Partha Saran, my friend and an
entrepreneur, recently had to attend an important meeting at Mumbai. Indian
Employers Association organized it to deliberate on issues related to
entrepreneurs with operations in India. At the eleventh hour, he had to go
abroad to participate in another important meeting with his clients. He told me
to go to this conference in India on his behalf and voice our concerns as an
employer in an appropriate manner. I took his place in this context. I
presented a two-page paper discussing various issues faced by employers in
India. There was an interview schedule every evening. Journalists talked to
different employers individually to elicit information regarding their problems
as entrepreneurs. Ms. Roma Jatin interviewed me. I talked with her about the
views and concerns of Saran as an entrepreneur.
Roma: India seems to be a heaven to entrepreneurs now as the state and
central governments are taking many measures to promote employment in India. As
an entrepreneur, what is your take on it?
I: In India, what is read in newspapers
does not happen at ground level. Indian ministers and bureaucracy are good at
rhetoric. They show heaven to enthusiastic entrepreneurs in their public
speeches just to impress their present and future voters. Red tapism, nepotism
and corruption are high in India. Nothing happens as early as we desire. At
almost every step of starting and running an industrial unit in India, we are
paying bribes to many politicians, government employees and unscrupulous
brokers. This is why black money is hugely needed in India to pay to those, who
are wrong people essentially, to do a good thing like creating employment to
some. Depending on the nature and volume of an industrial unit or units in a
place, we are going to start, we have to satisfy many rogues on the way. It is
a layer system. We have to pay each of them handsomely in lakhs and crores to
get approvals at various levels. For 90% of the corruption in India, I presume,
governments, political parties and bureaucracy are the cause. They talk about
virtues publicly to attract innocent people. They create and promote vice in
reality.
Roma: As an entrepreneur, you should stop
indulging in malpractices like this. Positive change has to start from
somebody. Why can’t you be that? Why do you criticize others for your faults?
I: Corruption started increasing
tremendously in India after around 1970. Then those rulers, government
employees and people had patriotism. They were ready for sacrifices for the
cause of the nation. In course of time, politicians established the culture of
corruption and malpractices for their benefit. Corruption is like a cancer in
India now. 98% of businessmen and entrepreneurs have to close their businesses
in India now if they refuse to pay bribes to others at many levels. Imagine the
state of educated and uneducated Indians then in India. They lose jobs as
employees and contract workers. Indian economy collapses. The image of India
gets lost internationally. Would you like me and thousands of other employers
in India to get into this culture of catastrophic negative impact across India
within days? Ask your boss personally if he ever offered bribe to anybody or
not to run his venture. If you are doing a job with his unit of operations, it
is just because he got accustomed to this dirty and nasty corporate culture in
India. You cannot imagine the landscape of Indian employment industry without
disorders, demerits and corruption at all. As an employer, I am a kind of
permanent victim in this scenario. I choose to remain as a victim to bring
comfort and happiness into the lives of my employees and contract workers. In
India, we cannot survive as an individual or entrepreneur if we do not succumb
to the thoughts and acts of corruption at some level. Haven’t you ever paid
bribe in your personal or professional life to get things done? Corruption is
the core of India. Indian economy collapses in seconds if every entrepreneur is
100% right.
Roma: What do you think about the employee
unions and such other interest groups in India now?
