organisations
to enhance their careers by gaining knowledge and
insight into state-of-the-art management techniques
and technologies. Executive Education Programme
consists of various training courses and workshops
that are organised and conducted by the distinguished
IBA faculty as well as industry leaders. Besides open
enrolment programmes, the Centre also offers client
specifc training to organisations on their request,
keeping in view their unique and distinct requirements.
41
Profle of Rausing Executive Development Centre
(REDC)
The Rausing Executive Development Centre
(REDC) under the aegis of Suleman Dawood School
of Business, Lahore University of Management
Sciences has conducted a wide range of executive
development programmes that have responded to the
development needs of managers and leaders. It was
supported by a donation of USD 2 million from the
Rausing family of Sweden.
REDC offers both Open-Enrolment and Client-
Specifc Programmes designed to suit the needs of
todays upwardly mobile managers. It is positioned
to prepare managers for new challenges through
close industry links, investment in national and
international case studies and a rigorous academic
focus. It gives managers an opportunity to enhance
their effectiveness and competitiveness of their
companies. REDC is a member of UNICON, The
International University Consortium for Executive
Education, which is an organisation of leading
business schools worldwide with a commitment to
executive education and management development.
Open enrolment programmes
Executive education is a critical tool for organisational
survival today. Our approach at REDC is to provide
new knowledge, competencies and techniques. Our
objective is to encourage participation with the
viewpoint that one is investing in their organisations
future. All programmes are intensive and offer
practical solutions.
At every phase in their careers, managers are faced
with a new realm of responsibility and confront a
unique set of challenges. REDCs Open-Enrolment
programmes are revised and updated each year to
ensure that they refect the latest in management
thinking and address the dynamic learning needs of
managers over the course of their careers. Our focus
is on more than just the dissemination of knowledge.
The concentration is on business situations and
decisions that participants face on a daily basis. The
Executive Education Experience liberates thinking,
transforms perspectives and allows an unparalleled
opportunity to rethink future directions at an
individual and organisational level.
Client-Specifc Programme
A Client-Specifc Programme is a learning experience
specially structured to challenge process of
managing as an individual and within the context of
organisation. It is a developmental tool to provoke
thinking differently and develop new perspectives
and capabilities.
Partnership Programmes
This programme recognises that there is no single
approach to the development of managers. Therefore,
apart from concise Client-Specifc Programmes,
REDC also provides organisations a forum through
which they may train and develop their managers
using a partnership approach. The essence of this
approach is to work closely with an organisation over
a longer period of time.
In fne, main Focus of Courses in public sector
institutions
Public Policy Formulation and Implementation,
Governance, Service Delivery, Management,
Leadership, Personality Grooming, Knowledge
Enhancement, Skill Development, Application of
Theory to Practice, Attitudinal Change.
42
2.8 The Management of Training and Selected Training Institutes of the Provincial
Departments in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Comprehensive Develop-
ment Strategy (2010 - 2017):
Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Vision:
Attainment of a secure, just and prosperous society
through socio-economic and human resource
development, creation of equal opportunities, good
governance and optimal utilization of resources in a
sustainable manner.
Following Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Departments are responsible for management of
trainings:
The Establishment & Administration Department:
As per Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province Government
Rules of Business, 1985, the Establishment and
Administration Department shall be responsible for
matters connected with the services matter relating
to recruitment, training, pay allowances, promotion,
leave, postings etc. of:
The Provincial Civil Service (Executive Group).
The Provincial Civil Service (Secretariat Group)
Services.
The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Management
Service; and
The Ministerial Establishment of the Provincial
Secretariat.
Planning and Development Department:
According to the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province
Government Rules of Business, 1985, the Planning
and Development has following responsibilities on
foreign trainings:
Coordination of technical assistance from abroad
including training facilities; expert advisory
services and equipment.
Coordination of training of Local Offcers and
private sector candidates in foreign countries.
Secretariat functions of the Provincial Selection
Committee for training abroad.
The departments in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
province have their own respective training institutes.
Details of selective training institutes are provided
below:
Local Governance School (LGS), Local
Government Elections and Rural Development
Department, Peshawar:
The Provincial Government in Local Government
Elections and Rural Development Department
has established a Training Institute in the name
of Local Government Training Institute Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa, under the Local Council Board
and headed by Deputy Secretary-IV (Training)
via notifcation NO.DS-T/LCB/1-1/2008 on
29/01/2008. Later the name Local Government
Training Institute was changed to Local Governance
School (LGE&RDD).
The main responsibilities of the institute are as under:
i. To conduct pre-service training/ refresher
course, seminars workshop etc;
ii. To coordinate all the capacity building activities
undertaken by thew Local projects and donor in
TMAs (now Municipal Committees) specifcally
within Local Government Department.
iii. To conduct training/orientation for the other
offcers serving in the Province regarding Local
Governance and Service Delivery.
Pakistan Provincial Services Academy (PPSA)
Peshawar:
24
The PPSA, Peshawar was established to impart pre-
service training to the probationary offcers of the
Provincial Civil Service cadre. Provincial Civil Service
offcers of all the four provinces of Pakistan viz the
Punjab, Khyber Paktunkhwa, Sindh and Balochistan
were being trained in the Academy. Governments
of Punjab & Sindh have now made their own
arrangements.
Staff Training Institute, Peshawar:
25
Training is the most deciding variable towards
improving administrative skills and organisational
capacity. Establishment and Administration
Department, not having a proper training wing to
look after the training needs of the supporting staff
24
Report of the National Commission for Government Reforms on reforming the Government in Pakistan, Vol-I, May 2008, National
Commission for Government Reforms, Prime Ministers Secretariat, Government of Pakistan Islamabad.
25
Introduction, please see: http://www.khyberpakhtunkhwa.gov.pk/Departments/STI/Introductions.php.
43
working in the Civil Secretariat, seriously felt that due
to a lack of training facility, the managerial effciency
and output quality in the offces is being deteriorating
day by day. On feeling that, much attention was
given to technical issues while little attention was
paid to the human resource potential, organisational
strengthening and institutional development in
the provincial government offces. It was decided
in the Secretaries Committee meeting held on 21st
May, 1992 to establish an Institute in the name of
Staff Training Institute to fulfl training needs of
government functionaries and evolve a policy matrix
taking into account the future needs, so as to improve
their professional skills and capacity and ultimately
enable them to perform their duties and functions
in order to achieve the desired objectives and
development of the Province and its people more
effciently, effectively and easily with confdence and
precision.
Subsequently, the PDWP, in its meeting held on 16th
January, 1993, approved a project Establishment
of Staff Training Institute in the Establishment
Department, Government of Khyber Paktunkhwa
, for a period of one and half year (i.e. up till June
1994) with an original cost of Rs4.530 million. The
Institute was initially designed to plan, organise and
conduct basic on the job training to the ministerial
staff, employed only in the Civil Secretariat. The
PDWP, however, observed that duration and scope of
the project would be enhanced, consequent upon an
evaluation of the performance of the Staff Training
Institute, to be conducted jointly by the Planning,
and Development Department, Finance Department
and Establishment & Administration Department
(ex-S&GAD). The project was housed at its present
premises in the Benevolent Fund Building in April
1993 to arrange, plan, design and conduct/impart
customised training courses, so as to strengthen and
improve the managerial and organisational capacity
and skills of the employees working in the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa, Civil Secretariat.
The achievements made by the Institute were
meticulously evaluated jointly by the representatives
of the Planning & Development Department,
Finance Department, Establishment &
Administration Department (i.e.S&GAD), Finding
the achievements/progress of the Institute up to the
mark, the PDWP accorded approval to extend the
project for another year, i.e. until 30th June, 1995,
with increased scope of work, at a cost of Rs.8.101
million. The scope of training at the Institute was thus
extended to the Offcers and Staff of the Attached
Departments, Divisional/District level Offces and
Autonomous & Semi-autonomous Bodies working in
the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Province and FATA.
Keeping in view the performance of the Institute
during the period and in order to streamline and
modernise the training and career planning functions
in the public sector on permanent footing, the
Provincial Government decided in 1995 to convert
the project from the development budget into
revenue/non-development budget and allowed the
project (i.e. Staff Training Institute) to continue its
activities as part and parcel of the Establishment &
Administration Department (i.e. ex- S&GAD).
The subjects being taught at the Institute directly
relate to the assigned duties of the participants,
according to their category/job specifcations.
Particular attention is being paid to the institutional
development and strengthening of organisation,
project planning & management, project monitoring
& evaluation and human resource management.
Due care is taken to highlight the humanitarian
aspect of the Civil Service and to inculcate a sense
of responsibility among the participants/trainees.
Of late, the subject of Human Rights has also been
added to the course contents. Presently the Institute
also imparts training in Information Technology/
computer courses on various topics for improving
the skills and capacity of the Government Employees
at all levels in the Province/ Fata.
Staff Training Institute, Establishment Department,
Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, consists of
two wings, i.e. Training Wing and Administration
Wing.
Technical Education and Manpower training
26
Technical Education has been known vital for the
progress and prosperity of a nation it is quite evident
in this era of Science and Technology that the
quantum of progress in Scientifc and Technological
pursuit has taken as an index of a nation, self-
suffciency prosperity and supremacy in the world.
26
http://www.khyberpakhtunkhwa.gov.pk/Departments/Technical-Education/index.php
44
If we have to progress it requires a very strong
base for quality Technical felds. So as to produce
adequately trained Technical Man Power in order
to supplement research and Development efforts,
Pakistan inherited very few Technical Institutions in
1947; this part of country (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa)
was particularly neglected. Council of Technical
Education of Pakistan started Functioning in
1947-1948 on the recommendation of this Council
initial steps were taken which laid the foundation
of Technical Education in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
However it was not before 1971 that a Full Fledged
Directorate of Technical Education was created by an
administrative order.
The Directorate of Manpower and Training was
component of Directorate of Labour welfare till May
1986,in June 1986 Separate Directorate of Manpower
and Training was established. The Directorate of
Technical Education Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has been
transferred from Education Department to industries
Department, as its attached department with effect
from 01.07.2001. Directorate of Technical Education
was renamed as Directorate of Technical Education
and Manpower Training after merger with Manpower
and Training on 09.02.2002.
At present beside Technical Teachers Training College
and Govt: Advance Technical Training Centre, 78
different institutions are imparting Commerce,
Technical Education and Vocational Training at
different level, under the Directorate of Technical
Education.
Another important segment of this Department is
Apprenticeship Training Wing promulgated under
Apprenticeship Ordinance 1962 under which an
employer undertakes to employ a person and to train
him or have him trained systematically in an apprentice-
able trade for a period the duration of which had
been fxed in advance and in the course of which the
apprentice is bound to work in the employers service.
This particular training programme is 100% practical
oriented and is successfully running.
Vision and Future Plan
No nation can progress without advancement in
Science and Technology and they can contribute
a lot not only to improve our standard of living
standard but will be the main source of security to
face the global threats. To make it success sustainable
development will be required. Technical Education
and Vocational Training is considered to be the
backbone of our economy and todays more emphasis
on this segment speaks itself. With the passage of
time Technical Education and Vocational Training is
rapidly changing and naturally it is need of the hour
to restructure TEVT system.
To achieve the objective the following measure are
important to be considered:
To focus on Competency Based Training (CBT).
Innovative technologies according to local needs.
To capable our pass-out to work in the industry
and market by removing mismatch tendency with
industry and local market.
To establish Polytechnic Institutions and
Commerce Colleges at every District Level.
To establish Vocational Training Centre at every
Tehsil Level.
As per policy of the Provincial Government, the
Directorate General Technical Education and
Manpower Training is keenly looking forward to
expand its facilities to nook and corner of Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa.
Apprenticeship Training Programme has a lot of
potential of employability and can play a vital role in
poverty reduction and more stress is being given to
this segment for maximum utilization of this facility
available at the door step of the Directorate refected
above.
Provincial Health Services Academy,
Health department, Government of Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa
27
The lack of capacity for service delivery and
management in the health sector started receiving due
to attention recently. Human Resource Development
was a major objective of the World Bank and Family
Health Project launched in 1992. Under this project
Provincial Health Services Development (PHDC)
and Divisional Health Development Center (DHDC)
were setup in the provinces for in-service and on-the-
27
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45
job training of all cadres of health personnel. The
government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has taken up
Health Human Resources Development as a critical
component of its on-going health Sector Reform
agenda. To sustain the capacity building initiative
of Family Health Project, after its winding up in
December 1999, the PHDC was raised to the status
of an Academy, named Provincial Health Services
Academy (PHSA) and notifed as an attached
department of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Department
of Health. Some pre-service and on the job training
and teaching institutions of the Deptt: of Health
have been attached administratively and fnancially to
the Academy.
Vision
The vision for the academy is to establish and develop
into an institution recognized nationally, regionally and
internationally, as a center of excellence for training
and capacity building in health services delivery
and management. The academy aspires to attain
the highest international standard in health systems
research and become a repository of all health related
information required for health policy and planning
for the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa specifcally
and Pakistan generally.
Objectives
General:
To increase capacity in the health care delivery system
of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa for Planning, Development,
Organization, and Management and in the felds of
Primary Health Care, Public Health, and Essential
National Health Research.
Specifc:
To plan, organize, coordinate, supervise, undertake
and monitor all in-service and on-the-job training
of health personnel of the Province of North
West Frontier, specifcally in Primary Health
Care, Public Health, Health System Research and
Health Planning, Development, Organization &
Management
To provide technical support to the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Deptt: of Health on health human
resource development, planning, organization and
management.
To promote, organize coordinate and conduct
Health System Research.
To establish a health information resource base
for the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Department of
Health.
To Provide technical support and active assistance
to the future institutions like Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Health Council and the private sector at large in
context of the Health Sector Reforms process
Provincial Institute of Teacher Education (PITE)
28
The government of Pakistan launched Teachers
Training Project in all the four provinces of Pakistan
including Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in 1979. The teacher
training project with the name of Provincial Institute
of Teacher Education (PITE) was established in
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in October 1993 to assist the
Provincial Government to improve the quality of
teachers education.
The other institutions responsible for the provision
of graduate and post graduate level teacher education
are the Institutes of Education and Research (IERs)
located in Peshawar, Mansehra, Dera Ismail Khan,
Bannu and Kohat IERs are playing a major role in
providing both pre-service and in-service trainings.
Diploma in Education (DEd), Drawing Masters/
Mistress (DM) are programs run by Regional Institutes
for Teacher Education (RITE) at the elementary
level, whereas Bachelor of Education (B.Ed), Master
of Education (M.Ed), M.Phil. and Ph.D. are run by
the Institutes of Education and Research (IER) and
Associate Degree in Education is a new program in
its frst phase launched by IER Peshawar, Hazara and
RITE male Peshawar, RITE female Abbottabad in
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
Industrial Training Centres
29
Majority of women in our society are completely
dependent on their families and on community. They
deserve special attention for their welfare. The Social
Welfare and Women Development Department is
providing the following services through its Industrial
Training Centres.
28
Reba, Amjad; Afridi, Arbab Khan, Perceptions of the Trainee Teachers Regarding Teacher Education Program in KPK Pakistan. FWU
Journal of Social Sciences;2012, Vol. 6 Issue 1, p79, June 2012
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46
Vocational and Skills training to women to enable
them to supplement their family income. The scheme
is aimed at providing training to 2025 women per
centre per annum.
To enable the women to get jobs after training or
start petty business for their own.
To make them productive and contributing
citizens.
To promote social awareness amongst women
folk to share socio-economic development of
the society.
