Sunday, May 10, 2015

Time To Bury Wage Settlement ?

Time to bury the wage pact in the banking industry-LiveMint-By Tamal Bandyopadhyay

The benchmark for such a pact is the paying capacity of the weakest of the banks and this is unfair to the employees of strong and profitable banks
11th May 2015
My column last week on the human resources crisis in India’s public sector banks (PSBs) evoked strong reactions from a few senior bankers. The chiefs of two public sector banks told me that my apprehensions are “highly exaggerated”. The PSBs, according to them, have the systems and processes in place to carry on and grow business. A retired chairman and managing director of one bank said that in an extremely robust PSB work culture, individual employees do not matter.
 
“A bank can continue to perform well even if it doesn’t have a managing director. The senior management is competent enough to run it for months,” he said.
 
I have my reservations about their observations though. Indeed, there are talented bankers in the public sector, but by and large, this set lacks the skills and expertise needed for risk management, credit appraisal and credit monitoring. This is evident in their balance sheets. Most PSBs have more bad assets on their books than private banks; they need to set aside dollops of money to take care of such assets and this affects their profitability. The work culture needs to change and a beginning could have been made by burying the industry-wide wage pact, but none of the PSBs are willing to take the initiative.
 
The PSBs are a motley group in terms of business per employee and profit per employee; return on assets and return on equity; and valuation on stock exchanges. Yet, when it comes to wages and salaries, 800,000 PSB employees are treated equally. The performers are not rewarded and the laggards are not punished. An industry-wide wage pact is the most bizarre performance appraisal that any industry can have. The benchmark for such a pact is the paying capacity of the weakest of the banks and this is unfair to the employees of strong and profitable banks. It is another story that PSB employees are better looked after than their peers in private banks. Barring a handful of executives at the top, the cost per employee in the private sector is lower than public sector banks.
 
The new wage settlement, effective from November 2012, when the last five-year settlement expired, ensures a 15% wage hike for PSB employees, lower than the 17.5% hike given last time. However, this is not strictly comparable as the last hike was calculated based on an employee’s remuneration, including pension and gratuity, while the basis of calculation this time does not include retirement benefits.
 
Demanding a 19.5% wage hike, the unions had threatened to go on a four-day strike in February, leading to the intervention of finance minister Arun Jaitley. The United Forum of Bank Unions, an umbrella body of nine trade unions, and the Indian Banks’ Association (IBA), a national bankers’ lobby, spent more than two years negotiating the settlement. The salary hike will lead to an annual outgo of Rs.4,725 crore for the 45 banks that are part of the 10th industry-wide bipartite five-year wage pact ending in October 2017.
Apart from public sector banks, most old private and foreign banks in India are also covered by this pact.
 
However, old private and foreign banks have only the salaries of their clerical workers covered by this, unlike PSBs, whose officers too are part of the wage agreement. Typically, once the existing settlement expires, protracted negotiations follow for years to reach a new one. The first such settlement was signed in October 1966. Apart from the IBA, the Bombay Exchange Banks’ Association, representing foreign banks in India, was involved in the first pact, which had a tenure of three years. The Bombay Association does not exist any more and foreign banks operating in India have joined the IBA.
 
The continuation of the industry-wide wage pact for close to 50 years makes it clear that the trade unions still have a strong hold on the industry even though the IBA always tries to extract certain commitments from the unions while negotiating the wage settlement.
For example, in 2002, while signing off on a 13.3% wage hike, the IBA, on behalf of the bank managements, got a blanket go-ahead from the unions for computerization—a move that the unions had been resisting for long.
 
The unions also accepted transfer of employees, which was quite tough for the bank management till then, even though, theoretically, all bank employees can be transferred within a zone where the same language is spoken. This time around, the unions have extracted two extra days off a month (second and fourth Saturdays) as part of the settlement—not an entirely illogical demand in the age of digital banking.
 
Since the IBA starts negotiating with the unions after it gets the mandate from all banks, individual banks have the choice to break away from the industry and have their own settlement. They should start doing it now. Also, if the banks are serious about financial inclusion, they should create a separate cadre for this. Ideally, it can be done by floating a subsidiary and the employees of such a subsidiary should be locally recruited and paid much less than the employees of a bank.
 