I: Employee and labour unions are a
nightmare to owners of businesses in every part of India. Begging or demanding
somebody to give you something now or tomorrow is easy. Meeting those demands
is very difficult or impossible at times. Suppose you have a good daughter. You
are giving her 1,000 rupees every month for her pocket money. After some months,
she demanded you to pay her 3,000 rupees every month for her pocket money. If
you don’t satisfy her, she would call you a demon or commits suicide. In fact,
your financial status was low that year. You were giving her 1,000 rupees also
sacrificing many things in your life. You could not pay her 3,000 rupees. Do
you like her calling you a rogue or she committing suicide because you could
not fulfil her desire? This is my status as an employer and that of thousands
of entrepreneurs across the world. Employee and labour unions are experts in
demanding their employers anything any time without thinking whether it is
practically possible or not. Their wish lists keep growing every year. Can
anybody in this world assure me that an industrial unit keeps making profits
every year without being influenced by internal or external changes? Then, how
can we pay hugely and keep our employees in a comfort zone regularly, offering
them various perks and privileges? How many employees, associated with any big
company in India, who are getting huge salaries and benefits from their
employers, ever publicly talked about the greatness of their employers? They
talk about film stars, sports personalities, politicians and about many such other
contemporary celebrities, who are not bringing happiness into their lives
directly but not about their employer, who is the primary reason for their
happiness now. If I am permitted, I hang all employee and labour union leaders
publicly. They are telling lies to their comrades. They are making these
employees and workers believe that they can live in a heaven, exploiting the
goodness of their employers. If I sack 100 employees or contract workers, due
to some inevitable financial reasons, they take me as their villain. Media
persons present us as cruel ones. They don’t acknowledge the fact that our
intelligence, hard work and vision in establishing and running various
companies are the primary cause for comfortable and luxurious lives of millions
of employees. We are being identified and promoted as wrongdoers mostly. I
regret this phenomenon. Various other factors like community, region, language,
skin colour, religion, race and class also partly impact our work culture. We
face many sensitive issues patiently while running a company for all.
Roma: Are you able to find suitably qualified
and experienced candidates for your requirements?
I: It is a pathetic story for all of us
employers now in India. One might have an M.Sc. degree and 10 years of
experience but one cannot communicate fluently and confidently when situation
demands. The standards and values of our present educational institutions are
so low that we cannot expect to recruit intelligent and creative ones from them
for our challenging jobs and work environments. They are not learning much
while at school, college or university. Once into the job, they are not
learning anything new at all. When 90% of the available human resources in the
market are quite incompetent ones in many aspects, we cannot run our companies
recruiting those 10% challengers only. We recruit undeserving ones also
helplessly. Even after joining our units, they don’t feel like improving their
professional skills. There are some employees in our units, who have been
working with us for about 15 years or more but they have not improved much in
terms of innovative thinking, practical approach and ownership. They act smart
roles before us. They don’t feel that this company is theirs and that they must
struggle to make and keep it as a competent one in the international market.
Circumstances are changing rapidly around us but our employees are not changing
accordingly. They wish the systems and operations to run in the old style to
suit their requirements but don’t struggle to update themselves to meet the
challenges of the present. Thus, I should say, we are bearing with them
helplessly. They are complacent, foolish and outdated in many ways. They don’t
change on their own nor allow us to change them. This is an ordeal for us.
Roma: It is a widely held common belief by
many that industries are the main cause for pollution.
I: It is true that soil, air and water
are getting polluted due to poor effluent treatment systems in many industries.
However, we are using modern technology and equipment to treat all kinds of
waste material in a proper manner and dispose them as per the standards of
regulatory bodies. I accept that many industrial units are not taking stringent
measures to save environment from pollutants emanating from their units of
operations. More margins and more profits are the primary concern of any
enterprise. They have to spend huge money every month for various inevitable
responsibilities like procurement of raw material, storage, distribution,
employee salaries and benefits, income tax and so on. An employer mostly tries
to save money to keep in reserve fund to face any untoward incidents or natural
calamities. If regulatory bodies like Pollution Control Board act ethically and
efficiently at all levels, employers too take more measures to keep the
environment good. PCBs collect bribes regularly from employers. I also think
that all are focusing on industrial units only, more than necessary, about
issues of pollution. Many public transport systems like buses and trains, which
are being funded and run by state and central governments, are also causing
much pollution. Why are they running thousands of old buses and trains to save
money and pollute environment? 60% Indians defecate in public places as they
don’t have toilets. Waste dump yards are pervasive. Most of the vehicles in
India are outdated, emitting poisonous smoke. Seawater is polluted due to oil
leaks from ships. Pesticides used in farms are another major source of
pollution in India. Plastic bags are being used widely across places, making
India a huge dustbin. Natural calamities are another source of pollution.