To encourage the women in Beekeeping, food
preservation and fruit processing.
There are 93 Industrial Training Centres working
under the supervision of the Department, and
more than 100 Centres are run by different NGOs,
Women Welfare Programme and Mustahiqeen Zakat
Programme to provide vocational skills training to the
local females enabling them to share the economic
responsibilities of their families.
The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Judicial Academy
30
Via notifcation dated, the 17th January, 2012
Peshawar, (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa ACT NO. IV OF
2012) the Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
through the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Judicial Academy
Act, 2012, established the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Judicial Academy for imparting training to the judicial
offcers and personnel concerned with the system
of administration of justice with a view to develop
their capacity, professional competence and ethical
standard for effcient dispensation of justice and
matters.
Aims and objectives of the Academy.--- The aims
and objectives of the Academy shall be:
i. To provide training to the judicial offcers
and court personnel and the personnel of all
those departments, organizations, bodies and
institutions, which are directly or indirectly
connected with the system of administration
of justice like Police, Prosecutors, Government
Pleaders, Probation Offcers, Medico Legal
Experts and others;
ii. To award certifcates and other distinctions
to the trainees and to prescribe standards of
profciency before awarding such certifcates
and distinctions, which may also form yardstick
for future promotion of such offcers subject to
rules of respective services;
iii. To hold conferences, seminars, lectures,
workshops and symposia in matters relating to
court management, administration of justice, law
and development of skills in legislative drafting;
iv. To initiate, promote and encourage research,
publication of books, journals, research papers
and reports on important topics relating to
administration of justice;
v. To establish liaison with research institutions,
universities and other bodies including the
Federal Judicial Academy, towards the cause of
administration of justice; and
vi. To inculcate and promote ethical values and
standards in judicial offcers and in personnel
connected with the system of administration of
justice.
Skills Development Council, Peshawar
31
In Pakistan Skill Development Councils have been
established by the Ministry of Labour Manpower
and Overseas Pakistanis, Government of Pakistan
under National Training Ordinance 1980 on the
initiative of World Bank, ILO and Employers
Federation of Pakistan. The objectives are to make
Technical, Vocational Education and Training System
demand driven, fexible and cost-effective through
participation of the employers.
SDC Peshawar was established in December 1998 as
employers-led autonomous tripartite model of public
and private partnership in technical education and
vocational training. Since then it is playing a vital role
in establishing links between business organizations
and training providers. The Skill Development
Council Peshawar since its inception in December
1998 has been able to arrange training and re-training
of more than 52194 youth as well as already employed
people in various employable skills. In addition series
of workshops/seminars on promotion of Technical
& Vocational Training, Information Technology,
30
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31
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47
Technical Education, management and other related
subjects were also organized with the support of
International Labour Organization, Employers
Federation of Pakistan and other donors.
Vision
Vision of the SDC is to be a leading Human Resource
Development (HRD) Organisation on the Technical
and Professional Training to meet the needs of all
sector of economy focusing and leading towards life
long learning of the professionals.
Training Courses
The training programmes are composed of
theoretical instructions but mainly focus on hands on
training. Proper certifcation of the trainees qualifying
different training programme is undertaken.
Vocational Training Courses.
Training in Earthquake Affected Areas.
Skill Upgrading Course (formal / informatl
sector).
Training for Orphans.
The Skill Development Council Peshawar in the
fnancial year 2011-2012 has been able to arrange
training and re-training of more than 20272 youth
as well as already employed people, in various
employable skills. In addition series of workshop/
seminars on promotion of Technical & Vocational
Training, Information Technology, Technical
Education, management and other related subjects
were also organized.
20272 trainees were trained in different demand
oriented trades in the SDC facilitated institutes
2.9 Local Government Training Institutions in Pakistan
Local Government Training Institutions at the
Federal level are Pakistan Academy for Rural
Development (PARD), Peshawar and National Centre
for Rural Development & Municipal Administration
(NCRD&MA), Islamabad while at the Provincial
level, the LGTIs are Municipal Training And Research
Institute (MTRI), Karachi, Punjab Local Government
Academy (PLGA), Lalamoosa, Sindh Local
Government Academy (SLGA), Tandojam, Local
Governance School (LGS), Peshawar and Balochistan
Academy for Rural Development (BARD), Quetta.
All these institutes were established to provide state
of the art capacity support and research inputs for
municipal administration and rural development with
the ultimate aim of improving quality of life of people
who receive service from local institutions.
Ideally these institutions should be working as think
tanks on local governance and rural development
through cutting edge action research. However this
is not the case the research capacity in all these
institutions is negligible paucity of funds aggravates
this problem.
National Centre for Rural Development
32
Akhtar Hameed Khan National Centre for Rural
Development & Municipal Administration (AHK
NCRD & MA) was established as a federal training
and research institution in the year 1979 and became
operational in 1983, it was declared as an attached
department of the Ministry of Local Government
and Rural Development in 1988 and was renamed
as Akhtar Hameed Khan National Centre for Rural
Development & Municipal Administration in the year
2000 in recognition of invaluable services rendered
by late Dr. Akhtar Hameed Khan for the cause of
community development, strengthening of civil
society and socio-economic empowerment of the
poor and marginalised people living in informal
settlements in Pakistan.
Vision
Socio-economic empowerment of the rural and the
32
Further information on NCRD can be obtained from http://ncrd.gov.pk/.
Achievements
Female, 4871
Male, 15401
48
33
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underprivileged for sustainable development.
Mission
Knowledge-based capacity building of the poor and
the marginalised in the rural sector.
Objectives
Training of mid-level offcials and functionaries
of nation building departments.
Training of local government trainers.
Special focus on orientation courses.
Assistance to local government and rural
development training institutions in curriculum
planning and training programmes.
Liaison with national and international
organisations and NGOs in the felds of training,
research, environment, local government, rural
development and municipal issues.
Training of elected representatives of local bodies.
Pakistan Academy for Rural Development,
Peshawar (PARD)
33
Introduction:
Pakistan Academy for Rural Development, Peshawar
an oldest and premier national institution, was
founded in 1957 as an autonomous organization to
impart in-service training and research on various
aspects of rural development administration. It is
controlled administratively by the Establishment
Division, Government of Pakistan through a Board
of Governors consisting of representatives from
four Provincial Governments with the Secretary,
Establishment Division, is the Chairman Board
of Governor, The Academy started functioning in
September 1959 at Peshawar.
The Academy imparts in-service training in Rural
Development and Administration to the offcials of
the Federal and Provincial Governments including
Azad Jamu & Kashmir & Northern Areas, as
well as local bodies, and carries out research and
experimentation as well in the related felds to support
training. Inter-disciplinary approach of social sciences
is applied in all these activities. Since its inception , the
Academy has made impressive progress qualitatively
and quantitatively .
PARD has organized 761 courses upto December
31, 2000, 02 of which 254 are regular, 295 special,
76 short, 103 decentralized and 33 courses specially
organized for foreigners, and has trained 19034
persons. Training courses are aptly designed, and
are made thematic, taking into account the emerging
needs of rural development functionaries and their
organizations. Social surveys and analytical research
studies of the academicians of the academy continue
to strengthen its training with deeper insights in
the processes of planning and managing rural
development. Special efforts are put in practice to
cover far-fung areas of Rural Pakistan. Hitherto
200 research monographs and 166 other reports on
numerous activities have been produced including
some in collaboration with other national and
international agencies. The Academy tests and
demonstrates the practicability of emerging concepts,
methods and procedures through action research in
rural areas of Peshawar District. The documentation
of these experiments takes shape of instructional
reading material for the training courses. Quite a
few have won national and international recognition,
like Wara Lasoona (Small Hands) Co-curricular
programme for Students of Rural Schools, Mosque-
Feeder Schools (Masjid Maktab), Adult Education,
Ulema (Religious Scholars) Development Centers.
Keeping in view, the performance of PARD in the
spheres of Training and Research, the Academy
was declared. A center of Excellence for Human
Recourse Development, by United Nations
Economic & Social Commission for Asia and the
pacifc in 1997.
PARD Courses:
Rural Development:
Meaning and importance of rural development,
concept and components, principles and objectives,
polices and strategies, Models of rural development,
economic, socio-cultural and politico-administrative
aspects of rural development in Pakistan. Revies
of past rural development programmes, current
and future programmes in Pakistan. Planning for
rural development, peoples participation in rural
development.
Development Planning
Concept of Planning, objectives and principles
of planning, techniques and procedures, review
49
of development planning in Pakistan. Project
Planning, local level planning, project planning
cycle-identifcation, preparation and formulation,
implementation, monitoring and evaluation. Planning
Commissions Forms (PC 1,II,III,IV and V).
Agricultural Extension
Extension education in rural development, historical
review, extension system, extension methods
programme planning process in extension and
evaluation of extension programmes, different
approaches of extension work, effective supervision
in extension.
Public Administration
Development administration, coordination for
development, Human relations skill, effective
communication techniques for feld workers, decision
making, management of feld operation, motivation -
morale and supervisory techniques, local government
system in Pakistan, comparative study of local
government systems.
Rural Sociology
Socio-cultural milieu, rural-urban differences,
characteristics of rural society, social change in
rural society, diffusion and adoption process in
rural society, local leadership, profles of rural
poverty, identifcation of local resources for rural
development.
Education and Communication
Education for rural development, problems of
educational expansion in rural Pakistan, learning and
teaching techniques, innovations in education for
development, literacy and mass education in Pakistan,
effective communication - importance, methods,
techniques and barriers to communication.
Social Survey and Research
Concept, meaning and importance, design of social
research, Basic methods/techniques for conducting
social research, techniques and tools of data
collection, data analysis and presentation techniques,
scientifc report writing, concept and importance
of evaluation, area development planning and
techniques.
Gender and Development
Issues in the uplift of rural Women, role of women
in development, Womens Rights under Islam,
involvement of women in income generating
activities, strategies and mechanisms for increasing
participation of women in development, participation
of women through local government institutions
Punjab Local Government Academy(PLGA)
Established in 1953 as Village Agriculture and
Industrial Development (VILLAGE-AID) Training
Institute to train multipurpose base level workers of
the then V-AID programme, such as Development
Offcers, Supervisors and V-AID Workers. The
course duration range was 3 months to 1 year for
different categories. In total, training was imparted
to 998 participants of different categories through 6
courses.
It was re-designated as Basic Democracies Training
Institute (BDTI) in 1960 and entrusted responsibility
to train offcials and elected members/offce bearers
of Urban and Rural Local Councils. The training
was imparted to Development Offcers, Supervisors,
Secretaries Union Councils, Urban Local Council
Offcers and Elected Representatives. In total
training was imparted to 7167 participants of various
categories through 128 courses. Renamed as Local
Government Training Institute in 1972, it was made
responsible for training the functionaries of Peoples
Works Programme (PWP), such as Development
Offcers, Supervisors, Secretaries of Union Councils,
Sub-Engineers, Urban Local Councils Offcers,
Sanitary Inspectors and Functionaries of other
concerned Departments. In total training was
imparted to 3543 participants of various categories
through 95 courses.
From 1979 to mid-2001, the Local Government
Training Institute (LGTI) was responsible for training
of functionaries of LG&RD department, Local
Council Service (BS-5 to 17) and the Chairmen/
Vice Chairmen/Councillors of the Local Councils.
The training was imparted to the various categories
of participants such as ADLGs, Project Managers,
Project Assistants, Accounts Clerks, Secretaries
Union Councils, Sub-Engineers, Local Councils Chief
Offcers, Taxation Offcers, Sanitary Inspectors,
Elected Representatives, and Sanitation Promoters
under UNICEF Sanitation Programme. In total
training was imparted to 8455 participants of various
categories through 396 in-campus courses and 12122
participants through 329 off-campus courses.
The institute remained the focus of various trainings
from 1979 to 1984 as all development was entrusted
to the Local Councils so these institutions were given
50
much importance during this period. With the start of
1985, the members of both National and Provincial
Assemblies were elected; therefore, the local councils
were put at second priority. This resulted in the
situation that from 1985 to mid-2001, the working
of the institute was confned to the limited activities.
Only minor courses on regular basis were organised
in which newly recruited Offcers/Offcials such as
Project Managers, Chief Offcers, Secretary Town
Committees, Project Assistants, Accounts Clerks and
Secretaries Union Councils were the participants.
From 1981-2001, in collaboration with UNICEF,
Punjab LGTI have conducted In-Campus and
Off-Campus courses on Water and Environmental
Sanitation (WES), Adult Literacy and Registration of
Birth throughout Punjab.
After the implementation of Devolution Plan 2000
and promulgation of Punjab Local Government
Ordinance 2001, the role of this academy has been
increased being pivotal point of capacity building
for all categories of participants. The successful
implementation/working of the various tiers of local
government entirely depends upon the importance
attached to the capacity building of both elected
representatives and government functionaries.
The New Local Government System 2000 ensures
the devolution of powers and authority at the grass
root level. The leadership of the new system as well
as the administration and public, need to be brought
up to speed in a systematic manner. The variety of
new possibilities along with the responsibilities and
administrative authority and the benefts of new
systems and structures must be clearly spelt out
and understood. Training is, therefore, included as a
core principle to overcome these diffculties and to
enhance participatory representation and leadership
qualities. Hence Punjab Local Government Academy
(PLGA), being the only institute of local government
in the province, has been given the responsibility to
fulfl these requirements of District, Tehsil and Union
level Local Governments. Pre-service/In-service/
Professional/Special training courses/workshops/
seminars/orientations courses to the following
functionaries of Local Government Department and
Local Council Service Punjab, under Devolution Plan
are the statutory objectives of this Academy.
Municipal Training and Research Institute (MTRI)
Municipal Training and Research Institute (MTRI)
was an attached department of Ministry of LG&RD
to impart training and orientation facilities to elected
representatives i.e. Nazims/Naib Nazims, Members/
Councillors, Offcers and staff of Local Government
Institutions viz District Governments, TMAs and
Union Councils as well as the representatives of
NGOs. MTRI was established in the year 1986.
However it became practically functional during the
year 1988-89. The Mission Statement of MTRI is
to strengthen a sound Local Government System
consisting of trained professionals in the country
who are responsive to public needs at the grassroots.
Municipal Training and Research Institute (MTRI),
Karachi being a local Government Institute at the
apex level provides a comprehensive training forum
to the participants from all over Pakistan and other
regional countries to exchange views and share their
experiences and knowledge on the problems and
constraints being faced by them in the feld of Local
Government, Management of Local Affairs and
Sustainable Local Development. The training also
aims to raise their knowledge and skill and to equip
them with modern techniques for making positive
contribution to the development process carried out
in their respective localities.
Sindh Local Government and Rural Development
Academy
Sindh Local Government and Rural Development
Academy was originally established as village aid
training institute in 1953 at Sakrand. In 1956, it was
shifted to Tandojam in the present campus. In the
1st phase, the institute was confned to the level of
imparting pre-service and in-service trainings to the
newly recruited male and female village workers
under village-aid Programme in the subjects of
agriculture, animal husbandry, horticulture, poultry,
carpeting, smiting, home economics, community
development, frst aid and child card. During the
above period, eight long team courses, each of one
year duration, were conducted at the institute and 522
male and female workers were trained in 1960. The
second phase started after the wind up of village Aid
programme and introduction of Basic Democracies
system in the country in July 1960.
