|
PILDAT
Performance Analysis of the Provincial Assemblies in 3rd Parliamentary Year
(2015-2016):
Sindh
Assembly�s performance highest at 68%, Balochistan Assembly gets lowest score
at 35%, Punjab and KP Assemblies tied for second place with scores of 66%
-
Sindh and Balochistan Assemblies post
highest attendance of members at 34% each followed by KP Assembly at 32%
and Punjab at 13%
-
Sindh Assembly introduced most Private
Members’ bills at 9, KP and Punjab Assemblies introduced 1 each while
Balochistan Assembly introduced none
-
KP Assembly becomes the only Pakistani
legislature to transact all business in the House through Computers
-
Punjab CM Shahbaz Sharif posts the
lowest Assembly attendance at 5%; Balochistan’s CMs Nawab Sanaullah
Zehri and Dr. Abdul Malik Baloch post highest combined attendance: 59%
-
In 3 Parliamentary years, Balochistan
Assembly failed to elect all Chairpersons of Standing Committees
-
Punjab Assembly passed the highest
number of bills at 46, followed by Sindh Assembly at 28, Balochistan Assembly
at 23 and KP Assembly at 18
-
The Punjab Assembly met for 193 working
hours followed by Sindh Assembly, which met for 182 hours, the KP Assembly
for 126 hours and Balochistan Assembly for just 95 hours.
June 20; In a PILDAT assessment on the comparative
performance of the four Provincial Assemblies of Pakistan in the third Parliamentary
year (2015-2016), the Sindh Assembly has received the highest score at 68%,
followed closely by the Punjab and KP Assemblies at 66%. Balochistan Assembly
got the lowest score of 35%.
Figure 1: Comparative Scores of the Performance
of Provincial Assemblies 2015-2016
Sindh Assembly performed the best in the area
of representation in 2015-2016 with a high score of 88%. Citizens
can only be adequately represented in the Provincial Assembly if their Members
(MPAs) regularly attend the proceedings. Even though it is still not optimal,
the Assemblies with the highest attendance at 34% of the membership being present
on average were the Balochistan and Sindh Assemblies. The Punjab Assembly performed
worst in this regard with an average of 13% of the 368 members being present.1
The combined presence of Dr. Abdul Malik Baloch,
Former Chief Minister of Balochistan (PB-48, Balochistan, NP) and Nawab Sanaullah
Zehri, Current Chief Minister (PB-33, Balochistan, PML-N) was 59% of the total
sittings in 2015-2016. A close second was the attendance of the Honourable Chief
Minister of Sindh, Syed Qaim Ali Shah, MPA, (PS-29, Sindh, PPPP) at 51% of the
total sittings in Sindh Assembly. The Honourable Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,
Mr. Pervaiz Khattak, MPA (PK-13, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, PTI) attended 29% of the
sittings of the KP Assembly in 3rd year. The lowest attendance in 2015-2016
was of the Honourable Chief Minister of the Punjab, Mr. Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif,
MPA (PP-159, Punjab, PML-N), who only joined 5% sittings of the Provincial Assembly
of the Punjab during the third year.
Figure 2: Attendance of Chief Ministers
in Respective Assemblies 2015-2016
While the Leader of the House in the Punjab
Assembly demonstrated the lowest attendance, the Opposition Leader, Mian Mehmood
ur Rashid, MPA (PP-151, Punjab, PTI) attended 85% of the sittings in 2015-2016,
the highest figure for any leader of the opposition in the provincial assemblies.
Khawaja Izharul Hassan, MPA (PS-99, Sindh, MQM), Opposition Leader from Sindh
Assembly was present for 73% of sittings; Maulana Abdul Wasay, MPA (PB-20, Balochistan,
JUI-F), Balochistan Assembly Opposition Leader attended 61% of sittings, and
Maulana Lutf ur Rehman, MPA (PK-66, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, JUI-F), KP Assembly
Opposition Leader, was present for 53% of the sittings.
