Terming the status of human resources in state-owned enterprises as "disturbing", the Secretary in the Department of Public Enterprises Seema Bahuguna said: "The CPSEs are following a culture of status quo, they are not proactive, they are reactive.
"They are also more interested in teasing unions instead of really doing fundamental restructuring of their relationships. I find that some CPSEs are still remaining in silos regarding their turfs," she said.
"Our CPSEs have to align themselves with new challenges. They need to focus on developing younger talent, they should have a transparent mechanism of communication with employees, they should be able to manage diversity and innovation, there should be fairness in the policy of promotion.
"This is something that as Secretary to Government of India, I would be very keen to emphasise. They should have a transparent, fair and objective system of promotions. They should promote administrative excellence," Bahuguna said at the International HR Summit organised by SCOPE here.
"A lot of people think that the higher you go you don't need training. You look at the case of some of our public sector banks which have very respectful and highly decorated directors. But how is it that a large number of the loan proposals vetted by these banks went bad," Chowdary said.
"Falling female labour participation rates in India are puzzling. A policy framework encouraging and enabling women's participation should be constructed of the gender specific constraints," said Mukesh Gupta, Chief Technical Adviser, International Labour Organisation.
"This is a surmounting challenge since more than 75 per cent of the new job opportunities are expected to be skill-based. In order to make India the skill capital of the world, training programmes should be on the lines of global standards," Gupta said.
Besides, the SCOPE Chairman Ved Prakash said the public sector enterprises will need to have a more hands on approach towards managing the resources of their company.
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