The institute was renamed Basic Democracies
Training Institute Southern Zone. The institute
catered the training needs of offces/offcials and
the elected representatives of various tiers of Basic
Democracies in Karachi, Hyderabad, Khairpur,
Multan, Bahalwalpur, Quetta and Kalat division of
defunct province of west Pakistan. In all (93) courses
51
2.10 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Local Government Act 2012
Section 78 of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Local
Government Act 2012 relates to Training and Training
Institution. As per this section-(1) Government may-
i. Set up institutions or make other arrangements as
may be necessary for-
The pre-service and in-service training of the
functionaries of Local Council, Government
departments and other related agencies;
The training of Chairmen and members of Local
Councils;
Organising conferences and seminars on local
governance and related subjects; and
Undertaking research on issues in local
governance and allied subjects independently or
in collaboration with Universities or Research
Institutions;
ii. Provide for-
The administration of training institutions;
The compulsory training of members and staff
of Local Councils;
Curricula and courses to be studied;
The holding of examinations and award of
diplomas and certifcates to successful candidates;
Affliating institutions with the Universities; and
Associating such Universities, Colleges or training
institutes as may be necessary for the training of
staff of Local Councils.
A Local Council may be required to pay towards the
cost of the institutions set up or other arrangements
made under sub-section (1) in such proportion as
Government may, from time to time, determine.
of two or three weeks and three to six months
duration were conducted and 3188 participants were
trained in the subjects of Public Administration,
Offce Procedure, Basic Democracies Order
1959, Municipal Administration Ordinance 1960
and rules framed thereunder, Accounts, Budget,
Taxation, Conciliation Courts Ordinance, etc. 1970.
Subsequent to Basic Democracies system, the
nomenclature of the institute was changed as Sindh
Local Government Training Institute, with the object
of catering the training needs of the offcers/offcials
of local councils, constituted under Sindh Peoples
Local Government Ordinance 1979. During this
phase, 74 training courses were conducted and 4858
participants were trained.
In July 1983, the institute was raised to the status
of academy renamed as Sindh Local Government
and Rural Development Academy. Presently, the
Academy is going ahead, with enlarged scope in
the sphere of its activities and a well-articulated
methodology of training in the feld of rural
development to the functionaries of Nation Building
departments at Taluka, district and division level
and electric representatives of local councils and
village leaders are being sponsored to acquaint them
with the nature and scope of the problem of rural
development. The functionaries are being kept
abreast of the latest knowledge and skills to improve
their effciency. The Academy is also conducting
different training programmes in the disciplines of
local government system, fnancial management and
public administration for the employees and elected
representatives of local councils.
The main objective of these courses to acquaint
local council employees at various level and
elected representatives about the working of local
government system and to create in them professional
skill and to enhance their capability and aptitudes for
better management of local councils. During the
period from 1983 to December 1999, 161 courses
were conducted and 3650 personnel were trained.
Apart from regular training courses, the Academy
organised 130 seminars/workshop/conferences
from 1953 to 1999 and 9624 participants attended
the various events.
Rural Development Academy, Quetta (RDA)
RDA was established in 1973 in Quetta, Balochistan.
The courses offered by RDA includes Local
government, Training of Trainers, Engineering
Services, Financial Management, Gender and
Development, Community Development, Sustainable
Rural Development, Planning and Development
Techniques, Social Research Methodology,
Environmental Conservation, Offce Management
and Management of Union Councils.
52
2.11 Common Courses in all Training Programmes
After analyzing the courses of different training
institutions including executive training institutes and
LGTIS, following commonalities were identifed:
Research Methodology
The 1973 Constitution of Pakistan
Poverty Alleviation
Public Policy formulation and its implementation
Governance and accountability
Role of the Federal, Provincial and District
Governments
Role of Regulatory bodies
Leadership theory and styles
Macro / Micro Economics
Disaster and Crisis Management
Project Management& Planning
E-Governance
Energy
Marketing and Accounting
Gender Sensitisation & Mainstreaming
Rural Development & Local Government
Administration (in the context of Public
Administration)
Human Resource Development; Community
Mobilisation
Information Technology
Municipal Engineering & Services
Communication & Presentation Skills
Human Rights & Women Development
Management: Financial, Urban, Environment
Water management in Pakistan including clean
drinking water.
2.12 Gaps in Training
Governance Institutions Network Project Report
(2009) identifes certain gaps which are discussed
below:
Standardised National Policy
The survey result shows that there is no coherent
or standardised national policy for training and
education of the high level executives in Pakistan.
Each institution is doing its own thing. No priority
sectors have been identifed by the top level
policymakers for training. Funding was found to be
an issue with most institutions. Incentivisation of
faculty is not used anywhere except at the NSPP in
the public sector. There is little collaboration between
the public or private sector training institutions and
the industry. Private sector is mainly focused on
the corporate sector and their approach seems to
be more commercial than public service oriented.
There is very little in terms of R&D anywhere either
in the public sector or in the private sector. There is
no mechanism found for sensitising on the national
issues and on the concept of public service.
Lack of soft skills
There is no emphasis on the character building in
the training programmes in public sector training
institutions in general. The methodology used at the
NSPP, however, incorporates such training tools as
attachments of participants with pro-poor initiatives
such as the Orangi Pilot Project, Earthquake Relief
work in Muzaffarabad, exposure to Edhi Foundations
work, etc which equips public servants with humility
and a spirit to serve the people. Other public service
training institutions should follow the NSPP example.
The other missing ingredient of training of civil
servants in Pakistan is the inculcation of soft skills
values, attitudes, orientation, and respect for citizens.
No benchmark
The frst step for any type of executive training is to
determine the benchmark. It helps in identifying the
defciencies and problem areas that hamper effcient
and effective performance. It also helps to identify
the gaps what is and what ought to be, and
considers if training can solve the problem. There
is need for properly identifed and relevant training
for the improved performance, offcers/staff of a
particular department. There is need to fnd out the
impact of the training that it is signifcant or not.
Rigorous training
It has to bring mental toughness and it should be
rigorous. Rigorous training has to be at initial level.
The offcer has to deal with the public and has to be
able to solve problems. There is always risk involved
53
54
in the decision making but the rationale is future
can be understood on the basis of current and past
experience.
Failure to relate governance with administration
In many cases, the current training fails to relate
governance with knowledge of problem solving. It
does not train the offcers to deal with crisis situation.
The front line offcers are not well equipped with
training so the higher up unable to rely on them during
decision making. There is no component of scientifc
training; it leads to the wastage of resources. With
more awareness of the rights the pressure on public
offces has increased tremendously, this pressure on
the system is a reason for poor governance.
Training fails to identify the strength and
weaknesses of the offcers
Training institutes does not help in identifying the
strength of the offcer who undergoes the particular
training. There is no component of writing a report
related to the weakness, appointment for the trainees.
(NSPP has an objective system of Evaluation and
Report Writing).
Computer literacy cannot help in developing
policies
Most of the training programmes emphasised the
computer usage abilities of the administrators.
Computer training help in processing the information
but it cannot think on the part of the person.
Lack of problem solving techniques
No bench mark for training exists in Pakistan.
Lecturing the trainees is the major component of
training in Pakistan, especially when the quality of
the teachers has a question mark and these teachers
are not aware of the problems of the trainees and
their job tasks and nature of postings. There is no
system of writing down their ideas, experiences and
job diffculties. It has to be promoted. It should
be the part of the training. Training has to be the
cognizant of the fact with the problems solution and
application. These executive institutes do not use case
study method. Case study is an art which needs good
writing skills and regular updating and executing the
case. The diversifed tasks like disaster management
are not the part of any training institutes. The
NSPP, however, employs a variety of training tools,
of which Lecturing is just one component. Case
Studies used at the NSPP are developed, written and
updated by the faculty itself, and are contextual to
the Pakistani environment. In addition, a much more
rigorous training method - Simulation Exercise-
is also indigenously developed which prepares the
participants not only for problem solving, but also
for hard work, teamwork, leadership, and innovative
thinking. Much value addition can accrue to the other
training institutions if they take a lead from the NSPP.
Impact assessment of training on governance
In all the training programme 60-70 percent time is
devoted for academics. These academic programmes
rely on the syllabus of academic institution, which
they have already studied at their Masters level
because many of the offcers join public service after
completion of their Masters.
There is no mechanism to evaluate the need of the
department. Most of the government procedures
are not outlined so it is diffcult to quantify the
contextual need of the training. Moreover, training is
not well received and it has not even factored in the
promotion.
No relationship between training and job
placement
Training is ineffective because it has no role in job
placements. Jobs and assignments are not retained.
There is no job security in refusing to implement
a wrong order and those who say no the boss
usually send them for training. The trainer loses its
assignments and future guarantee of posting on the
same assignments. Training should be effective and
mandatory for all the public servants and according
to their future postings and jobs. It has to enhance
the participants motivational level. Those who
participate in training, there postings and facilities
should remain intact. Offcers who were sent for
training, felt alienated. It was found that 90% of the
candidates those who were sent for training said that
they were not satisfed with their job.
No effective monitoring
There is no effective monitoring process of the
offcers, post-training. There is need to improve
monitoring system, post-training. The results of
training evaluation have to be used while deciding
about the future posting. Exams and test are used
to increase involvement but not for deciding about
successful completion of the course. There is no
system of selecting candidates for a particular
training programme. The training institutes send the
request and departments send the participants for
training. Computer literacy found the only criterion
of successful training. A few of training institutes
55
conduct computer competency test.
Institutional pride
Training failed to win institutional pride and
offcers cant relate themselves as better offcers
after completing the training. There are no course
reunions. The candidates value CTP for its value
as an interaction point for all the offcers of the
same batch other than this it is considered valuable
for skill formation. There is need to bring more
professionalism in the pre-service and in-service
training.
Very low ingredient of research: In training there is
10-15 emphasis on the new ideas and research. NSPP
has a very good library and this can be utilised better
with a professionally trained librarian.
Lack of leadership qualities
Lecturing about leadership alone does not produce
leaders. How decisions are taken is not mainstreamed
in the courses.
Areas Identifed for Future
Future guidance on the basis of training is lacking.
Monitoring effciency and productivity of the
change in the work patterns
Quantifable indicators have not been developed to
measure enhancement of effciency and productivity.
Problem solving techniques
The emphasis is on stating the problems and problem-
solving is an unclear objective.
Comprehension and analytical ability
Lecturing and routine questioning rather than
comprehension and analytical ability restricts the
space for critical thinking. The methodology used at
the NSPP, however, caters for this.
Better information system
Teaching E-government is only a technique, albeit
more effcient, but is not a substitute for the mental
ability to absorb information to enable decision
making. No cost /returns consideration.
34
34
All the gaps in the Executive Education of the civil servants of Pakistan were comprehensively covered by the Governance Institutions \
Network International project report which is discussed in detail in this paper. These gaps are equally applicable to the other institutes
in the country including Local Government Training Institutes in the country, except NSPP which has a sound system of training and
evaluation.
The training institutions for civil servants of
Pakistan, except NSPP, have a lot of gaps in their
delivery and conduct of the training programmes.
The study encapsulates that training need assessment
should be identifed for offcers and staff of a
particular department and district. Without this, the
entire training programmes would be a futile effort.
A linkage needs to be developed among training
institutes for an effective service delivery. During
the training, quality guest speakers, who have
professional expertise, should be called for lecture
discussion and for conducting workshops. Greater
emphasis should also be laid on the documentation
of the training programme. LGTIs were created
as think tanks on local governance and rural
development, however, this link is clearly missing in
all of them. Absence of signifcant policy research
further aggravates the problems of LGTIs. Time is
ripe to improve the legal and policy framework for
these institutions. The study succinctly puts forward
that the trainings of the civil servants of Pakistan
should have a signifcant impact on the participants.
2.13 Conclusion
2.14. National Commission for Government Reforms (NCGR) Recommendations
35
The National Commission for Government Reforms
on reforming the Government in Pakistan report
(2008) posits following recommendations pertaining
to training of civil servants of Pakistan:
Management of training at the Federal and
Provincial Governments
In view of the importance, expanding role and
growing responsibilities in the feld of training, the
management of this function at the Federal and
Provincial Government levels requires immediate
attention.
Training of ex-cadre offcers
The Engineers, Accountants, Economists, Medical
Doctors, Educationists, Agriculture experts,
Scientists, Financial Analysts etc, form the bulk
of offcers grades in the Federal and Provincial
Governments, should be provided in-service training
in their respective professions after certain intervals
of time. The successful completion and certifcation
of the prescribed courses should be made a pre-
requisite for promotion to the next grade. There are
some existing institutions that can be mandated to
design these training courses, while in other cases new
institutions such as an Engineering Academy may be
set up for the design and delivery of professional in-
service training.
Training of Provincial Offcers
The Provincial Governments are setting up the
Provincial Management Academies for the training
of their newly inducted generalist offcers. These
academies should be asked to expand their activities
to in-service training, on the lines of the Federal
Government. As the majority of the offcers of
these Governments and District Governments are
in the feld of education, health, police, agriculture,
engineering and municipal services, professional
training of these offcers should also be made
mandatory and linked to their promotion.
Incentives, facilities and standards in specialised
and professional training institutions
To attract best staff members to serve as faculty
members in various training institutions, it is necessary
to bring the compensation, incentives and facilities
admissible to them at par with those offered at the
constituent units of NSPP. It is proposed that the
decisions taken by the NSPP Board of Governors in
respect to its constituent units on salaries, allowances,
facilities, additional points, etc should also be made
applicable to all training institutions. In return, the
standards of instruction, pedagogy, testing and
certifcation in all these institutions should meet the
standards prescribed by NSPP. We expect that as the
NSPP units have begun to attract offcers of high
calibre to work as instructional staff, these incentives
will be able to add quality staff to other specialised
training institutions also.
Governance structure of training institutions
There is a great deal of variation in the current
governance structure of the training institutions,
ranging from subordinate offces to autonomous
bodies. All training institutions should be autonomous
bodies with their own boards of directors, chaired
either by the Minister or Secretary of the Division
or Department concerned, but consisting of eminent
persons in their felds. The Board should enjoy the
fnancial, administrative and operational powers
to manage the training institutions in an effective
manner.
These training institutions should also be mandated
to develop the capacity for policy research in their
respective areas of expertise and thus provide
inputs to the Ministries in their policy formulation
work. As these institutions would be offering better
remuneration than is available in the regular Ministry,
they will be able to attract the right kind of skills,
which can in turn be used by the Ministries to their
advantage.
35
In order to study the complete NCGR report 2008, please visit http://ishrathusain.iba.edu.pk/ncgr.html
56
2.17 References
Government of Pakistan (1957). The First Five Year Plan (1955-1960). Government of Pakistan Press,
Karachi.
Government of Pakistan (1960). The Second Five Year Plan (1960-1965). Government of Pakistan Press,
Karachi.
Haque. N, and Khawaja (2007): Public Service, through the eyes of civil servants. Pakistan Institute of
Development Economics, 2007.
Jadoon M.Z. I & Jabeen N: Public Administration Education in Pakistan: Issues, Challenges and
Opportunities. Pakistan Vision Vol. 11 No. 1. Available at: http://www.pu.edu.pk/psc/journal/PDF-
FILES/Artical%20No-6.pdf
National Commission for Government Reforms on reforming the Government in Pakistan (2008).
Reba, Amjad; Afridi, Arbab Khan, Perceptions of the Trainee Teachers Regarding Teacher Education
Program in KPK Pakistan. FWU Journal of Social Sciences;2012, Vol. 6 Issue 1, p79, June 2012.
Reforming Pakistans Civil Service (2010): International Crisis Group, Asia Report N185 16February
2010Islamabad/Brussels.