Deforestation is widespread. Millions of rusty and dusty vehicles are kept
unattended at various police stations across India. The pollution caused by
industrial units is not more and fatal than these other factors leading to
global warming. However, media persons, mobs of agitation, environmentalists
and local interest groups always target at us only. How many vehicles are
running behind those of VIPs in India daily? They want luxuries and privileges
daily, not minding the virtues about which they are teaching us through their
regulatory bodies. How many millions of rupees are they spending for events
like commonwealth games? How much pollution is being created by government
agencies daily in India? Who punishes an MLA, MP or minister if they indulge in
acts of pollution? In India, there are double standards everywhere. Those with
political power can do anything. Nobody has morality or guts to question and
punish them. Since we are creating employment to thousands of educated youth
and innocent contract workers daily, facing a multitude of problems caused by
government bodies only, we are appearing as buffoons to governments and people
in India. We should remain silent always but others can create violence in our
units at will. Can this culture attract foreign investments into India? They
may come here with standards and values of their nations and culture but once
into India, we teach them how to be immoral, illegal and disorderly in India to
survive somehow initially and make huge profits later. The minds of Indians and
the attitudes of politicians got polluted irrevocably across India now. In this
scenario, the pollution we are creating is nominal.
Roma: In India, it is believed, black money
is increasing due to immoral and illegal tax evasion tricks by employers. Are
you genuine in this regard? Why are you not paying taxes honestly to
governments?
I: Tax evasion is a common culture in India. Individuals and companies try
to save money evading tax somehow, through wrong projection of assets and
income. We need huge money to pay brokers and such many idiots in India to run
our companies. We cannot do it utilizing our taxed income alone. To fund
corrupt politicians, agents and regulatory bodies of many kinds, we need a lot
of money. We use much of our untaxed money for these purposes. Somehow we
should run our companies to bring happiness into the lives of those working
with us directly or indirectly. We should pay them regularly. We cannot run our
companies if we are financially weak. We evade tax to be strong as industrialists.
However, there are many Indian companies, which are paying all kinds of taxes
in time in a systematic manner.
Roma: Do you think governments are not
facilitating you considerably to run your firms peacefully?
I: It is true. Governments see us as
sources of huge tax income. There are no good infrastructural facilities for
companies operating from isolated areas. The situation is good in huge SEZs to
much extent. We need electricity, fuel and gas to run many of our units
successfully but governments are not in a position to provide us these
facilities. They cannot keep their promises. Their regulatory bodies punish us
if we break rules set by them but who is there to punish bureaucracy and
representatives of governments if they don’t fulfil their responsibilities. In
formal meetings, they state that they are making India into an investor
friendly heaven but actually it is a hell at ground level. Indian politicians
are experts in making public promises to impress foolish and stupid voters but
not in offering reliable service to all stakeholders. They beg us money while
going for elections and demand from us after becoming MLAs, MPs and ministers.
They change political parties like chameleons do with their colours often. Most
of the politicians in India have no vision now for the overall development of
India but only to promote their areas and their political parties. Narendra
Modi, who was believed to be an ideal politician of India, making a promise
that he would offer 1, 20,000 crore rupees for the development of Bihar, in
view of elections ahead, shows the culture of politicians in India. Doesn't it
mean that he is buying voters through false promises? Is it not corruption? Why
do they remember that a region needs to be developed during elections only? If
these are the standards of one like Narendra Modi in India, you can imagine the
characters of other representatives of people. They appear like angels to
public but behave like leeches behind the screen. They torture us like anything
looting our money in many ways and making threatening phone calls through their
agents at various levels. They neglect laying roads around industrial units.
