Why the Digital Age Demands Decision Makers to be Like Elite Marines and Zen Monks
February 7, 2025
Bankruptcy is one of the natural states which a company may find itself in. Entrepreneurship is primarily about taking risks. When companies take risks, some of them succeed, whereas others fail. Hence failure is a natural part of the business. However, many critics of bankruptcy laws believe that there isn’t a need for an elaborate […]
What is the Wirecard Scandal all about and Why it is a Wakeup Call for Whistleblowers Anyone who has been following financial and business news over the last couple of years would have heard about Wirecard, the embattled German payments firm that had to file for bankruptcy after serious and humungous frauds were uncovered leading […]
How Modern Decision Makers Have to Confront Present Shock and Information Overload We live in times when Information Overload is getting the better of cognitive abilities to absorb and process the needed data and information to make informed decisions. In addition, the Digital Age has also engendered the Present Shock of Virality and Instant Gratification […]
Geopolitics, Economics, and Geoeconomics In the evolving global trading and economic system, firms and corporates are impacted as much by the economic policies of nations as they are by the geopolitical and foreign policies. In other words, any global firm wishing to do business in the international sphere has to be cognizant of both the […]
In the previous article, we have already come across some of the reasons why the government should not encourage funding of stadiums that are to be used by private franchises. We have already seen that the entire mechanism of government funding ends up being a regressive tax on the citizens of a particular city who […]
The decades starting with the 1990s witnessed the proliferation of a new kind of sector among the various agencies and governmental departments engaged in public service. This sector was the Non-Profit or the NGO (Non Governmental Organizations) that mushroomed all over the world to fill the gap between the governmental agencies and the public.
The intention behind the creation of the NGO’s was that in places where the government was either doing a bad job of service delivery or the government could not reach for whatever reason, the NGO’s could step in and act as the medium between the official sector or the governmental sector and the people. Hence, the term Non Governmental Organizations was coined to describe these entities. Further, the fact that the increasing complexity and the multiplicity of problems that confronted the world meant that there was need for a quasi-official entity to step in and help both the government and the society.
The rise of the NGO’s coincided with the awareness among governmental and multilateral bodies like the United Nations that the problems of the 21st century were too complex and too diverse for the government to handle them alone. Hence, there was a need for an intermediary, which would be focused on a specific aspect of the gamut of issues and hence would be able to concentrate its energies solely on the issue rather than being general like the government.
The point here is that the NGO’s comprise of experts in particular fields and hence, they can devote their expertise and energies to solve the intractable problems, which the government cannot because of the red tape as well as the fact that many government officials are administrators first, and experts next. This was the reason for the NGO’s attaining a prominent place in the pantheon of agencies that were tasked with solving the problems of the world.
Further, the NGO sector is useful to act as a watchdog to oversee the governmental programs and assess how much the government is effective in addressing them. Moreover, the NGO’s can also be focus groups who do not venture into on the groundwork but are advisory in nature. These are the public think tanks and advisory councils that routinely come up with policy suggestions and whitepapers that are used by the government and other agencies as inputs to their policymaking apparatus. Apart from this, the NGO’s can also check the leakage that is inherent in governmental programs because of bribery and corruption and hence can be the conscience of the people who would report any irregularities in the delivery of public services.
Finally, the NGO sector also comprises of volunteers who are committed and dedicated and can to the rescue of victims of natural disasters like Earthquakes and Tsunamis where the governmental and other agencies are overwhelmed and understaffed to deal with the situation adequately. These are some of the ways in which the NGO sector acts as the bridge between the government and the people. In subsequent articles, we would explore the many facets and details of the NGO phenomenon in detail and would analyze the positive as well as the negative aspects of the rise of the NGO’s.
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