Tahir. P, Saleem. N, Bashir. S (2009). Baseline Research on Executive Education in Pakistan. Governance
Institutions Network International, Islamabad.
57
CHAPTER 3
AN OVERVIEW OF THE NATIONAL
COMMISSION FOR GOVERNMENT
REFORMS (NCGR) REPORT ON
REFORMING THE GOVERNMENT
IN PAKISTAN
3.1 Introduction
In April 2006, the Government of Pakistan
constituted the National Commission for
Government Reforms, (NCGR)
36
consisting of a full-
time Chairman, seven part-time members from the
private sector, three Secretaries to the Government
and a full-time Secretary. The Commission had to
work in accordance with its terms of reference. What
was different about this Commission is that it did
not focus on downsizing, rightsizings or reducing
the numbers of civil servants or the numbers
of Divisions/Departments, but took a holistic
view of the functions an effective government
should perform, how these functions should best
be divided between the Federal, Provincial and
District Governments, and what kinds of skills and
competencies would be required to discharge these
functions. In light of this, the business processes,
rules of business and other supporting infrastructure
(such as E-government) should be revamped. The
human resource policies and management should
then be aligned to meet the restructured organisation
and re-engineered processes. The time span to
implement these reforms is medium to long term.
An innovative feature introduced was the procedure
for the approval of the reform proposals developed
by the NCGR. A high powered Steering Committee,
co-chaired by the President of Pakistan and Prime
Minister and consisting of the four Provincial Chief
Ministers was authorised to take fnal decisions on the
recommendations of the Commission.
The Commission held 13 meetings during its two-year
tenure (2006-2008), while the Steering Committee
could meet only twice. The proposals were developed
after exhaustive consultations with the Provincial
Governments, Federal Secretaries Committee, focus
groups of retired, senior, middle level and junior
offcers, members of academia and civil society. The
Commission made good use of rich material produced
by the previous commissions and committees and did
not reinvent the wheel. However, a few surveys were
carried out to update the information and compile
new data for analytical purposes.
The report produced by the Commission after
deliberations during these two years is comprehensive
and covers the restructuring of Government at the
Federal, Provincial levels, strengthening of the
district governments, reorganisation of civil services,
revamping of human resource management policies
and practices, reengineering of business processes.
These proposals summarise the fndings from
extensive research in the feld and consultations
conducted with a wide range of stakeholders
spanning the public and private sectors, particularly
the Federal Secretaries committee and the Provincial
Governments.
This study is aimed at providing a concise overview of the National Commission for Government Reforms,
(NCGR) report on reforming the Government in Pakistan
3.2 Purpose
To understand the basic need of reform of the
civil service in Pakistan.
To comprehend a roadmap that contains the
proposals that will carry forward the reforms as
a long-term initiative rolled out over a 10-15 year
period.
To view the broad principles underpinning the
reforms.
To study the proposed changes in the civil service
structure.
3.3 Objectives
58
36
For detailed information on NCGR, please visit http://ishrathusain.iba.edu.pk/ncgr.html
Pakistan has made serious strides in policy reform
since 1947. Policy reforms can take the country
only that far but sustained improvement will take
place only after institutions to implement policies
and programmes are made effective and effcient.
Five other signifcant developments have added to
the urgency for a fresh look at the Government
structure, processes and outreach.
A large number of government-owned
corporations and businesses have been
privatised reducing the administrative burden
on government.
A new tier local government has been
introduced that requires reallocation of
resources and strengthening of capacity.
The unbundling of the policy, regulatory and
operational responsibilities of the Federal
Ministries requires a shift of focus.
The civil services in Pakistan suffer from a
variety of weaknesses including poor training
and morale and have to be reorganised.
The opportunities provided by E-government
have not yet been fully realised to improve the
access of the common man.
3.4 Need for Reforms
3.5 Importance of NCGR Report
The report adds value addition in at least seven
distinctive ways.
First, it systematically updates the knowledge and a
problem facing the Government in the formulation
and implementation of policies, programmes and
projects, carries out a critical analysis of the reforms
that have taken place so far and attempts to align the
structure, processes and practices with the nature of
the problems and diffculties identifed.
Second, the report commits itself to utilise the entire
workforce employed by the Government optimally
by following an inclusive approach whereby it
provides equality of opportunity to the majority of
offcers who are currently outside the occupational
groups and service cadres in matters of recruitment,
training, career progression and promotion on the
basis of performance and achievements and does
away with entitlements and reservations. There is a
clear need to ensure that generalists and specialists
are brought together under the highest policymaking
position matrix.
Third, the essence of decentralisation and devolution
to the local governments is extended further and
strengthened by recommending creation of District
Services under the control and management of
the districts. All employees in Grades 1-16 in the
devolved departments will become employees of the
District Governments improving span of control
and accountability for results. At the same time, it
recommends transfer of functions from the Federal
to the Provincial Governments. It also opens up
the highest policymaking positions at the Federal
Government to qualify and competent Provincial
Civil Servants by introducing regional quotas at those
levels also.
Fourth, the interface between the public and the
civil service administration has to be improved in a
manner benefcial to citizens. The current norm is one
where the public deal with low grade, unqualifed and
ill-trained offcials who lack neutrality, integrity, and
right attitude and often lack the skills to address the
concerns of the citizens. These proposals recommend
the need to ensure that there is a system where each
district assigns young direct recruits in thanas, tehsils,
etc to be the frst point of contact with a citizen.
These public servants will be authorised to resolve
the problems and take the decisions expeditiously.
Fifth, a holistic approach is to be adopted for human
resource management to turn civil servants into
competent, motivated, well-trained problem-solving
individuals rather than demotivated, ill-equipped, paid
sticklers for rules. The emphasis is on a transparent
and accountable merit-based approach that rewards
performers and penalises the recalcitrant. This will
ultimately bring much needed cultural change to the
59
3.6 Broad Principles underpinning the reforms
In order to lay down the direction of these reforms,
the NCGR has set broad principles that underpin
these reforms. These are set out below:
Civil Services
i. Open, transparent meritbased recruitment
at all levels and grades of public services, with
Regional Representation as laid down in the
Constitution.
ii. Performancebased promotions and career
progression for all public sector employees, with
compulsory training at post induction, mid-
career and senior management levels.
iii. Equality of opportunities for career advancement
to all employees, without preferences or
reservations for any particular class.
iv. Replacement of the concept of Superior
Services, by equality among all cadres and non-
cadres of public servants.
v. Grant of a Living wage and compensation
package, including decent retirement benefts to
all civil servants.
vi. Strict observance of security of tenure of offce
for a specifed period of time.
vii. Separate cadre of regular Civil Services at All
Pakistan, Federal, Provincial and District levels,
co-existing with contractual appointments.
viii. Creation of an All Pakistan National Executive
Service (NES) for senior management positions,
drawn through a competitive process, from
the Federal, Provincial and District level Civil
Servants and outside professionals.
ix. Introduction of three specialised cadres under
the NES for Economic Management, Social
Sector Management and General Management.
Structure of Federal, Provincial and District
Governments
Devolution of powers, responsibilities and
resources from the Federal to the Provincial
Governments.
Establishing inter-governmental structures with
adequate authority and powers to formulate and
monitor policy formulation.
Clear separation of policy-making, regulatory and
operational responsibilities of the Ministries/
Provincial Departments.
Making each Ministry/Provincial Department
fully empowered, adequately resourced to take
decisions and accountable for results.
Streamline, rationalise and transform the attached
departments/autonomous bodies \ subordinate
offces/feld offces, etc into fully functioning
arms of the Ministries for performing operational
and executive functions.
Reduce the number of layers in the hierarchy of
each Ministry/Provincial Department.
organisation; it will also ensure that mechanisms are
put in place to address under-performance.
Sixth, it is proposed that the potential offered by
E-Government should be exploited quickly and
advantageously. The switch will ensure there is a
move away from paper-based working towards a more
effcient, productive and cost-effective approach.
This will also imply that all government rules,
regulations, circulars, instructions and manuals are
readily accessible through web in the public domain
and that the latest editions of documents such as the
establishment manual, the ESTACODE and Finance
Manual, are used instead of obsolete versions. This
will not only curtail the discretionary and arbitrary
powers of the lower functionaries but also encourage
openness, transparency, lesser opportunities for
corruption and accountability by the public.
Seventh, there are some well thought out ideas
presented in the report for improvement in the
delivery of essential public services: education, health,
police, and land revenue in the short term. As most
of the day to day transactions of an ordinary citizen
pertain to these services, an early implementation of
these recommendations would bring quick win.
This report is a roadmap that contains the proposals
that will carry forward the reforms as a long-term
initiative, rolled out over a 10-15 year period.
60
Cabinet Secretary to perform the main
coordinating role among the Federal Secretaries.
Revival and strengthening of the Secretaries
Committee in the Federal/Provincial
Governments to become the main vehicle
for inter-ministerial coordination and dispute
resolution among various ministries.
District level offcers interacting with the general
public in day-to-day affairs should enjoy adequate
powers, authority, status and privileges to be able
to solve the problems and redress the grievances
of the citizens.
Police, Revenue, Education, Water Supply, and
Health are the departments which are highly
relevant for the day-to-day lives of the ordinary
citizens of this country. The internal governance
structures of these departments, public grievance
and redressal systems against these departments
and checks and balances on the discretionary
powers of the offcials have to be introduced.
Business process re-engineering
i. All laws, rules, regulations, circulars, guidelines
issued by any Government ministry/ Department/
agency should be available in an up-to-date version
to the general public free of cost in a user-friendly
manner, on web page and in electronic and print
forms at public places.
ii. Service standards with timelines for each type of
service rendered at the District, Thana and Union
level should be developed, widely disseminated
and posted at public places in each department.
iii. Rules of business at the Federal, Provincial and
District Government levels should be revised to
make them simple, comprehensible, empowering
the Secretaries/Heads of Departments/District
Coordination Offcers to take decisions without
multiple references, clearances and back and forth
movement of fles. Post-audit of the decisions
taken should be used to ensure accountability
rather than prior clearances.
iv. Delegation of fnancial, administrative,
procurement, human resource management
powers should be revisited and adequate powers
commensurate with the authority should be
delegated across each tier of the hierarchy.
v. Estacode, Financial Rules, Accounting and
Audit Rules, Fundamental Rules and all other
rules in force should be reviewed systematically
and revised to bring them in line with modern
management practices.
vi. E-Government should be gradually introduced
in a phased manner. Technological solutions,
hardware and software applications are easy part
of the process, but the most diffcult aspect is
the training and a change in the culture, attitude
and practices. E-Government should be driven by
business needs rather than crafted as an elegant
technical solution.
61
3.7 The Existing System of Civil Service in Pakistan
A brief review of the existing structure of civil
services at all levels of the government is essential for
understanding the present arrangements for staffng
at the three tiers of the Government.
The basis for establishment of various Civil Services
at the Federal and Provincial levels has been provided
in Article 240 of the 1973 Constitution of the Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, which is reproduced below for
ready reference:
Article 240, Appointment to Service of Pakistan
and Conditions of Service
Subject to the Constitution, the appointments to and
the conditions of service of persons in the service of
Pakistan shall be determined:
i. In the case of the services of the Federation, posts
in connection with the affairs of the Federation
and All-Pakistan Services, by or under Act of
Majlis-e-Shoora [(Parliament)]; and
ii. In the case of the services of a Province and
posts in connection with the affairs of a Province,
by or under Act of the Provincial Assembly.
Explanation
In this Article, All-Pakistan Service means a service
common to the Federation and the Provinces, which
62
was in existence immediately before the commencing
day or which may be created by Act of Majlis-e-
Shoora [Parliament].
A. Civil Services of the Federation
Legal Basis:
The Civil Servants Act, 1973 and the Rules made
there under provide the legal basis for regulating
the appointment to, and the terms and conditions
of an All Pakistan Service or a Civil Service of the
Federation or a post in connection with the affairs
of the Federation. It applies to all Civil Servants
of the Federation wherever they may be, in Federal
Government, Provincial Government, Local
Authority, a Corporation or a Local Body.
Service Structure:
Administrative Reforms of 1973 abolished all classes
among the Civil Servants, merged all services and
cadres into a single unifed graded structure and
prohibited the use of service labels. The following
three unifed grades were created under the new rules
(framed on the basis of Civil Servants Act, 1973)
which continue to this day:
All Pakistan Unifed Grades (APUG):
The APUG offcers are posted to Federal as well as
Provincial Governments, including Districts, mostly
on posts reserved for them. The APUG comprises
the following occupational groups/services:
District Management Group. (BS17-22)
Police Service of Pakistan. (BS1722)
Secretariat Group (19-22)
Federal Unifed Grades (FUG):
As a rule, the FUG offcers are posted to the Federal
Government posts only. The FUG consists of the
following occupational groups:
Pakistan Audit and Accounts Service
Commerce and Trade Group
Customs and Excise Group
Foreign Service of Pakistan
Income Tax Group
Information Group
Military Lands & Cantonment Group
Offce Management Group
Postal Group
Railways (Commercial and Transportation) Group
Economist & Planners Group
Inland Revenue Service:
A new cadre was created namely Inland Revenue
Service by the Government of Pakistan, vide
notifcation No: 2412-M-IA/2010 dated 16th
November, 2010. Now the cadre of Inland Revenue
Service (IRS) and Pakistan Customs Service come
under the Administrative Control of Federal Board
of Revenue.
Besides the above 11 occupational groups, personnel
belonging to the following categories also form part
of FUG:-
Ex-Cadre Offcers (BS-17) and above:
There are a large number of Federal Government
offcers who do not belong to APUG and FUG.
These offcers mainly belong to technical and
professional categories, eg specialised positions in
Ministries of Education, Science & Technology,
Food & Agriculture, Population Welfare, Special
Education, Communications and a host of Attached
Departments, Subordinate Offces, Bureaus,
Commissions, Research Organisations, etc. Although
they account for 80-90 percent of the offcers
positions in the Federal Government, the ex-cadre
offcers enjoy relatively limited career progression,
compared to groups mentioned above.
Subordinate Staff of BS-l to BS-16:
Subordinate staff of BS-l to BS-16 in Ministry/
Division/Department-specifc employees with the
exception of Subordinate Accounts Service (SAS)
personnel who are routinely posted across Ministries/
Divisions/Departments.
B. Recruitment Policy:
Recruitment to the Federal Services / posts is
regulated by the Civil Servants (Appointment,
Promotion and Transfer) Rules, 1973; and Federal
Public Service Commission (Functions) Rules, 1978.
Recruitment to all Federal services/posts at the entry
point is made on provincial / regional quota basis,
through:-
63
Federal Public Service Commission for employees
of BS-17 and above.
Ministry/Division/Department Recruiting
Committees, for employees of BS-l to BS-16.
C. Provincial Civil Services:
Legal Provision:
On the basis of Article 240 of the Constitution,
separate enactments were made by each Provincial
Government in 1973/1974 for regulating the
appointment to and the terms and conditions of
service, of persons in the service of respective
provinces. The Provincial Civil Servants Act
applies to all the Civil Servants of the respective
provinces, irrespective of their posting to the
Provincial Government, Federal Government or any
autonomous body.
Structure of Provincial Civil Services
The1973 Administrative Reforms also resulted in
the merger of all provincial services and cadres into
a single unifed graded structure, called Provincial
Unifed Grades (PUG). The existing Provincial
Services/cadres can be divided into the following
categories:
i. Provincial Civil Services (BS-17 and above): The
Provincial Civil Services (PCS) consist of two
branches:
PCS Executive Branch. [PCS (EB)]. Extra
Assistant Commissioners.