They think that because companies have huge money with them, they develop their
roads somehow, someday. Women, widows, the old-aged, physically and mentally
challenged ones, sports and games folks, defense sector, SC and ST communities
and many others are like their favorite ones. They spend crores of rupees every
year for these unproductive activities but not for industrial units, where
employment is being generated for thousands of helpless ones? Is this not an
unfair treatment of local, state and central governments in India against
industrial units? They don’t offer us what we want. They squeeze money from us
regularly in quite dishonest and intimidating manner. If we talk about
politicians publicly, honestly, they punish us though unfair raids on our
companies and facilities. We should think and behave like bonded labourers
before them. Quite uneducated and uncivilized MLAs, MPs and ministers are there
in India. They talk rudely with us utilizing the political power accorded to
them by innocent and helpless voters of India. They are like dictators. They
recommend brainless sheep for recruitment in our units. How can we accept all
the recommendations of these nasty politicians? They need certain
qualifications and experience to do a variety of hazardous and innovative works
in our units. Can these stupid rogues, recommended by unscrupulous politicians,
do such critical works in our workplaces? If we don’t take their candidates
into our facilities at their will, they disturb us indirectly, utilizing their
political power. They have no love or respect for ordinary people but their
vote banks. They victimize us in this process. We don’t complain against them
in police stations or courts of law because even these departments are victims
of bad politicians like us. It is all like a vicious web around us. Starting a
company somewhere sometime is our first blunder. Thereafter they threaten us
through quite immoral ways. We often feel like killing them.
Roma: Many industrialists deploy their
relatives and close friends in highly crucial positions. Outsiders take it as an
internalized policy and practice of biased treatment towards most employees.
Why?
I: As organizations grow in scale of
operations, it is difficult for the owners or promoters of an establishment to
watch everything at ground level. Number of units and related departments keep
growing in course of time according to the expansion plans of key management.
Trust and loyalty play key role in building and retaining human relationships.
We mostly choose our highly familiar folks for assuming key positions in
various units. We expect high standards and values from them. If they cannot
meet our expectations, we ask them to leave. We don’t have such freedom when we
go professionally. If we recruit a highly intelligent, creative and talented
one to head a department, in accordance with the statutes of the governments
and regulatory bodies, he may work like a reliable and strong machine but we
cannot trust him completely. What if he manipulates the existing staff and
systems to his advantage? I don’t say that our relatives and friends don’t
betray us but we hope that chances might be less. They have a sense of loyalty,
respect and love towards us, considering the special status we accorded them in
our organization. They mostly try to deliver in the best manner possible to
keep our trust in them intact. We certainly have a tendency of preference
towards candidates of our community, religion, region, language, culture,
class, race and so on though we state differently in our corporate policy
statements and otherwise. We pay and reward them handsomely in comparison to
those, who don’t belong to us that closely. Generally others get demotivated
and demoralized in such working environment. To satisfy all, we cannot go 100%
professionally in many things we do. Many sentiments and beliefs influence us
in this direction than rationality and conscience. I believe this culture is
prevalent in every company across the world.
Roma: What do you do to control attrition
rates in your organization?
I: I believe even God cannot control
attrition rate even if he would start and run a company, which is 100 times
better than Google or Microsoft. Contemporary employment opportunities, trends
and attractions influence the attitudes and lifestyles of almost all employees.
Every human being, including me, is essentially an opportunist. He is more
concerned about profit and loss than good or bad. If I have to survive and
excel as an employer, I have to make more profits every financial year. All
discuss success only, not failure. To be successful and happy as an employer, I
make such products, which bring me huge profits in a short span of time. I
change my policies, systems, operations, ideas and plans according to my
requirements, which aim at profit. Similarly, employees move from one company
to another for better salaries, increments, perks, privileges and working
environment. Even if I keep them in a heaven for one year to treat them
extraordinarily, they may leave my organization the second year, not because they
are not happy here but they want to see another heaven or hell somewhere else.
They want variety. Most of them don’t have loyalty and gratitude towards their
previous or present employers. They just act smart roles in every organization.
They jump out when a better opportunity beckons. As employers, we see thousands
of such frogs and cats. We get accustomed to their tastes, preferences and
tricks. We realize that man is like a monkey. They cannot be stationary but evolutionary.
On the other hand, some employees remain with us for years together, not
because they are not competent but because they are deeply tuned to our working
environment and work culture. If they go out, they may need to face new bosses,
more challenges and different work environments. They cannot adjust to such
change. At times, they appear as dead burden to us. We would be happy if they
go out and get a better opportunity but they don’t. We bear with them. It means
we, as employers, like attrition indirectly. We want change of human resources
often. Attrition is an inevitable phenomenon. We cannot control it. We have to
face it bravely.
