Business Standard
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Sponsored by  
drived banner
drived banner
  Advanced Search
RSS
Content Guide
Follow us on  
|||||Opinion|||| 
 Section Home | Editorials | Compass | BS People | Columnists | Lunch with BS
Home > Opinion & Analysis Live Markets | Commodities
 

Kanika Datta: Handling management grievances
Kanika Datta / New Delhi Oct 01, 2009, 01:42 IST

Associations with board-level representation may sound radical but they aren't such a bad idea.

Workers and clerical staff have unions, the C-suite has the decision-making powers, but how should the general cadres of white-collar managerial employees express their grievances?

This issue has been starkly highlighted over the last two months when some pilots of, first, Jet Airways and, this week, of Air India struck work over pay and allowances, holding air travellers to ransom country-wide. Much opprobrium has been heaped on them, the conventional view being that pilots, who would broadly correspond to mid-level managers in airlines, are obscenely overpaid and have no right to protest besides displaying a gross sense of irresponsibility.

In Jet Airways’ case, the point was made with all the maudlin histrionics that Chairman Naresh Goyal had perfected during an earlier strike by cabin crew last year. This time, it was cabin and ground crew who held a press conference to beseech their pilot colleagues to abandon the sick-out and return to work. Otherwise, they said, innocent employees, caught in the middle, would be in trouble if the airline lost revenue. The implication: the fat cats of the airline were ruining the livelihood of the toiling lesser mortals.

State-owned Air India played out the drama differently but characteristically with Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel, with an anxious eye to impending Assembly elections, telling the pilots to return or else — even as compromises were feverishly being worked out backstage.

The jury is still out on whether the pilots of India’s largest private and state-owned airlines have a legitimate case — the fact that both managements backed down doesn’t necessarily suggest the pilots were right. The bigger question, though, is this: if such a category of employees do think they have a valid grievance and if negotiations with senior management fail, how should they react? Is taking mass sick leave or simply not reporting to work — a strike by any other name as the Mumbai high court ruled in Jet’s case — a justified form of protest by people in positions of managerial responsibility, especially when their organisations are bleeding profusely?

The short answer from senior managers is that managerial staff who don’t agree with corporate policy are always free to leave or look elsewhere, a privilege blue-collar labour doesn’t enjoy. This is a fair argument in the kind of open labour market that India has become. Indeed, pilots have done just this in the past, exiting with alacrity from state-owned airlines to private competitors when the industry was booming; their protests now are an indicator of the dire straits in which the airline business finds itself.

It is telling that in the late eighties, union-style protests for higher pay by mid-level managers in the public sector proved signal failures precisely because of the lack of job mobility in those pre-liberalisation days. Around the same time, a strike by Indian Airlines pilots on pay and perks failed for precisely the same reason.

One of the issues in the pilot-management clash in Jet Airways was over whether pilots had a right to form a union. They didn’t, according to the airline’s management, which provided it an excuse not to negotiate — initially, that is; the stance changed later following the widespread havoc the strike created. Apparently, it was okay for the pilots to have a “welfare organisation” but not a grievances forum.

In an economy in which quality of talent counts for rather more than just manpower numbers, viewing the marketplace as an automatic grievance-correcting mechanism could boomerang on managements. Even if we assume that it is unseemly and undignified for managerial cadres to go on strike or haggle via employee unions, the truth is that middle managers remain uniquely disenfranchised.

This is hardly a healthy situation. Forget about the dire predictions about robots replacing middle managers on the shopfloor. In most organisations, despite successive bouts of “de-layering” and “right-sizing”, middle management forms a critical element of the employee base — if not always in numbers, certainly in the nature of the work it performs.

In other words, it makes sense for CEOs to put in place more enlightened “protest management” mechanisms beyond the standard HR structures — to act as (a) early warning systems and (b) create a dignified, non-combative negotiation forum for its managerial cadres. Associations with board-level representation may sound radical but they aren’t such a bad idea — after all, labour union leaders in the West are represented on corporate board, so why not middle managers. Some Scandinavian countries have experimented with such structures.