PCS Secretariat Branch. [PCS (SB)]. Section
Offcers.
Note: The Provincial Governments of Punjab and
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have decided to merge (1) and
(2) into a Provincial Management Service.
PCS Judiciary Branch. [PCS (JB)]. Magistrates.
Technical/Professional Services/Cadres (BS-16
and above):
The Technical/Professional Services/Cadres include
Revenue, Accounts, Excise & Taxation, Education,
Agriculture, Health, Forestry, Veterinary, Engineering,
Information, Law etc. Their recruitment is made
through PPSC and service matters are handled by
their respective parent departments.
Subordinate Employees (BS 1-15):
Direct recruitment to posts of BS-l to BS-15 is
generally carried out by the respective departments,
except for some of the more lucrative posts which are
recruited to by the PPSC. These posts include Naib
Tehsildar, Police Inspector, Sub-Engineer, Sub-
Registrar (Revenue), Prosecuting Sub-Inspector,
Assistant Jail Superintendent, Cooperatives Inspector,
Electricity Sub-Inspector, Food Grain Inspector, etc.
Personnel management of these employees is the
responsibility of their respective departments, except
for the employees of the Provincial Secretariat who
are managed centrally by the Services and General
Administration Department (S&GAD).
Recruitment Policy:
The departmental recruitment committees are
responsible for direct recruitment of technical/
professional cadres and subordinate staff. The PCS
or PMS offcers and Technical offcers in Grades-16
and above are recruited through Provincial Public
Service Commission (PPSC) and put through an
initial training of a short duration of 4-6 months
before being posted. The service is managed centrally
by S&GAD of the provinces.
Federal-Provincial Interrelationship:
The APUG offcers (Federal Services) are eligible
for posting to the provinces on the basis of the
following formula for distribution of posts between
the provincial services and the APUG:
Basic Scale APUG Provincial Offcers
BS-21 65 % 35 %
BS-20 60% 40%
BS-19 50% 50%
BS-18 40% 60%
D. Civil Service in Local Governments
Pre-Devolution Scenario:
In the pre-devolution days, the local self-government
had a limited scope. Local bodies functions were
restricted mainly to municipal services, animal
husbandry services, establishment and maintenance
of dispensaries, maternity centres and rural health
centres. In a few cases, urban local bodies also
undertook establishment and management of
educational institutions. While most of the offcer
level staff (BS-16 and above) of the local councils
was and continues to be provided by the Provincial
Services, majority of the support staff in BS-l to
BS-7 were the employees of the local bodies. Support
staff of BS-8 to BS-15 was being shared between the
Provincial Local Councils Service and the Servants of
the Local Councils.
Categories of Employees in Local Bodies:
The following three categories of employees were
found in the pre-devolution local governments:
i. Civil Servants: The employees were from
the Provincial Local Government and Rural
Development (LG&RD) Department, and from
DMG and PCS cadres.
ii. Member of the Provincial Local Councils
Service (LCS): The LCS was established under
Provincial Local Government Ordinance
1979/80. Recruitment, postings, transfers and
all other service matters of LCS were handled
by Local Government Board (LGB), comprising
Secretary LG Department as the chairman
and 3-5 members, appointed by the Provincial
Government. Secretariat of the LGB acted as
the secretariat for the LCS. The LCS comprised
employees ranging from BS-5 to BS-20.
iii. Servants of the Local Councils: Apart from the
LCS, the Provincial Local Government Ordinance
1979-80 also provided for another category of
employees, who were called Servants of the Local
Councils (SOLC). They were the direct employees
of the local councils responsible for recruitment
and personnel management. However, the
number of SOLC of each local council and
their pay scales were controlled by the Provincial
Government.
E. Post-Devolution Changes
Since 2001, the Local Government comprises
of (a) District Government or City District
Government (b) Tehsil Municipal Administration
or Town Municipal Administration and (c) Union
Council Administration. Eleven departments
District Coordination, Agriculture, Community
Development, Education, Finance & Planning,
Health, Income Tax, Law, Literacy, Revenue, Works
and Services have been devolved under the Local
Government Ordinance to the District Governments.
The functions of the offces of Local Government
Elections and Rural Development Department,
Housing, Urban Development and Public Health
Engineering Department have been entrusted to the
Tehsil or Town Municipal Administration.
The Local Government Ordinance 2001 envisages
local governments to function within the provincial
framework and adhere to the Federal and Provincial
Laws. However, the local governments are not subject
to direction by the Provincial/Federal government
except for the purpose of preventing any grave threat
to public peace and order, handling emergencies,
protection and security of the people and the security
and integrity of the state.... And such directions
are to be issued through the concerned Zilla Nazim.
It thus implies that the local governments are
independent in their routine functioning and that any
intervention by the Provincial Government, except in
the above stated eventualities, can only be through
legislation. In practice, however, the hierarchies of
the Provincial Government departments are intact
and provincial intervention continues informally,
through a network of departmental loyalties. This
adversely affects responsiveness of the Provincial
Government employees to the elected head of local
administration. On the other hand, the administrative
links between the District Government, Tehsil
Municipal Administration (TMA) and Union
Administration are quite weak.
64
3.8 Proposed Changes in the Civil Service Structure
The NCGR report provides a roadmap for
restructuring the civil service in Pakistan. There will
be four types of services in Pakistan - All Pakistan,
Federal, Provincial and District.
All Pakistan Services
All Pakistan Services will include:
National Executive Service. (NES)
Pakistan Administrative Service.(PAS) (formerly
DMG)
Police Service of Pakistan. (PSP)
Offcers belonging to All Pakistan Services will
rotate between the Federal and the Provincial
Governments.
The Federal Services
The Federal Services will consist of the following
cadre services in addition to ex-cadre and subordinate
services:
Pakistan Foreign Service. (PFS)
Pakistan Audit and Accounts Service. (PAAS)
Pakistan Taxation Service with two cadres for
Customs and Inland Revenue. (PTS)
Those belonging to the Federal services will work
only at the Federal Government
Fresh recruitment to some of other existing cadres
and occupational groups through the Central
Superior Services (CSS) examination should be
discontinued in the future and substituted by other
modes of competitive recruitment based on specifc
job requirements.
Implication on the Provincial Civil Service
The Provincial Civil Services should have several
components such as:
Provincial Management Service (PMS)
Provincial Executive Service (PES)
Provincial Technical Services Cadres such as
Irrigation, Communications, Education, Health,
Police, etc.
Provincial Judicial Service (PJS)
Subordinate Employees (Grade 1-16)
The constitution of technical cadres would vary
according to the specifc circumstances of each
province. For example, it is possible that Punjab may
have a minimum critical strength for a regular cadre
that provides adequate number of posts in higher
grades for career progression and promotion path
to higher positions of responsibility. In Balochistan,
these criteria may not be fulflled and most of
technical departments may continue to have ex-cadre
positions. In that event, like the Federal Civil Services
the alternative system of professional growth
promotion may also be introduced for these positions
and opportunities for progression are equalised
between cadre and ex-cadre offcers.
The Provincial Management Service would fll in the
positions at Tehsil, District, Provincial Government
level of generalist nature such as Tehsil Municipal
Offcer (TMO), Deputy District Offcer (DDO),
Executive District Offcer (EDO), District Offcer
(DO) in Revenue, Finance, Planning, Community
Development Departments and the incumbents can
progress all the way up to Grade 22 in the Provinces.
These cadre positions will be shared with the offcers
of PAS.
The Provincial Executive Service will be constituted
on the lines of the National Executive Service. A
competitive examination by PPSC will be held for
recruitment to PES and will be open to the offcers of
PMS, Provincial technical cadres and ex-cadre posts
at Grade 18. Those who meet the eligibility criteria
including performance record and are successful at
the examination will be inducted into the PES at
Grade 20 level. The PES and NES offcers will have
equal shares in all the Provincial Secretariat positions
from Grade 20 to 22. Offcers of PMS, PAS, ex-
cadres, PTS etc will be eligible to occupy positions
at Grades 17-19 in the Provincial Secretariat. District
Service offcers of Grade-17 will also be eligible for
these positions.
Role of The Provincial Government
Steer and oversee the transition process leading to
creation of District Service and its cadres.
Council service and employment rules.
Establish the overall procedures of fnancial
management, reporting and personnel
65
management to be adhered to, by the local
administration.
Establish overall procedures for personnel
management, especially procedures and processes
for arbitration and review of employment
disputes.
Hear and rule on specifc grievances on the part
of District Service staff, regarding wrongful
termination or other issues of personnel
management.
Hear and rule on complaints against either the
District or Tehsil administration, or against the
elected councils and leaders, regarding deviations
from policies, regulations or law.
Establish and provide training programs and
institutions in support of the local government
Civil Service.
Provide professional guidance, standards,
technical assistance and skills to technical staff in
the Districts and Tehsils.
Provide specifc periodic oversight and inspection
regarding the performance of Districts and
Tehsils as mandated by law.
Provide such guidance, oversight and support to
local administration as required under the law,
passed by the Provincial Assembly.
Implication on the District Service
A new District Service encompassing all posts in
Grades1-16 will be established for each district or
group of districts. All posts in BPS-1 to 16 at the
District, Tehsil/Town and Union Council levels be
classifed into two categories:
All common services staff who can be rotated
from one offce to another, without any diffculty,
such as messengers, drivers, clerks, assistants,
superintendents, serving at the District, Town/
Tehsil, Union Administration levels, should be
grouped together to form the General Cadre. The
inter-changeability of the staff, who will mainly be
generalists, will be the main criterion for induction
into this grouping.
All technical staff, which belong to specifc
departments, will either be grouped into separate
cadres if there is a justifcation to do so, or remain
in ex-cadre or non-cadre posts in their respective
departments, with their promote son prospects
at par with the cadre employees.
For City District Governments, the District Service
can be extended to include BPS-17 offcers. These
District Service offcers will share posts with
Provincial and PAS offcers.
National Executive Service (NES)
A new All Pakistan Service the National Executive
Service will be created and along with the Provincial
Executive Service (PES), set up in each province, will
fll in all senior positions (BPS 20-22) in the Federal/
Provincial Secretariats. The NES/PES will be open
to all existing offcers serving the Government and
also to professionals from outside, meeting certain
eligibility criteria. Regional/Provincial quotas for
recruitment to NES will address the complaints
of smaller provinces of non-representation at
Secretary/Additional Secretary levels in the Federal
Government.
Selection to NES will be made through an open merit-
based competitive system, introducing representation
for underdeveloped and provincial regions. In the
beginning, it has been proposed to have two streams
within NES - the Economic Management Group
(EMG) and the General Management Group (GMG).
The third stream, i.e Social Sector Group (SSG), can
be created later on.
Any offcer in Grade-19 belonging to the Federal,
Provincial or All Pakistan Services will have the
option to continue working in his cadre service or ex-
cadre position and move up vertically according to
the cadre rules or appear at the NES examination.
Once selected, the person will become member of
the NES cadre in Grade-20 and rise up to Grade-22
on the basis of performance, output, competencies
and integrity through a transparent selection process.
Subordinate Services (Lower Level of Civil
Servants) (BS 1-16)
Lower level of civil servants include staff from BS-l
to BS-16 in ministry/division/department-specifc
employees with the exception of Subordinate
Accounts Service (SAS) personnel who are routinely
posted across ministries/divisions/departments.
Almost 95 percent of the positions in the Federal
66
Government ministries/attached departments/
subordinate offces, etc are occupied by the
subordinate staff up to BS-16.
A very large proportion of the annual wage, salaries,
allowances and benefts budget of the government
employees accrues to staff employed in BS 1-16. In
terms of sheer numbers, it is estimated that 90-95
percent of all Civil Servants in the three tiers, Federal,
Provincial and District, belong to subordinate
services.
At the Federal Government level, 85 percent of
the salary and wage bill of the Ministries, attached
departments, subordinate offces, is disbursed to this
category of employees and only 15 percent to the
offcers in BS 17 and above. The Federal Government,
for example, has up to 234,000 employees sanctioned
posts, (208,000 actually working) in BS 1-5.
A question may be asked whether this large pool,
(almost 60 percent of the Federal Government
employees) in a largely unskilled category, would be
required, once the e-offce suite is introduced in all
the Ministries/Departments, as the horse engine
for conducting government business. It is quite
conceivable that new skills which do not currently
exist in the Government, at the support staff level,
may be required for future business.
The existing staff members should be given
opportunities for retraining to acquire the necessary
skills. Even after that, if redundancies become
apparent, the planning for meeting those redundancies
in the outer years should start now and all the vacancies
likely to become surplus to the requirements in the
future, should be frozen and no new recruitment be
allowed against those posts. This natural attrition
would prepare the Federal Government to reach its
envisaged target in a manner that does not threaten
the livelihoods of employees. Staff welfare and
protection should remain an important criterion for
the Government in evaluating its alternatives and
forced or voluntary separation should be avoided
as much as possible. These low-income employees
do not possess marketable skills and therefore their
absorption elsewhere in the economy would be highly
doubtful.
A rough estimate of the Provincial Government
employees also indicates that 85 percent of the salary
and wage bill is allocated to three departments
Education, Health and Police. These departments
will expand in future, as the facilities and services
are extended and new recruitment is made, either
on contract or regular basis, to fll in the new
vacancies. Outside these departments, the Provincial
Governments and District Governments may have
to examine, in light of E-government initiative, the
optimal size of support staff, which will be required
to sustain their operations. This review may lead to
the conclusion that there would be surplus staff in
several categories in year 5. Action will have to be
initiated immediately to freeze recruitment to the
vacancies against surplus posts occurring due to
attrition.
Secondly, the up-gradation of SHO to BS-17 offcer
by combining some of the urban Thanas, or Tehsil
Land Record Offcer in place of a number of
Patwaris, or similar other positions that interface
with the general public, may also force freezing of
new recruitment against these redundant posts. The
NCGR can provide the broad guidelines, but an in-
depth review has to be carried out by each Provincial/
District Government.
Entry points to Subordinate Services should be few,
so that there are good prospects for promotion across
the BS grades.
67
Strengthening of District Service
Clear boundaries of responsibilities should be
delineated between the Provincial Government and
the devolved departments at the district government.
The Provincial Government will have powers for
policy formulation and issuing directives, setting
quality standards, offcer training, monitoring and
evaluation. The Provincial departments that have
devolved their functions should no longer be engaged
in executing or implementing programmes and
development projects.
There are no administrative linkages between
the Union Councils (UC), Tehsil Municipal
Administration (TMA) and the District Government
(DG) under the new system analogous to those
existing between the Federal-provincial and
Provincial-District Governments. The missing link
can be established by requiring the UC Secretary
reporting to UC Nazim for all UC affairs as given
under the LGO but also to the Tehsil or Town
Municipal Offcer (TMO) for coordination within
the teshsil/town. Similarly, the TMO should report
to the Tehsil/Town Nazim for TMA affairs under the
LGO but report to the District Coordination Offcer
(DCO) for coordination purposes within the District.
The TMO should be designated as ADCO also and
should be an offcer of Grade-17 directly recruited
under the PAS or PMS.
For meeting urban planning needs of large cities
and providing integrated municipal services to the
citizens in the 8 City District Governments (CDGs),
autonomous Municipal Services Corporations (MSC)
may be established with a Governing Board. The
MSCs will be able to attract quality human resources
with requisite skills and establish modern management
techniques. This combination of people, processes
and technology at one place will halt the fragmented
management of urban services; solve the capacity
problem by better response to the needs of the urban
citizens.