Roma: Tell me a little about your periodical
employee appraisal systems and implementation?
I: God did not create every creature and
phenomenon with equal strengths and weaknesses. My abilities and weaknesses are
different from those of yours. All employees cannot perform alike in their
respective departments and job roles. I believe that many organizations are
being run successfully because some are weak and some are strong, physically
and mentally. Some can do wonders within days and some cannot even for years.
We cannot do 100% justice to all our employees because we cannot assess the
abilities and drawbacks of our staff accurately by any means any year. We can
monitor the physical presence of an employee in our campus through our
attendance records but not the quantity and quality of work he is doing there
regularly. When I cannot assess the standards and values of my wife, children,
close relatives and bosom friends also accurately, even if they happen to be
very close to me, how can I do it towards my employees? Mostly all our
assessment systems are imaginary and defective. An office boy cleans our
tables, carries office material, offers tea and snacks, opens and shuts car
door and does such many works for us every day. We witness it with our eyes and
feel love towards him. Can I make his salary 50,000 rupees per month because I
like him? Then, the head of a department, who is receiving 2 lakh rupees from
me towards monthly salary, may not be able to deliver well a year for various
internal or external reasons. Does he accept and appreciate me if I offer 5,000
rupees only that year to him towards increment? The bitter fact is that every
employee expects more and more from his employer every year but does not
improve himself physically and mentally to deserve such progress in treatment
towards him. I am astonished to realize that 90% of the human resources in our
organization belong to this category. When they were young and energetic, they
worked well out of love, respect or fear of their superiors. After they stay
with us for a few years, they don’t compete with their subordinates in
knowledge or skills but keep instructing them to do this or that artificially.
They believe that they have grown but the fact is they have degraded themselves
over the years. Once they worked and showed us results. Now they are playing
roles of formal supervision only. They present the worth of their subordinates
as theirs. They expect more privileges and increments every year but not doing
anything economical and innovative for the growth of their respective units or
our organization. If I sack them, they revolt against me and stamp me as a
cruel and ungrateful employer. If I continue them, they are a burden to me
because they are not contributing to the growth of the organization uniquely
but repeating an old process or procedure year after year, a kind of job that
can be done by anybody after training. I believe that almost all companies are
suffering from this problem. Experience is a vague and unreliable word for me.
If one is with me for 25 years, driving my car loyally, is he superior to one
who joins me today to drive the same car more efficiently but with less salary
and accountability by me? Whom should I prefer? If I sack the experienced one,
he says that I have no gratitude towards him. If I don’t recruit this young
fellow, who is desperately looking for a job, you say that I am not creating
employment opportunities for the youth of India. Assessments of salaries,
increments, perks and privileges are not at all fair in any part of the world,
I presume. Many superiors don’t assess the worth of their subordinates
honestly. Many of our employees cannot understand and fill our printed
appraisal forms also. Heads of departments are favourable towards some employees
only. I believe the owner of a company has very little role to play in
performance appraisal system. What can a manager do if his superior does not
write positively about him even if the prior did wonders that year and brought
huge profit to the company directly? Can I personally assess the performance of
each of my employees? I entrust various responsibilities to others believing
that they are fair and decent. What if they fail to be so in assessing and
rewarding their subordinates? Many are leaving our units at various places soon
after credit of their increment arrears just because they assume that we did
not assess them fairly.
Roma: What about accidents, incidents and
poor checks and balances in companies across places?
I: Despite our best efforts; accidents and
incidents are bound to occur in any workplace because it is the nature of law.
There is no creature, which is not subject to pain and damage, in course of
time. Every owner or user of a vehicle expects his car to move safely on a road.
He drives it carefully. What if a drunkard comes from behind fast and hits his vehicle?
