Recently I had the opportunity of interacting with some very senior officers of the Indian Railways,while trying to brief them about the journey from IR (industrial relations) to ER (employee relations). The history of Indian Railways is perhaps older than the history of Indudtrial Relations in this country. The oldest legislation governing industrial relations in this country is the Trade Union's Act 1926 and the first legislation which took care of both sides of employment is the Bombay Industrial Relations Act 1946, whereas the first railway was Mumbai to Thane way back in 1853.
The state of affairs in our country is where we always follow a curative pattern in our governance style. Till the problems spring up rampantly and become unmanageable the control factors do not pay any heed to address them whether it is the law or they are the simple administrative measures. Likewise the Railways and its problems too became a subject which was taken for granted. Despite being a service organisation the Central Government preferred to run it on its own by not only creating an additional department but also a Ministry, thereby allocating the 'importance' it deserved, little realising from the blunders that showed up by retaining a major Airlines. Thanks to the private participation in the Airline industry, at least the spirit of competition has been kindled and benchmarks are available for comparision. It may be worth mentioning here that as a trainer and a consultant when I suggested a fairly senior officer a topic such as 'Change Management and Competition', I was specifically retorted with an expected reply, "What good of, is it to us?" Many senior employees of public sector organisations play with this mindset and live in a fool's paradise, which I call the protected syndrome. How can we expect PSUs or the Indian Railways benchmark with the world class performances. Delhi Metro could do it because it eventually detached itself as a separte organisation from the Railways. According to the Economist http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2011/09/employment?fsrc=scn/tw/te/dc/defending, the Indian Railways is the eighth largest employer in the world. This organisation is not facing any competition and survives on archaic systems and inflexible attitudes. The decision makers are either impounded by vested political interference or are averse to decision making because of being at the fag end of their careers, when they are more prone to prepare for their post superannuation comforts. With this scenario prevalent in the organisation called Indian Railways, I have a very interesting episode to quote.
The state of affairs in our country is where we always follow a curative pattern in our governance style. Till the problems spring up rampantly and become unmanageable the control factors do not pay any heed to address them whether it is the law or they are the simple administrative measures. Likewise the Railways and its problems too became a subject which was taken for granted. Despite being a service organisation the Central Government preferred to run it on its own by not only creating an additional department but also a Ministry, thereby allocating the 'importance' it deserved, little realising from the blunders that showed up by retaining a major Airlines. Thanks to the private participation in the Airline industry, at least the spirit of competition has been kindled and benchmarks are available for comparision. It may be worth mentioning here that as a trainer and a consultant when I suggested a fairly senior officer a topic such as 'Change Management and Competition', I was specifically retorted with an expected reply, "What good of, is it to us?" Many senior employees of public sector organisations play with this mindset and live in a fool's paradise, which I call the protected syndrome. How can we expect PSUs or the Indian Railways benchmark with the world class performances. Delhi Metro could do it because it eventually detached itself as a separte organisation from the Railways. According to the Economist http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2011/09/employment?fsrc=scn/tw/te/dc/defending, the Indian Railways is the eighth largest employer in the world. This organisation is not facing any competition and survives on archaic systems and inflexible attitudes. The decision makers are either impounded by vested political interference or are averse to decision making because of being at the fag end of their careers, when they are more prone to prepare for their post superannuation comforts. With this scenario prevalent in the organisation called Indian Railways, I have a very interesting episode to quote.
5 comments:
Very informative...indeed we may find many such compassionate officers in the corridors of govt offices who have been following ER without actually realising it or having any formal exposure to such concepts!! The task remains in identifying them and engaging them more effectively!!
Funnily as I mentioned the decision makers are in deep slumber awaiting their severance of ties! Therefore the task would continue to remain for time unknown!
and exactly for this reason we have people like u striving hard to get them awakened from the deep slumber!
Ha ha ha!!!
Very good article, well written and informative. I learned something.
thanks, Rhonda
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