The City District Governments (CDGs) should be
assigned the responsibilities of Master Planning, its
implementation and the delivery of all municipal
services water supply, sanitation, sewerage, solid
waste management, building codes and standards,
etc by all other independent land owning agencies
operating in their jurisdictions.
Training Needs Assessments (TNAs) should be
carried out for each District. On the basis of the
TNA, course content, teaching tools and methods of
on-the-job training and capacity building should be
developed. Those who fail to qualify the prescribed
standards and qualifcations should be removed from
these sensitive positions and replaced by professional
staff hired on contract or in regular cadres or
borrowed from the Provincial Governments on
deputation.
The monitoring and oversight functions of the
Provincial Governments can be better performed,
for example, in the province of Punjab covering 35
districts, by posting a Member Board of Revenue
with a limited staff at the Regional headquarters with
the powers to inspect 8-10 District Governments
a. BS-1 Through Departmental Selection Boards, automatic promotion on seniority-cum-
ftness basis up to BS-4
b. BS-5 50% vacancies for new entrants and 50% for promotion, through an examination
conducted by Departmental Selection Boards, automatic promotion on seniority-
cum-ftness basis up to BS-10
c. BS-11 60% vacancies for new entrants and 40% for promotion, through an examination
by the Departmental Selection Boards, automatic promotion on seniority-cum-
ftness basis up to BS-13
d. BS-14 70% vacancies for new entrants and 30% through an examination and interview
by Departmental Selection Boards, automatic promotion to BS-16
e. BS-17 80% vacancies for new entrants and 20% for promotion, through an examination
and interview conducted by FPSC and PPSC
68
It is suggested that fresh induction should take place in the following Grades:
each year. The Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
has already appointed Regional Coordinators at the
former Divisional headquarters.
Valuation based on new cadastral surveys can raise
the revenues of all the city District Governments
three or four times their present level and help them
fnance the growing needs of urbanisation. The over
dependence of each tier of government upon the
next one and the expanding vertical fscal imbalances
have to be narrowed by exploiting this under-tapped
revenue potential of agriculture, income tax, water
user charges and urban property tax.
It has been found that development projects executed
by the District Governments have a signifcant effect
in removing inter-district differentials in access to
services and promoting equity. These projects are
more responsive to the local needs, refect the priorities
of the communities and potential benefciaries. The
Federal Government should formulate and execute
projects of inter-provincial or national dimension.
The Provincial Governments should do the same in
respect of inter-district and province-wide coverage
projects. But their involvement in District level
projects should be through matching grants and
provision of technical expertise rather than direct
execution.
One of the ways in which the enforcement of
local and special laws can be ensured under the
new Local Government system is to introduce the
system of Illaqa Magistracy. Illaqa Magistrates would
be entrusted the functions such as Crisis/Disaster
management and relief measures, inspection of
weekly bazaars and markets for ensuring price control
of essential items.
The post of District Coordination Offcer (DCO)
may be re-designated as District Chief Operations
Offcer. The posts of DCO for City District
Governments will be in Grade-22, in major district
Grade-21 and in smaller districts Grade-20.
NCGR Recommendations
The following recommendations for improving
the Local Government system should therefore be
seen in the above larger context, rather than in the
narrow sense of taking away powers from one tier
of the government to the other. The adversarial
and confrontational relationship that dominates at
present has to give rise to a more consensual and
collaborative arrangement.
i. The National Reconstruction Bureau (NRB) and
the Federal Ministry of Local Government and
Rural Development should be abolished and
their responsibilities and functions transferred to
the Provincial Governments. This will reinforce
the ownership of the future reforms by the
provinces, who will develop a greater stake in
the system and also allay the perception that the
Federal Government is driving the process that
rightly belongs to the provinces.
ii. The boundaries of responsibilities between
the Provincial Government and the devolved
departments in the Districts have to be clearly
delineated. The Provincial Government should
have the powers of policy formulation and
directives, setting and enforcing standards
of quality assurance, training of offcers,
management of offcers above Grade-17,
oversight and monitoring of projects and
programs and holding the District Governments
accountable for results (Annex-I). The Provincial
departments that have devolved their functions
should no longer be engaged in executing or
implementing programmes and development
projects. The existing set of rules, regulations,
bye laws, orders, should be revised to refect this
changed relationship between the provinces and
the Districts. The District Governments should
be responsible for the day-to-day operations and
implementation of policies, programs/ projects
and provision of services to the citizens mainly
through the District Service Cadre. The services
of the offcers of the Provincial Governments
in Grades-17 and above ought to be placed
at the disposal of the District Governments
for a fxed period of time, during which the
responsibility for their performance evaluation,
disciplinary actions, postings and transfers
etc. would fall squarely upon the shoulders
of the District Governments. The technical
back-up support will be provided by the
respective Provincial department. The District
Governments can surrender any offcer to the
Provincial Government before completion
of the tenure by providing valid and cogent
reasons. Similarly, the Provincial Government
can recall any offcer after giving reasons, prior
consultation with the District Government and
69
providing a substitute. To illustrate the above
division of work take the Tehsil and District
Headquarters hospitals as an example. These
hospitals will be funded, operated and managed
by the District Government, but they will have
to abide by service, maintenance, cleanliness
and waste disposal standards, drug procurement
procedures, patient welfare guidelines etc. issued
by the Provincial Health Department and asked
to comply with the ISO certifcation. The Health
Director of the Provincial Government will
arrange physical inspections of the hospitals
by his staff, to ensure that these standards are
being observed, patient welfare processes are in
place and certifcation requirements are being
complied with. The development schemes for
these hospitals will be prepared by the District
Health Offce, and approved by the DDWP or
PDWP as the case may be.
iii. A District Service Cadre as proposed in
Chapter-III of this Report should be established
immediately and all Grade 1-16 offcials of the
devolved departments transferred to this cadre
in each district
iv. The complex nature of urban development
requires an organizational delivery mechanism
that is able to cope with the future growth of
cities in a planned and systematic manner.
Unfortunately, the present system of urban
planning and management is bereft of the
essential ingredients to meet these challenges.
To provide integrated municipal services to the
citizens of the 8 cities, autonomous Municipal
Services Corporations (MSC) may be established
with a Governing Board, chaired by the District
Nazim and drawing representatives from Town
Administration, the Development Authority,
the Cantonments and other major jurisdictional
entities. In outlying towns the MSC can enter into
a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with
the TMAs, that will be delegated the powers to
deliver the municipal services in their respective
areas. The present position of EDO (Municipal
Services) will then be transformed into the
Chief Executive Offcer of the MSC. Water and
Sewerage Authorities (WASA) would become
part of the MSC. The MSCs should have their
own Municipal Police and Municipal Magistrates
for taking cognizance of the Municipal offences
and enforce action under the law. The merit of
this arrangement is that the MSCs will be able
to attract quality human resources with requisite
skills and establish modern management
techniques taking advantage of information
technology tools. This combination of people,
processes and technology will provide a better
response capacity to the needs of the urban
citizens who are also more vocal and articulate.
v. The City District Governments (CDGs) should
be assigned the responsibilities of Master
Planning, its implementation and the delivery of
all municipal services water supply, sanitation,
sewerage, solid waste management, building
codes and standards etc. in all the areas falling
within its territorial limits. The ownership of
the land and properties within the respective
areas will continue to rest with the respective
jurisdictional entities such as Cantonments,
Housing Societies and Authorities etc. The cost
sharing arrangements will have to be worked out
between the CDGs and the jurisdictional entities.
vi. The missing administrative linkage between the
Union Tehsil District can be established in
the following matrix management:
UC Secretary reports to Union Nazim for all
Union Council affairs as given under the LGO,
but reports to Tehsil/ Town Municipal Offcer
(TMO) for coordination within the Tehsil/
Town.
TMO reports to the Tehsil/ Town Nazim for
all TMC affairs as specifed in the LGO, but
reports to DCO for coordination purposes and
is designated as ADCO. The DDOs working
in the Tehsil / Town will then be able to liaise
closely with the Town / Tehsil Administration.
The DDOs working in the Tehsil/ Town will
then be able to liaise closely with the Town/
Tehsil Administration.
vii. The LGO stipulates external mechanisms of
Citizens monitoring and Mediation Committees
and the District Ombudsman and the Police
Order envisages District Complaints and District
Public Safety Commissions. These mechanisms
have either been made ineffective or not put
in place by design or default. This serious gap
in the grass roots accountability is giving rise
to growing perceptions of corruption and
rent seeking among the elected and appointed
offcials of local governments.
70
viii. Despite innumerable efforts by the donors,
NRB and the Provincial Governments, the
capacity of the offcials at the local governments
does not match the requirements of the new
system. Training Needs Assessments (TNAs)
should be carried out for each District. On the
basis of the TNA new pedagogical tools and
methods of on-the-job training and capacity
building particularly in Planning, Project Cycle,
Budgeting, Accounting, Auditing, Procurement
of goods and services and tendering, contract
management, fnancial management and
controls and human resource management
should be immediately introduced. Those who
fail to qualify the prescribed standards and
qualifcations should be removed from these
sensitive positions and replaced by professional
staff hired on contract or in regular cadres or
borrowed from the Provincial Governments on
deputation.
ix. Capacity constraint particularly at the TMAs
and Union levels is that of technical and
administrative expertise. Offcials of former
Local Government Departments who were
not trained or prepared, were given heavy and
complex responsibilities for which they were not
equipped. Complaints of incompetence, delays,
widespread corruption, malfeasance, leakage of
funds etc. are rampant at the TMA. The TMA
has to be strengthened by elevating the status
of the offcials responsible for these services
and inducting capable, competent and honest
offcers.
x. One possible way to strengthen the monitoring
and oversight functions of the Provincial
Governments is to post the Members, Board
of Revenue with a limited staff at the Regional
headquarters and assign them the powers to
inspect 08 to 10 District Governments each
year, to ensure that the policies, standards, rules
and regulations are being observed. They can
be delegated the enforcement powers assigned
to the Provincial Governments under the LGO.
xi. The Provincial and Local Governments are
excessively dependent on transfers. As much
as 90 percent of the revenues of the Local
Governments are derived as transfers from
Divisible pool. As the incentives for resource
mobilizations are perverse the revenue potential
of provincial and local taxes and user charges
remains substantially under exploited. For
example, land revenue collection accounts for
less than 1 percent of the agriculture income,
water rate collection is inadequate to meet the
full operation and maintenance costs of the
irrigation system and property taxation of
rental incomes is about 5 percent as opposed
to the statutory rate of 20 percent or more. In
Karachi, Lahore and other large metropolitan
areas, the values of property have escalated
several fold, but the tax collection has lagged
far behind. Valuation based on new cadastal
surveys can raise the revenues of all the city
District Governments three or four times their
present level and help them fnance the growing
needs of urbanization i.e. water, sewerage, solid
waste disposal, traffc management, roads and
bridges etc. The over dependence of each
tier of government upon the next one and the
expanding vertical fscal imbalances have to
be narrowed by exploiting this under-tapped
revenue potential of agriculture income tax,
water user charges and urban property tax.
One of the ways in which the enforcement of
local and special laws can be ensured under the
new Local Government system, is to introduce
the system of Illaqa Magistracy. While there
is no question that the executive and judicial
branches of the state should be kept separate,
there are compelling reasons for assigning some
of the magisterial powers of prevention and
taking cognizance of the violations of local and
special laws to the Executive Offcers serving
in the districts. The powers to adjudicate, hold
trials and punish the offenders should remain
solely with the judicial magistrates. Under the
Local Government Ordinance, enforcement
mechanism was restricted to taking cognizance
of violations of the Ordinance itself. Inspectors
were to be appointed and they were empowered
to impose fnes in shape of tickets and to
send the offenders for trial in the court of the
Magistrates of the First Class. The said law was
silent on the violation of other local and special
laws. Thus only the Magistrates, working under
the supervision of District and Sessions Judge,
could take cognizance of such offences. These
Magistrates are not only overburdened but are
reluctant to visit the sites for taking action for
removal of encroachments or other municipal
offences or enforce price controls, adulteration
etc. Thus, there exists an impelling need to re-
71
introduce the system of Illaqa Magistrates, to
take cognizance of violation of local and special
laws as well preventive action, as was prescribed
under the Criminal Procedure Code (Cr.P.C).
Illaqa Magistrates would be entrusted the
functions like Crisis/Disaster management and
relief measures, inspection of weekly bazaars and
markets for ensuring price control of essential
items, prevention of encroachments and other
preventive actions as may be prescribed, under
the law.
xii. Recently, section 14(a) of Cr.P.C. has been
incorporated, which provides dispensation by
the Price Magistrates, to be appointed by the
Provincial Government, (Home Department)
to check arbitrary infation of prices of essential
food items. It is a right step in right direction.
However, things would not come to a full circle,
unless and until Cr.P.C. is amended to empower
the Provincial Government to appoint or
confer Magisterial powers to any person/public
functionary, to perform Magisterial functions in
a given local area. To that end, section 14 of the
Cr.P.C. needs further amendments. The scope
and effectiveness of control exercised by DCO
is limited in practice by the powers specifed to
him i.e. for coordination only. The business
model that has worked very well in Pakistan so
far is the Chief Minister Chief Secretary model
at the Provincial level. It is suggested that the
same model may be applied at the district level
also, in matters of devolved departments. Chief
Minister (CM) is the Chief Executive of the
Province in all matter of the Administration,
while the Chief Secretary (CS) is not only his
principal adviser, but also implementer of the
decisions taken by the C.M., the Cabinet and
the Provincial Legislature. This relationship
has evolved over time and is clearly established
despite the variation in the leadership styles of
the C.M. or the C.S. After all, some of the districts
today are larger than the provinces of the 1950s
and 1960s. The post of District Coordination
Offcer may be re-designated as District Chief
Operations Offcer (DCO) and the current
relationship that exists between the CM and
CS in respect of the Provincial Government
may be replicated at the District level in terms
of functions, responsibilities, authority, powers,
and accountability. The posts of DCO for City
District Governments will be in Grade-22, in
major districts Grade-21 and in smaller districts
Grade-20.
xiii. The absence of an institutionalized and
effective administrative link between the
District Government and the Tehsil / Town
Administration, is creating serious problem of
fragmentation and lack of integrated planning,
infrastructure and service delivery in the entire
territorial jurisdiction of the district. The
synergies and the economies of scale and scope
are not being fully exploited, with the resultant
high cost solutions, ineffciency outcomes,
waste and duplication. In order to fll in this
missing link it is recommended that the Tehsil
Municipal Offcer (TMO) should be the
Chief Operating Offcer of the Tehsil/ Town
Administration, (TMA) working under the direct
control of Tehsil/ Town Nazims, but report for
coordination purposes to the DCO. He/ She can
be designated as ADCO for this purpose.
3.9 Re-organising the Structure of Government
The Federal Government should transfer legislative,
administrative and fnancial powers to the
Provincial Governments in respect of Education
(except curriculum and Higher Education), Health
(except national health programmes), Agriculture,
Livestock, Fisheries, Forests, Local Government,
Rural Development, Labour, Social Welfare and
Population Welfare. For these subjects, National
Council of Ministries consisting of the Federal and
Provincial ministers in charge of the portfolio and
National Committee of Secretaries consisting of
the Federal and Provincial Secretaries should meet
regularly to discuss, formulate the sectoral strategies,
plans and policies, monitor the progress and take
corrective actions. The responsibility for operations,
execution and regulation will, however, remain with
the Provincial and District Governments within the
parameters specifed by the National Councils of
Ministries. These Councils and Committees can be
established and work under the Council of Common
Interests (CCI) and submit a report to the CCI
annually. As a consequence, it is proposed to reduce
the number of Federal ministries from 41 to 23 and
the number of Divisions from 46 to 37.