Observers and police find both of them as wrongdoers but not just that
drunkard. We don’t have eye witnesses readily everywhere. We often become
victims of accidents not because we are not disciplined and systematic but
because we are destined to face it that day. Industrial units are not an
exception to this phenomenon. Accident is bound to happen even in the house of
factories inspector or one who wrote 10 books on how to prevent accidents. When
one slips at home and fractures his ankle or hand, nobody investigates it and
warns him but when a small accident occurs in a manufacturing unit, police and
politicians rush there to make it an attractive news coverage item for media
persons. Many gather like flies within seconds. Everybody makes it into a
public issue. The relatives of the victim comment that we are not taking proper
measures to protect our employees. They don’t talk about indiscipline of the
worker, his bad habits or character but just the cruelty of the management. You
are just seeing one person injured there but what about hundreds of other staff
members who have been working there only for years, receiving salaries and
enjoying their lives as our employees. We could serve and save all of them but
not just this one. He is an enemy to us. So, we intentionally made him slip off
a machine or on a wet floor? Is it fair on part of the observers, police,
governments and regulatory authorities? They come and close our units for a
specific period of time without giving us a choice to explain what happened?
They go as per rules when an incident happens at our end but not when we expect
something critical to be provided by them in time as per rules. Then, they
should tell us to send unqualified and weak staff out. Employees beat them
publicly if they instruct us to do so. Regulatory bodies are the first-rate
criminals in India. They victimize us always. Any day or night, we cannot sleep
peacefully, fearing any untoward incident or accident in any of our units. We
don’t know who reacts how, representing governments or unions. One running a
brothel can sleep well. A beggar can sleep well. A sheep can sleep well. But,
an industrialist, who is creating employment to thousands of employees, through
application of his vision and toil for years, is remaining as a voiceless and
helpless victim in the public, during times of accidents. I believe this is the
situation world over. On one hand, they invite us to start and run companies in
their native places for employment generation and political calculations but
when police or regulatory bodies torture us in inevitable and testing
conditions, quite irrationally, no MLA, MP or minister talks in favor of us.
They also consider us criminals. Nobody is interested in checking what happened
but just go by wild guess, generated and propagated by others, casually. The
ultimate goal of an entrepreneur might be making profits but he does take many
precautions in his workplace to avoid dangers. Just like we cannot avoid bus
and train accidents despite stringent safety measures, in industrial units also
accidents do occur. If a train accident occurs, all the passenger and goods
trains in the entire Indian Railways must be stopped. If a bus accident takes
place, all government buses must be stopped across that state. Is it happening?
State and central governments need not follow rules anywhere. They can break
rules at will. They expect us, the entrepreneurs, to be victimized always. If
an accident takes place in my unit, why should I close that unit for a few
days? Who pays me the loss caused by that closure? What should those employees
do during this time? What kind of image do I earn as its owner at higher end?
When I am creating employment to thousands of employees and paying them crores
of rupees as salaries and perks every month, no government or private agent has
time and interest to talk about it and appreciate me. When an accident occurs,
every rogue talks badly about me and my organization. This is incredible Indian
culture. This is the current status of Indian governments and media. When do we
grow as Indians? When do we avoid double standards?
Roma: When there are that many problems, why
do you start and run such industrial units at all?
I: God creates every creature with a
purpose. We all have a predestined lifespan. To make our lives meaningful and
interesting, all of us must do something good for others. I believe
industrialists are a good lot from this perspective. Most of the development we
are seeing now across the world is a result of industrial revolution. Before
this, man had to make goods manually. He had to walk for miles together to
reach a place. Many died due to infections, diseases and poverty. Designing,
production, distribution and utilization of goods and services improved
tremendously after automation technologies in industries. Large scale
availability of goods and services made human life more comfortable and
reliable. I believe, we, as industrialists, are continuing that tradition of
sustainable development in India. Can you imagine your present life without
clothes, money, medicines, computers, vehicles, films, cooking utensils, LPG,
electricity, roads, railways, seaports, airports, temples and laboratories? We
are all depending on various goods manufactured in various industries. Every
manufacturing process has a set of norms. There is no industry without risk.
Every phase of human evolution brings many risks along. Industrialists are
direct contributors to large scale employment, quality products and services
and human comfort as a whole. Human life is a complex of risks. I run an
industry to serve humanity in one direction. Hundreds of other industrialists
make a variety of other goods for humanity. Their primary objective may be
profit but those using these products feel comfortable, happy and healthy. We
seek pleasure from this realization. Imagine every industrialist closing their
units because of these unfavorable conditions across the world. Patients die
without medicines. Trains and planes cannot run. Millions of employees beg on
roads without jobs. Governments collapse within days due to revolution by poor
and helpless masses. Darkness and anarchy spread across the world.
