The Punjab government has initiated a decisive shift in its approach to bureaucratic accountability, signalling an end to what officials describe as a long-standing culture of cosmetic reporting and limited field engagement. Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif has authorised a performance-based monitoring framework aimed at directly evaluating the on-ground effectiveness of senior and mid-level administrators across the province.
At the centre of this initiative is the newly established Performance Management Unit (PMU), tasked with real-time oversight of commissioners, deputy commissioners and assistant commissioners. The responsibility for operationalising this mechanism has been assigned to Special Secretary to the Chief Minister, Shoaib Mirza, whose mandate includes verification of field reports, elimination of fabricated compliance submissions, and enforcement of measurable performance standards.
According to official briefings, the PMU operates through a voucher-based reporting system, mandatory reviews at the Chief Minister’s Office, and a 23-indicator Key Performance Indicator (KPI) dashboard. The framework is designed to replace publicity-driven assessments with data-backed evaluations linked to service delivery.
The KPI dashboard covers areas such as sanitation under the Suthra Punjab programme, sewerage and drainage maintenance, removal of encroachments, regulation of street vendors, price control enforcement, stray dog management, monitoring of outsourced schools, upkeep of parks and graveyards, and enforcement of one-dish regulations.
However, the framework has drawn attention for what it omits. Revenue administration – including issuance of land records (fard), mutations, inheritance cases, registry verification and relief on official fees – has not been included among the KPIs, despite these being core statutory functions of assistant commissioners under the Board of Revenue.
Senior administrative sources acknowledge that weaknesses in revenue governance remain widespread. Land encroachments, record manipulation and delayed dispossession proceedings continue to surface across districts, while compliance with court orders – including those issued by the Lahore High Court and civil courts – remains inconsistent. In several areas, land record handling has reportedly shifted into the hands of private intermediaries, with multiple patwar circles operating through outsourced or informal arrangements.
At the same time, commissioners, deputy commissioners and assistant commissioners have raised institutional concerns regarding accountability without commensurate authority. They argue that sanitation, waste management, sewerage, parks and animal control legally fall within the jurisdiction of municipal corporations and local governments. Officials maintain that performance scrutiny in these areas should correspond with administrative control, including authority over postings, transfers and disciplinary action, which currently rests with the Local Government Department.
In Lahore, governance tensions have further intensified due to a deadlock between the Lahore Development Authority (LDA) and the district revenue administration. While the LDA has pressed for expedited land mutation and verification processes, the revenue wing has adopted a stricter stance, maintaining that no reports will be issued without complete legal satisfaction, irrespective of time. The impasse has delayed property transactions and development approvals, prompting a rise in public complaints reaching the Chief Minister’s Office.
It is in this context that the government has expanded the role of the PMU. Officials confirm that earlier action has already been taken against 12 deputy commissioners for submitting false or misleading performance reports, with further evaluations underway. Government sources indicate that the current reforms are intended to move the bureaucracy away from what has been termed a “self-preserving file culture” towards visible, field-based service delivery. The emphasis, officials say, is no longer on transfers alone but on a structured system of reward and accountability.
As the new monitoring regime takes effect, the provincial leadership has conveyed a clear message: administrative authority is to be treated as a public trust rather than a privilege, and professional credibility will now be determined by verifiable outcomes rather than institutional lobbying.