72
In view of the new challenges that are likely to
emerge in the future, it is proposed to create some
new ministries and Divisions by merging, liquidating,
transferring some of the existing ministries and
Division. These new ministries are:
Technology Development (merging Science and
Technology and IT)
Regulatory Affairs (carving out of Cabinet
Division and bringing in CAA, DRA and PEMRA)
Human Resource Development (in place of
Education, Health, Population, Social Welfare)
Social Protection
Infrastructure Development (merging
Communications, Ports and Shipping, Railways
and Civil Aviation)
Energy (merging Petroleum and Power)
Special and Underdeveloped areas (merging
KANA and SAFRON)
Environment and Natural Resources (existing
Agriculture and Environment)
All the existing 411 autonomous bodies, semi-
autonomous bodies, corporations, companies,
councils, commissions, training institutes, attached
departments; subordinate offcers, etc have been
regrouped into two broad categories:
Autonomous bodies
Executive departments
Detailed proposals have been developed for each
of these 411 organisational entities. After mergers,
winding up, privatisation, transfers to the provinces,
liquidation, etc only 177 Autonomous bodies and 70
Executive departments will be retained at the Federal
Government. None of the employees serving
the redundant organisations will lose the job non-
voluntarily.
Autonomous bodies will have an independent Board
of Directors and led by a Chief Executive reporting
to the Board. The Autonomous body will perform
regulatory, operational, corporate, research and
development, quasi-judicial functions.
All training institutions will be reorganised as
Training and Policy Research Institutions which will
be autonomous with their own board of directors.
These institutions will be given one line budget that
they will be allowed to spend for the execution of the
annual work plan approved by the Board.
In cases where these bodies are funded fully by the
national exchequer, the representative of the Finance
Ministry on the Board will enjoy the veto power on
commitments of future fnancial obligations and
liabilities. But no references will be made to the
Finance or Administrative Ministry once the decisions
have been taken by the Board.
All Executive departments will work under the direct
supervision and guidance of the Secretary of Division.
The head of the department will, however, enjoy the
autonomy to deliver the agreed work programme for
the year and for this he will be provided the requisite
fnancial, human and other resources. The delegation
of powers to the heads of departments will have to
be upgraded.
3.10 Improving Human Resource Management and Development
Recruitment
The sources of recruitment for the Civil Services
should be widened and diversifed. The Federal and
Provincial Public Service Commissions should arrange
participation in job fairs and make presentations to
institutions with potential candidates for civil service
employment. For specialist and technical expert jobs,
they should acquire the services of professional
recruitment agencies.
Job descriptions and specifcations should be
developed for all the positions in the Federal and
Provincial Governments. Recruitment rules should
be revised and aligned with these job descriptions and
the requisitions be sent to the FPSC and PPSCs on
the basis of these revised rules.
The FPSC study on improving the current
examination and interview system should be used
to make changes within the Federal as well as the
73
provincial recruitment processes. Initial screening
and psychometric testing should help in assessing the
attitude, teamwork and other personality traits of the
candidates.
Particular attention should be given to bring the
standards and rigour of recruitment of ex-cadre
offcers at par with cadre services. Both written
examination as well as structured interviews should
be held for this category also.
The choice of services at the CSS examination
should be linked with the selection of elective papers.
For example, a candidate for Audit and Accounts
or Taxation Service cannot be considered eligible
for these services unless he/she has successfully
passed the elective paper in Accounting or Financial
management. There will be no restriction on the
number of services a candidate can opt for provided
he/she has cleared the elective papers relevant for
these services.
The recruitment standards and processes by the PPSC
should be brought at par with the FPSC. The method
and eligibility criteria, the tenure of the chairman and
members and the quality of permanent staff of these
commissions should be reviewed and upgraded.
Training
New training institutions should be established for
training of technical and professional staff at the
Federal and Provincial Governments in the subject
areas of their respective expertise. The majority of
ex-cadre offcers do not undergo any systematic
training throughout their career to acquire new skills
or modern techniques and knowledge. The shoddy
design and implementation, large cost overruns and
poor quality of the work in our infrastructure projects
and the weak social indicators refect the inadequate
training of the staff in the professional and technical
felds.
Just like management training has been made
mandatory for promotion to the next grade,
professional training should also be made
precondition for offcers both at the Provincial and
the Federal Government levels. Incentives, facilities
and standards for specialised and professional
training institutions should be comparable to those
with the National School of Public Policy.
To attract instructional staff to the training institutes,
it is essential to combine policy research at these
institutes with extra points in computation of
marks for promotion and special emoluments and
facilities such as free residential accommodation.
Case study methods should be used for analysing
large development projects, their costs, benefts and
impact.
Strengthening Key Institutions of Governance
About 100 key public sector institutions in the
country have a critical impact on the economic and
social outcomes. Their governance structure has to
be made more transparent and merit-based so that
the right man is chosen as the Chief Executive. A
special Selection Board will screen, interview the
candidates, and prepare a short list for consideration
by the Prime Minister. This process will minimise
arbitrary discretionary powers of the Chief Executive
and attract capable candidates for these key jobs.
Compensation and Benefts
The various reforms proposed in this report would
remain ineffective and incomplete unless the question
of compensation and benefts to the offcers above
Grade-17 is not squarely addressed. The present
compensation structure whereby 85 percent of the
Governments salary bill goes to subordinate staff
in Grades 1-16 who are well-paid compared to their
private sector counterparts while 15 percent goes
to the offcers grade who are all underpaid will not
allow talented persons to be attracted, motivated and
retained to civil services. While it is neither politically
feasible nor humanly desirable to get rid of the
surplus staff in lower grades, it is proposed that new
recruitment to this category be frozen except for
teachers, health workers, and policemen. Over time,
the budgetary savings freed up by a reduction in the
size of the workforce will enable the Government
to double or triple the salaries of the offcer grade
within the budgetary limits.
As a starting point, it is suggested that those
selected to the NES through a rigorous competitive
examination should be given MP III to MP I scales.
After all, the Government is paying these scales to
scores of persons whose suitability and eligibility
for these posts is questionable and whose selection
procedure is opaque. The fnancial implications of
paying these scales to 10,000 offcers in the NES and
PES are likely to be modest but the benefts in terms
74
of productivity, morale, low corruption and effciency
will exceed these costs many times over.
Performance-related salary has been introduced in
some government organisations such as the Federal
Board of Revenue. As long as the selection to these
specifed posts is competitive and transparent and the
measurement of performance indicators is objective,
this mode of salary should be introduced in other
key organisations and later extended to the whole
government in a phased manner.
Performance Appraisal
A fair and equitable compensation system cannot
work well unless it is accompanied by an objective
performance appraisal system. It is recommended that
the current system of Annual Confdential Report
(ACR) should be replaced with an open Performance
Evaluation Report (PER) system in which the goals
and targets are agreed at the beginning of the year, key
performance indicators to measure the achievements
are settled and an open discussion is held between
the appraisee and the supervisor on the identifcation
of development needs to carry out the work. Mid-
year review is held to assess progress and provide
feedback and the annual evaluation is held jointly
through a discussion between the appraised and the
supervisor. The appraisee can then sign the report
or appeal to the next in line supervisor against the
fndings of his immediate supervisor. This way the
PER is used mostly as a tool for the development of
the individual to meet the needs of the organisation.
Poor or underperformers are particularly focused
upon to bring them to better performance outcomes.
Promotion Policy and Career Management
The promotion policy and career management
should be the responsibility of a centralised Human
Resource Management and Development Agency.
The Establishment Division should be reorganised
into two divisions (a) Human Resource Management
Division (HRMD), which will be responsible
for the policies of recruitment, career planning,
promotion, compensation and benefts, severance,
etc and (b) Organisational Development Division,
which will be responsible for the policies of training
and organisational developments. Promotion policy
should lay down the criteria including the weight
given to PER, training and skills acquisition, rotation
of assignments, diversity of experience, complexity
of jobs, etc for each level. The HRMD should then
guide each Division/Ministry responsible for the
management of human resources in the enforcement
of these standards and implementation of policies.
Simplifying Rules, Process and Procedures
E-Government tools and development in digital
technology offer promising prospects for improving
the effciency of government, reducing the costs of
transactions, conveniencing the ordinary citizens,
introducing transparency and reducing discretionary
powers and therefore corruption and tracking the
performance and output. Despite such potentially
powerful impact of E-government the resistance,
reluctance and contrived delay in its adoption are
ferce. A modest beginning has been made in an ad
hoc manner but a concerted effort steered and guided
by the top leadership at the Federal and Provincial
governments is lacking. Unless serious attention
is given by the countrys leadership, the pace will
remain uneven, the impact will be marginal and the
opportunities foregone will be tremendous. The
report stresses equally upon training and adaptation
by those already working in the government to make
the transition from a paper-based environment to
electronic fling, messaging, sharing and exchanging
of documents, retrieving, reporting and archiving
smooth.
The other highly demanding but non-glamorous
job the Commission has done is to weed out and
purge the multiple rules, regulations, instructions
and circulars existing in the manuals followed by
the government offcials on day-to-day basis, to
update them and compile a concise and accurate
manual. The Establishment Manual has already
been completed while the Finance Manual would be
ready by December 2008. These manuals will then
be uploaded on the websites of the Government of
Pakistan so that they are accessible to the public at
large.
The Ministry of Finance has agreed to replace the
outdated concept of Financial Advisor organisation
by the Chief Financial and Accounts Offcer in
each Ministry working under the direct control of
the Principal Accounting Offcer (PAO), who is
the Secretary of the Division. The full powers for
reappropriation within the approved budget will
be delegated to the Secretary of the Division. The
Secretary can further delegate some of the fnancial
powers to the Heads of Executive departments or
other offcers in the Ministry.
75
3.11 Governance and Delivery of Essential Public Services
Education
A clarity in division of responsibilities for various
levels of education has to be established. The Federal
Government will deal only with curriculum and
Higher Education fnancing, standards and regulation.
The Provincial Governments will be responsible for
college education, technical and vocational training
and charters of higher educational institutions. The
District Governments will cover primary, secondary
and high schools.
To bring about coordination and ensure uniformity
in standards of public, private and not for private
schools, it is recommended that a District Education
Board be established in each district. The Board
will consist of eminent persons enjoying a good
reputation in their communities and will have the
District Education Offcer as the Secretary of the
Board. The detailed terms of reference of the
Board have been developed. The Boards will be
assisted by the School Management Committees
which will be empowered. Head Teachers will
enjoy more administrative authority in running the
schools and disciplining the teachers. The Board
will be involved in the oversight of selection of
teachers and inspection of schools.
Management and teaching cadres should be
separated and the career paths for the two cadres
would not discriminate against the teachers.
Endowment funds should be established by the
Provincial Governments to provide fnancing
for talented students to pursue studies at top
institutions in the country. Student vouchers or
stipends should be given to mentoring children
from the poor families to attend private schools
of their choice. Private-public partnerships in the
form of Adopt a School programmes should be
encouraged and given incentives.
To promote increased female enrolment at primary
schools, it is suggested that only female teachers
be employed whenever possible.
Health
Health management cadre should be separated
from teaching and service providers in each
province and the Federal Government. Only
those having the aptitude should be recruited as
health managers and trained at the National and
Provincial health academies.
The District, teaching and other specialised
hospital should have their own boards of directors
and should be given autonomy in administrative,
fnancial, legal and human resource matters.
Health and manpower development, particularly
in the nursing and paramedic professions, require
urgent attention.
Health Regulatory Framework should be made
more effective and decentralised to the Provincial
Directors of Health.
Police
The original Police Order has been compromised
by amendments that have weakened the functioning
as well as the accountability of the Police. The
revised Police Order should be reviewed.
The Provincial Police Offce should be organised
along functional lines and the powers delegated
under the Police Order should be exercised at all
levels.
Police stations should be merged, upgraded
and headed by an offcer of Grade-17 with full
responsibility for Watch and Ward, Investigation,
and Operations.
Legislative amendments and revised disciplinary
rules are needed to allow Police offcers to
perform their duties in ascendance with the Police
Order and to remove the discretionary powers of
the Police. Police force should not fall under the
purview of the Civil Servants Act (except those
belonging to the Police Service of Pakistan) to
enforce internal accountability.
Traffc Police in all large cities should be organised
and operated on the lines of Motorway Police.
Training, allowances, mobility, logistics support,
lodging and boarding, medical facilities and welfare
of the Police Force fall short of their requirements
and create demoralisation, too. These should be
reviewed and strengthened.
Land Revenue
Land revenue assessment and collection,
adjudication and dispute resolution should
be under the District Government but the
maintenance and update of land records should
be taken away from the District Government and
76
placed directly under the Board of Revenue.
Patwari should be replaced by Revenue Assistant
in BS-11 and above and recruited through the
Provincial Public Service Commission.
Colonisation of Government Lands Act 1912
should be revised for better and transparent
allocation and utilisation of State land.
Efforts to create a digital database of land records
should be expedited
3.12 Re-organisation of Training and Policy Research Institutions
A survey of the Federal Government training
institutions was carried out, which revealed that
there were 24 training institutions under various
Ministries that are engaged in training of civil
servants of all kinds. There were 15 other training
and skill up-gradation institutions, which mainly
cater to the non-civil servants. These training
institutes are characterised by highly varied mandate,
governance structure, resource availability, and links
with policymaking and in their capacity to respond
to the changing skill requirements of the Ministries/
Division.
The main thrust of the proposals is that the majority
of the offcers serving the Federal Government, who
do not belong to any cadre or service, receive no
systematic training for upgrading their technical and
professional skills. This neglect has a major negative
effect on the quality of investment and operations
of our development projects. The demands on
these specialists and technical experts are going
to rise exponentially if Pakistan has to maintain
competitiveness in the global economy. Several
missing institutes which cater to the needs of these
specialists and cluster around the key components
of our future economic and social development
are therefore to be set up. The existing physical
infrastructure facilities, available in the Government
as a whole, have to be reorganised and reconfgured
for setting up these institutes, but the main emphasis
is to build up the faculty, curriculum, pedagogy,
assessment and testing and to link them with career
progression in an integral manner.
The Government incurs fnancial losses year after year
due to cost overruns, poor designs, weak engineering
specifcation, inadequate supervision and cost
controls. The engineers working for the Government,
after receiving their frst degree are seldom exposed
to the latest techniques of project management and
new developments in materials, processes etc. As two-
thirds of the public sector development expenditure
is incurred on energy and infrastructure, the proposed
Energy Policy Institute and Infrastructure Policy
Institute can play a major role in the up-gradation
of the technical and managerial skills of the staff
involved in the formulation and implementation of
the development projects in these felds. Similarly
medical doctors, teachers, agriculture and livestock
specialists, economists and fnancial experts, etc,
working in the Federal Government, have to keep
themselves abreast of the latest developments in their
respective felds
The other missing ingredient in training of civil
servants in Pakistan is the inculcation of soft skills
values, attitudes, orientation, and respect for citizens.
The basic underlying principle of the proposed
reorganisation is to combine training, continuing
education and policy research as a critical service arm
to the Ministries. The merger of policy research and
training functions under a single institution will have
several advantages:
The scarce expert resources will be pooled with a
critical mass available in a feld
Training will beneft from research inputs, while
research studies will fll in the knowledge gaps,
identifed by the participants and the policymakers.