Figure 3: Attendance of Leaders of Opposition
in Respective Assemblies 2015-2016
Sindh Assembly also had the best performance
with regards to legislation with a score of 70%. The Assembly
saw an active membership that introduced the highest number of Private Members’
Bills at 9. Private Members’ Bills are important indicators of the performance
as they reflect the usage of the provision given to legislators to make laws
in addition to those made by the Executive. The remaining 3 Provincial Assemblies
lagged behind with only 1 Private Members’ Bill introduced by the Punjab
and KP Assemblies each. No Private Members’ Bill was introduced in the
Balochistan Assembly in 2015-2016. Meanwhile, the Punjab Assembly passed 46
laws in its third year (2015-2016), the Sindh Assembly passed 28 bills, the
Balochistan Assembly passed 23 bills while the KP Assembly passed the lowest
number of bills at 18.
The Provincial Assembly of the Punjab had the
best performance with regards to the Oversight of the Executive
in 2015-2016 with a score of 84%. Even though the budget process in Assemblies
remains very weak in general, Punjab Assembly spent 13 sittings (42 hours) discussing
the Provincial Budget 2015-2016. In comparison the Sindh Assembly’s budget
session lasted 10 sittings (39 hours); Balochistan Assembly’s session
lasted 6 sittings, and KP Assembly passed the annual budget in only 5 sittings.
The Punjab Assembly is also to be commended for being one of the two Assemblies,
alongside the Sindh Assembly, that has mandated in the Rules of Procedure a
pre-budget debate to increase the powers of the legislators in the development
of the annual budget. In terms of oversight of finances, however, the Sindh
Assembly surpasses Punjab by being the only Assembly to review the implementation
of the budget on a quarterly basis. The Executive in Sindh submits a Quarterly
Report of the Budget to Sindh Assembly, which is then discussed by legislators.
However, significant reforms are still required
across the 4 Provincial legislatures to strengthen the Budget process before
its passage. With limited time available to scrutinize the Provincial Budgets
and no adequate powers with Standing Committees to undertake in-depth reviews
of the Provincial Budgets, year after year, Budget Sessions see mere endorsements
of the Executive’s budget by the Provincial Legislatures. PILDAT has been
making recommendations to strengthen the Budget process in the Parliament and
Provincial Assemblies of Pakistan, which include increasing the duration of
the Budget process to at least 30 – 45 days and changes in the Rules of
Procedure of the Provincial Assemblies to allow Standing Committees both power
and time to review the Budget both before and after its introduction.
The Punjab Assembly met for the most number
of sittings at 75 with the most amount of time spent in the House at 193 hours.
In comparison, the Sindh Assembly met for a total of 182 hours over 59 sittings,
and the KP Assembly met for 126 hours over 51 sittings. The worst in this regard
was once again the Balochistan Assembly with 95 hours over the course of 46
sittings under its belt. In terms of time spent in the House, Sindh Assembly
members spent 3.1 hours on average per sitting, followed by Punjab Assembly
at 2.6 hours per sitting, KP Assembly at 2.5 hours per sitting, and lastly Balochistan
Assembly at 2.1 hours per sitting.
Standing Committees that offer the most important
avenue of oversight of the executive and are considered the eyes and ears of
each legislature show a dismal trend of activity across 4 Provincial Legislatures.
Even the highest number of average meetings per Standing Committee is 2.4, which
is in the Sindh Assembly. In KP, Committees held an average 2.1 meetings per
Standing Committee and 1.4 meetings per Standing Committee were held in the
Punjab Assembly during the third year. PILDAT did not receive the requested
data for the Balochistan Assembly in this regard. However, it is worth remembering
that Balochistan Assembly lagged behind even in activating its Standing Committees
while even at the close of the third year, 2 Standing Committees (Local Government,
and Public Health Engineering) are still without Chairpersons and thereby not
functional. There is a crucial need of reforms in enhancing the powers and capabilities
of Standing Committees. In most legislatures, with the exception of the KP Assembly,
Committees can only meet after a subject has been referred to them by the House
and do not have suo moto powers, allowing Committees to take up any
matter within their domain.