Industrialists are saving human beings from this adverse atmosphere. So, it is
the moral responsibility of governments, regulatory bodies, people, employees
and workers to be empathetic towards industrialists but not revolutionary or
anarchical. We are here for you. If you disturb us, it is indirectly disturbing
yourselves. We are direct contributors to comforts and happiness in your lives.
Roma: How is an industry different from an
individual, society or religion?
I: If an individual sleeps at home
without earning money, doing something, his direct dependants suffer. If a
clash takes place in a society, some of them get hurt. If a scheduled prayer
did not take place in a church or temple, nobody gets a disease or dies due to
hunger. If an industrialist closes his unit of operations, many suffer directly
or indirectly. One, who is driving a car, has to sell it and buy a used bike.
One, who is educating his children in a good school, has to send them to a
mediocre local school. People cannot communicate. They cannot travel to distant
places. Industries contribute to advancement of a civilization and culture directly
and indirectly. They decide the prosperity or adversity of an individual,
society or religion. In industries only, all are paid and treated well. You
cannot get such liberal treatment working in an agricultural farm, house or
orphanage. In industries only, employees and workers receive attractive wages
and salaries regularly. Certainty and reliability are features of industries.
Employers provide many facilities to their staff generously. We can’t find such
liberal culture at homes or in society. Thus industrialists are creators of
wealth and happiness in every nation. If governments and societies treat them
with respect and love always, any nation can develop fast. Otherwise,
unemployment and unrest prevail across the places. Thus industrialists are playing
a humanitarian role in various places daily.
Roma: What measures do you take to attract
and retain the best talent in the industry?
I: I don’t believe in the concept of best
talent also as far as human resources are concerned. It is not enough if only
one or a few are highly talented ones in a department, unit or organization.
Success and happiness are a result of collective approach and toil in any
industry. If subordinates cannot carry out scheduled tasks assigned by their
intelligent superiors, time to time, they cannot meet their deadlines.
Circumstances must be in favour of us to implement many innovative policies and
procedures minding the welfare of our employees. When we deduct money from
their salaries every month for various statutory obligations, they feel
demotivated. Cost of living is increasing tremendously year after year. We are
not in a position to keep our employees satisfied and happy always through high
salaries, attractive increments, bonuses and many such other facilities. The cost
of a cup of tea might look negligible to you at micro level but if you multiply
it with the total number of staff in an organization, it amounts to lakhs of
rupees. We are slowly withdrawing our contribution to many subsidy services in
our organization to cut our growing costs of operation. When everything is
free, employees misuse or disuse the resources.
Roma: What is your contribution towards
corporate social responsibility?
I: We spend lakhs of rupees every year to serve the societies
about our units of operations. Distribution of school bags and books to
students, drinking water facilities, medical camps, donations during natural
calamities, plantation of saplings, street lights, toilets, construction of
temples and so on. We do it formally to meet the norms of governments, not hoping
that those benefiting from our services feel loyal and grateful to us, now or
later. We see such real happiness in children and patients only much. Other
beneficiaries think that we are spending that money because we are earning
crores of rupees through operations in their areas. Many millionaires are there
in their regions also but they don’t donate even one rupee for public welfare.
People and governments have no control on them. They focus on industries only.
When we are in financial crisis, nobody comes forward to help us. When we are
earning a little through our ventures, all idiots come to us begging for
something or the other. CSR is undoubtedly a burden on our budgets when we are
financially down. We bear with governments and people silently.
Roma: How do local people around your units
respond and react towards you?