Regional rural banks, or RRBs, were set up in the mid-1970s to spread banking to rural India and finance agriculture, but they have not succeeded in their mission. RRBs are owned by the central government, respective state governments (where they are located) and the sponsor banks and the employees earn as much as their counterparts in PSBs following a court order, even though their skill sets are very different.
If banks want to recruit locally for rural pockets, they cannot discriminate between urban and rural staff in terms of wages, even though the cost of living in rural India is lower than in a city. The only way this can be done is by floating dedicated subsidiaries for rural lending. The RRB experiment has failed.
http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/HITsLuFWTUKgI18Tt5KDbO/Time-to-bury-the-wage-pact-in-the-banking-industry.html

Govt of India Not Interested in Honourable Wage Revision But Asks Bankers to  Enrol 10 Crore People in Social Security Schemes by 31st May, 2015 i.e. in about 20 days-By Rajesh Goyal (allbankingsolutions.com)

Calling himself the “Pradhan Sevak”, Narender Modi, PM of the country told at a rally in West Bengal that it is launching three  social security schemes  - the Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima Yojana, the Pradhan Mantri Jeevan Jyoti Bima Yojana and the Atal Pension Yojana.  The officially these schemes will be effect from 1st June, 2015. 
We are aware that 10th BPS has already become overdue by over 900 days.   Bankers are not only getting the least of the salaries among the central, state and PS units, but are being time and again burdened which are schemes of Government departments.   The Government departments do not have to do any spade work except issuing instructions about the scheme and giving targets to PS Banks.
 
I just have come across a news item on internet (10th May, 2015 evening)  at Economic Times website  wherein it is reported that the Centre has exhorted bankers to work towards surpassing the target of bringing 10 crore people under the ambit of the three social security schemes launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, before the end of this month.   "The bankers must ensure maximum coverage upto May 31 so that the national target of enrolling 10 crore population in the country is not only achieved but surpassed," MoS PMO Jitendra Singh said.
 
I think on this website we have written so many times about the ineffectiveness of various unions in banks (i.e. mainly nine  unions being represented in UFBU), that there is no need to repeat the same .     Modi Government wants to leave its impression on masses by introducing these social security schemes.    There is no doubt that it is a great job and India needs the same.   However, without the required infrastructure and manpower, banks are being forced to do this unprofitable job, which in the long run will  impact the profitability of the banks.                     
 
                                     The lower profitability will be raised as a boggy to merge the banks and /or deny an honourable wage revision or deny the retired bankers updation of pension.   Thus, the effect of these schemes is likely to be good for the nation but it will be at the expense of bankers and their shareholders. 
                                     
Unions have to play an active role in protecting the interests of the bankers and not remain mute spectators.  They at present are begging for a meeting with IBA (which is only informal association of banks and has no locus standi                   in the eyes of law).    For over 900 days IBA is playing a hide and seek game and has befooled the UFBU in cancelling the strikes in January and February 2015.   
 
                  At the same time, bankers are dictated by Government to complete the target to bring 10 crore people under the ambit of the three social security schemes within less than 20 days.   No additional staff and no additional payment for the extra work load.   In the whole banking industry, there is NOT EVEN ONE  CMD who can even issue a statement in favour of bankers and press for the need to go for much better settlement that is being offered vide MoD dated 23rd February 2015, and request for additional payment to bankers for the additional workload.   
 
                  All this is because CMDs are self centered and afraid that raising their voice can annoy the government which can bring to light their corrupt practices and they will be completely exposed.  Almost all of them have some or the other hidden skeletons in their cupboards.
 
Therefore, Jai Ho Modi Sarkar, Jai Ho UFBU and above all Jai Ho of all CMDs of PS banks.  Down Down with lazy bankers !! 

1 comment:

  1. What is there to comment upon ?. It is just like a story in my school days' CHANDAMAAMA magazine.Knowingly they are doing harm to all of us. Yet, AIBOC or the UFBU not responding properly. May GOD be with us to do the much needed miracle.

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