Physical infrastructure facilities will be commonly
shared and operational costs minimised.
Administrative burden of overseeing multiple
institutions on the Ministry will be reduced.
77
3.13 Advisors
Dr Ishrat Husain
Dr Ishrat Hussain had prepared a comprehensive
roadmap as head of the National Commission on
Government Reforms (NCGR). Dr Ishrat Husain
is the Dean and Director, Institute of Business
Administration (IBA), Karachi.
Ishrat Husain joined the elite Civil Service of
Pakistan in 1964 and served in the feld and also held
mid-level policymaking positions in the Finance,
Planning and Development Departments before
moving to Washington in 1979 to join the World
Bank as an Economist in West Africa Programmes
Department. He became the Banks Resident
Representative to Nigeria in 1983 and led the Banks
team that assisted Nigeria in formulating its frst ever
structural adjustment programme in 1986. On his
return to headquarters, he headed the Banks Debt
and International Finance Division and contributed
to the development of Banks strategy that led to
World Bank and IMFs participation in the Brady
Initiative for Debt Reduction. As Chief Economist
for Africa between 1991-94 and later as Chief
Economist for East Asia and Pacifc Region, he
guided and supervised the Banks analytical work on
the countries in these regions. In 1997, he was named
the Country Director for Central Asian Republics and
he managed the World Banks relations, programmes
and policies with these countries.
Ishrat Husain was appointed the Governor of
Pakistans Central Bank in December 1999.
During the next six years, he implemented a major
programme of restructuring of the Central Bank
and steered the reforms of the banking sector, which
are now recognised by the World Bank and IMF
to be among the best in developing countries. As a
member of the economic management team of the
Government, he played a key role in the impressive
economic turnaround of Pakistan. In recognition
of his meritorious services, he was conferred the
prestigious award of Hilal-e-Imtiaz by the President
of Pakistan in 2003. The Banker Magazine of London
declared him as the Central Bank Governor of the
year for Asia in 2005. He received the Asian Banker
Lifetime achievement award in 2006.
He was appointed the Chairman, National
Commission for Government Reforms in May,
2006 with the status of Federal Minister and held
that position for two years reporting directly to
the President and Prime Minister of Pakistan. The
Commission produced a two-volume report on
governance reforms in Pakistan. In March 2008, he
took over the charge of the offce of the Dean and
Director, IBA, Karachi the oldest graduate business
school in Asia. During 2005-06, he was appointed by
the Board of IMF as a member of a three-member
panel to evaluate the IEO and was also a member
of the Mahathir Commission 2020 vision for the
Islamic Development Bank (IDB). He also advised
the IDB for creating its poverty reduction fund. He
is currently a member of the Independent Advisory
Committee of the IDB.
Mr Husain has maintained an active scholarly interest
in development issues. He has authored 12 books and
monographs and contributed more than two dozens
articles in journals and 15 chapters in books on the
issues of Debt, Adjustment, African Development
and Poverty and Pakistans economy. He is regularly
invited as a speaker to international conferences and
seminars and has attended more than 100 such events
all over the world so far. He is the Distinguished
National Professor of Economics and Public Policy
and serves on the Boards of several research institutes,
philanthropic and cultural organisations.
Ishrat Husain obtained Masters degree in
Development Economics from the Williams College
and Doctorate in Economics from the Boston
University in 1978. He is a graduate of Executive
Development programme jointly sponsored by
Harvard, Stanford and INSEAD
Mr Javed Hasan Aly
A former Public Servant, Javed Hasan Aly has been
hired to advise on governance and public policy under
a newly-designed Promoting Professional Excellence
Project. Mr Aly has had an extensive experience
working in different departments as Federal Secretary
and also holding other important portfolios in the
Government of Pakistan.
78
3.14 Conclusion
This report benefts from international experience
and Pakistans own historical record of reforms it has
adopted a hybrid approach, whereby a comprehensive
long term plan for reform requiring 10-15 years of
steady, patient and fexible support from the political
leadership has been drawn up. Transition planning
is essential and unless these plans are carefully
designed and executed, it is quite plausible that
these reforms may never take off. The confdence
of the stakeholders, including both the public and
the civil servants, will be reinforced only if these
transition plans are implemented well. Ultimately, it
must be emphasised that the Governance reforms
proposed in this report is essentially an evolving
political process that takes into account the existing
powerful relationships in which the polity is rooted.
The report provides that the majority of the offcers
serving the Federal Government do not belong to
any cadre or service, receive no systematic training
for upgrading their technical and professional skills.
This neglect has a major negative effect on the quality
of investment and operations of our development
projects. In addition, the report also points out that
the missing ingredient in training of civil servants
in Pakistan is the inculcation of soft skills values,
attitudes, orientation, and respect for citizens and
provides proposal that the basic underlying principle
of the proposed reorganisation is to combine training,
continuing education and policy research as a critical
service arm to the Ministries.
79
Annexure-I Civil Service Laws in Pakistan
37
The Public Servants (Inquiries Act) 1850
The Offcial Secret Act, 1923
The Provident Fund Act, 1925
The Pension and Provident Funds (Payment in Rupees) Order 1959
The Government Servants (Marriage With Foreign National) Rules 1962
The Government Servants (Conduct) Rules, 1964
The Section Offcers (Probation, Training and Seniority) Rules, 1964
The Central Secretariat Service (Class-I) Rules, 1965
The Central Civil Services (War Injuries Pension) Rules, 1965
The Government Servant (Applications for Services and Posts) Rules 1966
The Central Government (Class-IV Servants) Provident Fund Rules, 1966
The Federal Employees Benevolent Fund and Group Insurance Act, 1969
The Federal Employees Benevolent Fund and Group Insurance Rules, 1972
The Civil Servants Act, 1973
The Service Tribunals Act, 1973
The Government Servants (Effciency and Discipline Rules) 1973
The Civil Servants (Appointment, Promotion and Transfer) Rules, 1973
The Civil Servants (Change in Nomenclature of Services and Abolition of Classes) Rules 1973
The All-Pakistan Services (Change in Nomenclature) Rules, 1973
The Rules of Business, 1973
The Service Tribunals (Procedure) Rules 1974
The Federal Investigation Agency Act, 1974
The Service Tribunals (Procedure) Instructions, 1977
Appointment of Inquiry Offcer against Misconduct and Corrupt Practices by Government Servant
(CMLA Martial Law Order No. 17 of 1977)
The Civil Servants (Appeal) Rules, 1977
The Liberalised Pension Rules, 1977 & the Pension-cum-Gratuity Scheme
37
This list of civil service laws in not exhaustive. Only important laws are provided in this list.
80
81
The Revised N.S.P & Allowances, 1977
The Federal Public Service Commission Ordinance, 1977
The Federal Public Service Commission (Functions) Rules, 1978
The Federal Public Service Commission (Composition & Condition of Service ) Regulations, 1978
The Revised Leave Rules, 1980
The Occupational Groups & Services (Probation, Training & Seniority) Rules 1990
The Civil Servants (Seniority) Rules, 1993
The Civil Servants (Confrmation) Rules, 1993
The Initial Appointment to Civil Posts (Relaxation of Upper Age Limit) Rules, 1993
The Removal from Service (Special Powers) Ordinance, 2000 (Repeal)
Revision of Basic Pay Scales & Allowance & Pension of Civil Employees of Federal Government 2005
Increase in Basic Pay and Allowances of Civil Employees of Federal Government (2008)
ESTACODE: (Civil Establishment Code), Compendium of Laws, Rules, and Instructions for Civil
Servants.
The Removal from Service (Special Powers) (Repeal) Act, 2010.
82
Annexure-II
Administration
Auqaf
Excise & Taxation
Elementary & Secondary Education
Food
Home & Tribal Affairs
Housing
Law
Planning & Development
Revenue
Tourism
Zakat and Ushr
Energy & Power
Information & Public Relations
Irrigation
Agriculture
Establishment
Environment
Finance
Health
Higher Education
Industries
Local Government
Population Welfare
Science & Technology and Information
Technology
Communication & Works (C&W)
Social Welfare
Transport
Mineral Development
Inter-Provincial Coordination
38
http://www.khyberpakhtunkhwa.gov.pk/Gov/Departments.php
Government Departments in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
38
83
Annexure-III
Technical Education & Manpower Training
Workers Welfare Board
Small Industrial Development Board
Sarhad Development Authority
Bureau of Statistics
Information Technology Excellence Centre
Wildlife
Forests
Public Safety & Police Complaints
Commission
Stationery & Printing
Employee Social Security Institution
Industries, Commerce & Labour
Workers Welfare Children Board
Staff Training Institute
Information Technology
Fisheries
Prison
Reclamation and Probation
Directorates/Attached Units in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
39
39
http://www.khyberpakhtunkhwa.gov.pk/Gov/Departments.php
84
Annexure-IV
Under the erstwhile devolution scenario, the province was territorially divided into districts, which are
again subdivided into sub-districts or tehsils:
1st tier:
2nd tier:
3rd tief:
District
Tehsil
Tehsil
Village Village Village Village Village Village Village Village
Union
Council
Union
Council
Union
Council
Union
Council
Local Government Structure
85
Annexure-V
Red Text:
Blue Text:
New offces set up at District Level.
Decentralized offces.
Legend: EDO
DO
DDO
: Executive District Offcer
: District Offcer
: Deputy District Offcer
DDO, Civil Defence
DDO, Coordination
DDO, Human Resource
Management
District Coordination Offcer
Offces Headed by DOs
Audit
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Agriculture
EDO
Education
EDO
Health
EDO
Law
EDO
Literacy
EDO
Revenue
EDO
Community
Development
EDO
Finance &
Planning
EDO
Information
Technology
EDO
Works &
Services
Zila Nazim
Zila Council Naib Zila Nazim
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Administrative Structure in District under LG0 2001
86
Tehsil Offcer
Planning
Chief Offcer at
Non-TMA HQ
Chief Offcer
at TMA HQ
Tehsil Offcer
Regulations
Tehsil Offcer
Finance
Tehsil Offcer
Infrastructure
and Services
Tehsil Nazim
Naib Tehsil
Nazim Convener
Internal Audit
Complaint Cell
Tehsil Municipal Offcer
*The word Tehsil may be read as Taluqa where applicable.
Tehsil Council
Tehsil Council
Offce
General Estab / Admin.
Public Information
Annexure-VI
Tehsil Municipal Administration Organisation under LGO 2001
87
Secretary
Community
Development
Secretary
Union
Committee
Secretary
Municipal
Services
Union Council
Union Nazim
Naib Union Nazim
Annexure-VII
At the lower tier, the Union Administration, which is a body corporate, covers the rural as well as urban areas
across the whole district. It consists of Union Nazim, Naib Union Nazim and three Union Secretaries and
other ancillary staff.
Administrative Structure in Union Council under LGO 2001
88
S# Institutes under various Ministries
1 Secretariat Training Institute
2 Civil Services Academy (NSPP)
3 NIMs Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar, Islamabad, Quetta (NSPP)
4 National Management College, Lahore (NSPP)
5 Pakistan Academy for Rural Development
6 Municipal Training and Research Institute (to be renamed as Urban Training and Research
Institute)
7 Akhtar Hameed Khan National Centre for Rural Development
8 Academy of Educational Planning
9 Pakistan Manpower Institute
10 Health Services Academy
11 Agriculture Prices Commission
12 Pakistan Forest Institute
13 Pakistan Railways Academy
14 Pakistan Postal College
15 Audit and Accounts Academy
16 Income Tax Academy
17 Customs and Excise Academy
18 Foreign Trade Institute of Pakistan
19 National Policy Academy (NPA)
20 Pakistan Planning and Management Institute (PPMI)
21 Information Services Academy (ISA)
22 Foreign Service Academy (FSA)
23 Central Jail Training Institute (CJTI)
24 Anti-Narcotics Law Enforcement School (ANLES)
15. Annexure-VIII List of Federal Training Institutes
40
40
This list is taken from Governance Institutions Network International project report 2009.
1 National Centre for Rural Development, Islamabad
2 Pakistan Academy for Rural Development, Peshawar
3 Punjab Local Government Academy, Lalamoosa
4 Municipal Training and Research Institute, Karachi,
5 Sindh Local Government and Rural Development Academy
6 Balochistan Rural Development Academy, Quetta
7 Local Governance School, Peshawar
15. Annexure-IX List of Local Government Training Institutions
89
1 Local Governance School (LGS), Local Government Elections and Rural Development Department,
Peshawar
2 Pakistan Provincial Services Academy (PPSA) Peshawar
3 Staff Training Institute, Peshawar
4 Technical Education and Manpower training
5 Provincial Health Services Academy, Health department, Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
6 Provincial Institute of Teacher Education (PITE)
7 Industrial Training Centres
8 The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Judicial Academy
9 Skills Development Council, Peshawar
15. Annexure-X Selective Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Training Institutes
90
Composition of National Commission for Government Reforms 15. Annexure-XI
1. Dr. Ishrat Husain Chairman
2. Dr. A. Malik Kasi Member
3. Mr. Shafqat Ali Shah Jamot Member
4. Mr. Shamsh Kassim Lakha Member
5. Mr. Farooq Rahmatullah Member
6. Mr. Asad Jahangir Khan Member
7. Mr. Shahid H. Kardar Member
8. Mr. Ejaz Rahim Member
9. Secretary Cabinet Ex-offcio Member
10. Secretary Establishment Ex-offcio Member
11. Secretary Finance Ex-offcio Member
12. Ms. Nargis Sethi Secretary
91
92
a. The Commission shall review and make
a clear, precise and implementable set of
recommendations in respect of:
i. The division of functions, responsibilities and
accountabilities among the Federal, Provincial
and Local Governments to avoid duplication,
overlap and functional redundancy;
ii. The appropriate size of government organisations
at each tier of government including attached
departments, autonomous bodies, public sector
corporations and other entities in the light of the
responsibilities and functions assigned to each;
iii. Improving existing, institutional capacity through
identifcation and meeting of skill gaps in the
context of functions assigned to organisations
of government at all levels;
iv. The redesigning of rules and core business
processes at all levels of government to achieve
functional effciency, client orientation, cost
reduction, transparency and a shift of focus from
process compliance to output and outcomes;
v. Inter-linkages between Federal, Provincial and
local public services with a view to strengthening
the federation through increased transaction
effciency and smoother conduct of business;
vi. Public service design for all tiers of the
government that would include:
The structure of the public services at all levels in
view of functional reassignments;
Recruitment, training, placement; promotion and
career planning for the public services;
The development of human capital through
training and higher education;
Indicators for qualitative and quantitative
measurement of performance for diverse
professions and services;
Compensation packages and performance-based
incentives;
Measures to fll capacity gaps in the interim;
vii. Legislative requirement to implement the plan;
viii. Resource requirement to implement the plan;
A strategy to manage the proposed changes &
transformation; and
ix. A monitoring mechanism to monitor
the implementation of the approved
recommendations.
b. The review and recommendations of the
Commission shall be made remaining within
the ambit of the provisions of Constitution of
Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
Annexure-XII Terms of Reference (TORS) of National Commission for
Government Reforms
Deutsche Gesellschaft fr
Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH
Support to Good Governance in Pakistan Programme
Administrative Reform Component
6-D (4), Park Avenue, University Town,
Peshawar, Pakistan
T (+92 91) 585 2532
F (+92 91) 585 2531
I www.giz.de/pakistan