I: If we give them jobs, they take us as
good ones. If we refuse to take them, they stamp us as villains. They mostly
consider only what they benefit from us. They are very selfish, narrow-minded
and eccentric. Even those, who benefit hugely from our operations there, don’t
have gratitude towards us. They look for opportunities to present us as
villains in their regions and them as the saviors of public from our crimes and
sins. This is how anybody that comes to our units with any purpose thinks and
reacts. For majority of Indians, a company is there only to offer them whatever
they demand. If we have to procure a piece of land for any purpose, they expect
very high rates from us. They believe that we have billions of dollars and
rupees and we can pay them handsomely. We should go as per law but they exploit
us in every way possible. Governments don’t control public when they revolt
against us even for minor reasons. They block our roads and damage our vehicles
at will. Strikes by political parties and interest groups are another ordeal we
face often. They demand lakhs of rupees if any one of their relatives meets
with an accident in or near our campus and torture us like anything if someone
dies. Dealing with public, unions, governments and locally influential folks is
a burning issue for any industrial unit operating in India. They are inevitable
sources of nuisance and unrest in India. No governments or regulatory agencies
have control on people. All of them victimize us quite often one way or the
other. We are silent victims.
Roma: What are the advantages and
disadvantages of being an industrialist in India?
I: We don’t get time to enjoy our personal
lives. If running a small joint family is an issue for individuals these days,
imagine managing thousands of employees and workers employed in various departments
and locations across the country. Comfortable and happy employees desire more
comforts and happiness from that company. Those with lower designations also
wish to move ahead in the hierarchy for better pay and facilities. Everybody
wants more professional and financial growth but not the growth of the
organization. All employees and workers are bothered about their lives only but
not burning issues of the company they are working with. This is where we get
hurt as industrialists. Everything should happen in time for them. They cannot
bear delay or negligence from our end but they are accustomed to such work
culture only. We pay lakhs of rupees every year to many high grade employees in
our units but they don’t feel much commitment and loyalty towards us. They
expect more from us every year but we should not expect it from them. They
revolt if we question or criticize them. I believe that we industrialists are
living here at the mercy of stupid people, corrupt governments, unethical
regulatory bodies and unscrupulous unions. Advantages are we have cars,
luxurious houses, considerable money, pride and job satisfaction.
Roma: What measures are you taking to create
employment opportunities for girls and women?
I: Managing female employees is Herculean
task for us. They need separate dining halls, restrooms, facilities and
privacy. If we reprimand them, they
burst into tears within seconds. Outsiders think that we are torturing them.
They are vulnerable as employees compared to men. Love and illicit
relationships develop between male and female employees. There is no problem to
us if they are amicable. If a girl is not happy with a boy, she complains to
us. She does not inform us when falling in love with him but only when she
fails in that relationship. We have to resolve those issues fast in a judicious
manner. Maternity and paternity leaves influence the speed and quality of our operations.
Does anybody pay remuneration if one sits at home? We do as industrialists. We
pay our employees even when they are on holidays and leaves. We conduct various
programs regularly to keep our employees happy. We disburse lakhs of rupees
every year for the travelling and stay of our employees to different place on
various occasions. Many submit fake bills and loot our money. We encourage them
and their children towards better education and employment opportunities. I
believe the present companies are doing many times better than the present
governments and voluntary organizations as far as the financial stability,
security, safety and welfare of their employees and workers are concerned. We will
be happy if people, governments, voluntary organizations, regulatory bodies,
media and our stakeholders do not treat us like villains in India but direct
contributors to comfort and happiness of millions of educated and uneducated
ones.
Roma: What are the opportunities and threats
to industries operating from India in near future?
I: Globalization creates many
opportunities to anybody in any country to start and run different industrial
units, minding the demand and supply parameters of goods or services concerned.
Standards and values are very important for industrialists. They must follow
regulatory norms as far as possible. If they cannot follow them, for many
inevitable reasons, they should collectively inform about it to governments
concerned. I believe there is no much unity and solidarity among industrialists
in India now. They must discuss their major issues quite often and try to run
their employment generation units successfully. Unemployment is a burning issue
in many countries now. Industrialists must update themselves often about the
trends and issues around them. Governments and regulatory bodies should have an
empathetic approach towards industrialists. They should avoid double standards
completely. Their policies must be fair and broad-minded. They must develop all
regions equally. All must be patriotic and sincere.
No comments:
Post a Comment