Management gurus, of course, will tell you that transparent decision-making is the ideal — but experience has shown that most corporations pay lip service to the concept. IT companies, heavily dependent on talent as they move up the value chain, have cracked the system better than most. For an emerging economy like India, such mechanisms could bridge the management deficit that is inevitable in family- and government-owned corporations that currently make up the vanguard of India’s competitive advantage.

New Ipad Application :Business Standard's all new IPad App
Click here to download for free
Arrow Other Stories     
- Markets end on a strong note
- Nabard FY14 operating surplus soars 28% to Rs 1,635 cr
- RBI eases banks' term deposit restrictions
- NMDC Q4 net down 21.74% to Rs 1,642.28 cr
- Balrampur Chini Q4 profit up by 15%
  Read Business news in 
- Journey on, We are by Your Side. Click here to know more
- Help a Child Achieve her. Click to know more
- Benefits Upto Rs. 2.36 Lakhs on the Fully Loaded TJet Petrol.
- The Best Seller is Also the No. 1 in Mileage. Click here
- Watch The Film Here. Click here to know more..
- Leader in Passenger Car & Automobile Tyres. Click here
- 1 billion in saving for Unilever without any tangles.
- A Brand New Server at a Price That Fits Your Budget. Click here
- Learn How One City is Running on FOOD SCRAPS.
- One Partnership Endless Possibilities. Click here to know more
- Helping doctors detect diseases earlier, saving costs & extending lives.
- 36 Lakhs can get you a pool of Luxuries. Click here
- Which is the best plan for your daughter
- Check out the TRUE COLOURS of your Stocks, Now for FREE!
- One of the leading business schools in the world.Know More
- Invest in Real Estate. Villas in Bangalore starting @ Rs.66 lacs
Sorry, comments to this story are closed
Latest Messages
Table for Two
  Now available at Special price
  Rs.280/- Only

  Buy Now
BS POLL
UPA 2 has completed three years. How do you rate its performance?  Read the story
  Good
  Average
  Bad
Submit
Most Popular
Read
E-Mailed
Commented
   
- IPL victory puts KKR in the black
- Re fall has minor impact on India?s rating, says Moody?s
- No diesel price hike for now, says Reddy
- From virtual world, hacktivism spills into real world
- Air India board refers Boeing compensation issue to govt
 
 More  
Tax Shastra
  Now available at Special price
  Rs. 360/- Only

  Buy Now
  Hot Searches  
 
Apalya |  Air India |  GAAR |  Agni  |  Solar eclipse |  Satyamev Jayate |  SRK |  Aamir Khan |  IPL |  Ertiga |  Sarfaesi Act |  Vodafone |  JP Morgan |  Transfer pricing |  Rupee |  Kingfisher Airlines |  Silver |  Provident Fund |  income tax refund |  iPhone |  Reliance Industries |  SEBI |  BSNL |  BSE |  NSE |  Mukesh Ambani |  Anil Ambani |  Infosys |  Pranab Mukherjee |  Sonia Gandhi |  Rahul Gandhi |  New Pension Scheme |  Reliance |  RBI |  GDP |  Gold |  Ratan Tata |  ICICI |  B-School |  Sensex |  Tax calculator |  Home Loan |  Personal Finance |  inflation |  oil prices |  Barack Obama |   
 
  Member Area Write to the Editor RSS Archives Advanced Search
  Subscribe to BS print product BS e-paper Newsletter Portfolio Tracker
  BS Products BS Hindi BS Motoring BS Books
Home | Markets & Investing | Companies & Industry | Banking & Finance | Economy & Policy | Opinion
Life & Leisure | Management & Marketing | Tech World | General News
About Us | Partner With Us | Code of Conduct | Careers | Advertise with us| Terms & Conditions | Disclaimer | Contact Us