Down the drain

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| The point, made many times before, is that most of the PSUs simply cannot be revived, even though, thanks to the massive hike in equity values (even after the crash) and land prices, it appears some of the revival can be achieved at a relatively low cost. In the case of NTC, for instance, the sale of surplus mill lands would probably finance much of the revival. But until something is done to drastically reduce NTC's labour costs, any revival package will only be that much more down the drain. In 2002-03, for instance, NTC's labour costs ranged from 20 per cent of turnover for the mills in Andhra Pradesh, Kerala and Karnataka, to 40 per cent in the case of Maharashtra and 70 per cent for Uttar Pradesh. For most private sector mills, labour costs as a percentage of turnover range from 5 to 7 per cent! In the case of HMT, another CAG report points out that none of the performance parameters in the turnaround plan in 2000 was achieved. While the turnaround plan projected HMT's sales at Rs 1,316 crore for 1999-00, the actual sales were Rs 752 crore in that year, and plummeted steadily thereafter, to Rs 200 crore in 2004-05. |
| Apart from the issue of labour retrenchment, the other issue is that of managerial interference, where, no matter what status the government may confer upon PSUs, there is virtually no change over the years. While the refusal to allow oil firms to hike prices is well-known, what is less talked of is the 50 per cent quota for SC/ST/OBCs in the total number of dealerships that oil firms can set up on their own. The twists and the turns in the extension to ONGC chief Subir Raha's tenure is just the latest episode in this story""the government is well within its rights not to grant Mr Raha an extension, but surely a successor for him could have been found before his tenure came to an end. |
First Published: May 26 2006 | 12:00 AM IST