The Punjab Assembly is to be commended for its
amendment to the Rules of Procedure in 2015-2016 that makes it mandatory to
hold election of Standing Committees within 90 days after the election of the
Leader of the House. A similar rule needs to be introduced in the Rules of Procedure
of all the Provincial Assemblies so that the inordinate delay can be avoided.
Additionally, the Punjab Assembly also amended Rules adding a Zero Hour to take
up matters of urgent public importance relating to the Government and requiring
intervention of the Assembly.
The Punjab and KP Assemblies surpassed the other
Provincial legislatures in Transparency and Accountability with
equal scores of 90%. Punjab’s most important initiative came with its
practice of uploading the individual attendance of MPAs online on its official
website. The Punjab Assembly became the first of all National and Provincial
legislatures in Pakistan to make this move. However, PILDAT notes with concern
that the attendance of a number of MPAs is excluded from the uploaded attendance:
including that of the Leader of the House, the Opposition Leader, Ministers,
Parliamentary Secretaries, Advisor to the Chief Minister, and Special Assistants
to the Chief Minister. All in all the attendance of 66 of the 368 MPAs is not
uploaded. In comparison the Senate and the National Assembly upload the attendance
of all the members regardless of whether they are Ministers or Parliamentary
Secretaries. PILDAT recommends that the Assembly Secretariat upload the attendance
of ALL MPAs as well as attendance within Committee meetings as is undertaken
by the Senate of Pakistan.
Regrettably, other than Punjab, no other Provincial
Assembly has, as of yet, begun making available members’ attendance on
their respective websites for easy public access.
The Punjab and KP Assemblies regularly compile
and update key performance statistics on their websites and are prompt in updating
them. The KP Assembly uploads detailed business transacted by each of the 123
MPAs on the official website. The KP Assembly must also be commended for a landmark
achievement to transact all business of the House on computers. Computers have
now been installed on the desk of every MPA. All business being transacted from
Executive goes through the Secretariat and is immediately accessible to MPAs
who simply have to click on the relevant folders to immediately access information
on questions, answers, motions, bills and proposed amendments amongst others.
The quality of websites of the Balochistan and
Sindh Assemblies lag far behind those of the Punjab and KP Assemblies. Not only
do they not have detailed performance statistics but they also do not upload
basic information such as lists of adjournment motions, Calling Attention Notices,
questions, etc. Sindh Assembly is only marginally better than Balochistan Assembly
by virtue of regularly issuing notices of Committee meetings.
PILDAT has assessed the cost-efficiency of the
Provincial Assemblies with regards to allocation of the budget. In 2015-2016,
the KP Assembly was the most cost-efficient at spending Rs. 6.3 million for
every working hour, Punjab Assembly spent approximately Rs. 6.8 million per
working hour, Sindh Assembly spent about Rs. 8.1 million per hour, and Balochistan
Assembly was least cost-efficient with Rs. 12.9 million per hour.
Methodology
PILDAT scored the performance of the four Provincial Assemblies in the third
Parliamentary year (2015-2016) using a series of key performance indicators.
Scores were generated using the min/max technique on the respective data for
each Provincial Assembly and then aggregated to arrive at a final score out
of 5. After each score out of 5 was generated, equal weightages were assigned
to each parameter: Representation, Legislation, Oversight of the Executive,
and Transparency and Accountability. Final weighted percentage scores were then
calculated. For the parameter on Transparency and Accountability, scores were
assigned subjectively by the PILDAT Team based on on-going monitoring of the
websites and the sharing of crucial information.
The data for the key performance indicators
was requested from all four Provincial Assemblies’ Secretariats. The Punjab,
KP and Balochistan Assemblies shared data with PILDAT while the Sindh Assembly
did not share data. Gaps in data were filled using media sources and other secondary
sources.
The Performance Indicators and corresponding
Scores for the Provincial Assemblies (2015-2016) can be found here:
http://www.pildat.org/events/16-06-20/img/table1.jpg
References:
(1). The overall attendance figures
for Balochistan and Sindh Assemblies are not compiled or shared by the Secretariats.
Therefore PILDAT used attendance at time of adjournment for consistency. |
|