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Repairing rather than reinventing Railways is the need of
the hour
Aarti
Khosla
While scarce resources were sunk in unremunerative projects,
the budgetary support was reduced and the share of the Indian
Railways (IR) in the Plan outlay was drastically cut. Added
to this was rising staff and fuel costs. The situation has
come to such a pass that for earning every rupee, IR is spending
99p. Where is the money left, then, for investment on replacements,
renewals, modernisation and capacity expansion. It did not
require an expert group to identify this problem. What, then,
is the remedy?
Raise resources, cut down costs. That is,
however, possible if IR is given the freedom to raise or reduce
fare and freight depending on the pull of market forces. The
Rakesh Mohan Committee thinks that it can be possible only
when IR is converted into a corporation as there will be greater
freedom in pricing and government control will be minimised.
This is a fallacious argument. Are the corporations free from
government control or political interference? Even the Navaratna
companies are not free from such control.
The expert group need not have to look around the world to
know that. Even the global experience they are referring to
has not been updated by developments after privatisation.
Take the case of Rail Track in the United Kingdom which has
been an utter disaster after privatisation so much so that
the first step towards renationalisation was taken by the
UK government on October 7 this year when they placed Rail
Track under the control of government-appointed administrators
by obtaining an order from British High Court. The company
was so badly run that it failed in its basic job of moving
passengers from A to B. Delays and accidents became frequent
because Rail Track kept profits before safety. It was an eye-opening
major corporate collapse. The fact that the privatised company
had to go to Government with begging bowl for subsidy to pay
dividend to its shareholders clearly and abundantly proved
that it made no commercial sense to privatise British Rail.
It is, therefore, ironical that the expert group is proposing
for IR from the experience of UK, among others.
As for the World Bank formula on corporatisation/privatisation
by which the expert group is obviously much influenced, one
has only to quote Joseph Stiglitz, one time economist of the
World Bank and now a Nobel Prize winner in economics. In an
interview to The Observer of London (October 10) he stated
that the World Bank prescribed exactly the same four-point
programme, of which ‘Briberization’ is one. The criticism
may sound too harsh but is certainly not without basis.
Thus the solution to IR ills, as suggested by the expert group,
is a borrowed one and stands largely discarded because of
the bitter experience with privatisation in this sector. It
seems it could not think of any solution relevant to socio-economic
realities of India and has gone by what has already been handed
out or adopted for sectors like telecom sector. The expert
group accepts that the arrangements put in place in the telecom
sector in India is also “in some process of flux”’. Then why
recommend such an arrangement for the Railways?
Another thought that has gone into this recommendation is
the inability of the central exchequer to meet with the requirement
of funds for IR in view of its own none-too-happy fiscal condition.
The expert group assumes that after conversion into a corporation,
IR would be able to raise resources from the public. Is this
not too facile an assumption, if not altogether unrealistic?
Railway business can never be that profitable so as to attract
investors with large portfolios for investment. The amount
of money required for what the group calls ‘strategic high
growth scenario’ cannot come by from external sources. Borrowing
from external sources would mean placing a heavy debt burden
on the system.
The theme goes on like this: “Central exchequer cannot help
the Railways because of its own bad fiscal condition but it
should help the IR in the initial years of its ‘re-invention’
as a corporate body.” As if the IR re-christened into Indian
Railways Corporation with the Railway Board revamped as the
Indian Railway Executive Board and a Rail Regulatory Authority
in place will work as Aladdin’s lamp to pave the way to a
cave full of gold!
The institutional separation of roles mechanism is flawed
in its very nature. The expert group itself is doubtful of
the credibility of the model suggested by them. That is why
they themselves reject the compulsions that drove Europe to
privatisation as not being applicable to this country. In
the face of doubts, contradictions and uncertainties expressed
in the report, are the ‘conservatives’ not genuinely alarmed
that the Railways are simply too important to be experimented
with? Billions of passengers, 1.5 million employees and 40
per cent of the nation’s freight cannot be made guinea pigs.
What the Indian Railways, therefore, require is ‘repairing’
rather than ‘reinventing’. While IR may have no control over
staff costs, some areas can still be identified for pruning
the expenditure on establishment. For example, why have so
many recruitment boards when one Railway Staff Commission
on the pattern of Staff Selection Commission would suffice.
In the light of modernisation and computerisation, a large
number of posts must have become redundant. Some of the non-core
activities like sanitation, catering, Yatri Niwases etc. can
be privatised.
The expert group has included in the list identified by them
of non-core activities, railway hospitals, research and production
units and security too. But if railway employees do not have
their hospitals, where do they go for medical facilities?
The pressure on the inadequate medical infrastructure in the
country will further go up. Similarly, security is one item
which cannot be shunted out in the present day world of terrorism.
After September 11, many of the world’s airlines had to greatly
tighten their security. Other modes of transport are also
attractive targets for terrorists. As we are aware, trains
in India have already been targets of many blasts. In such
a scenario of insecurity how can the Indian Railways spin
off their security concerns to private players? As regards
production units, these can be corporatised but then the IR
remain the sole buyers of rolling stock from these units with
its own attendant problems in such an arrangement.
Indian Railways are passing through a bad phase. Rationalising
fares and freight; scrapping unviable projects; support of
funds for accelerated completion of remunerative projects
and catching up with renewal and replacement work would nurse
IR back to health.
Also, a new vision is required—not the one recommended by
the expert group. In the post-September 11 world, airline
travel has become highly unsafe, inconvenient and costlier.
Here is an opportunity for IR to capture upper class travellers
by providing faster, comfortable and safe travel. Look at
AMTRAK of the US, post-September 11. A new challenge has been
thrown upon it and it is carrying more passengers than it
ever could think of. The future of IR lies in passenger traffic
and that too the long-distance one. It is high time a roadmap
for meeting this requirement is drawn up. It is in this area
that corporatising Indian Railways, so vital to the unity
and integrity of the nation, is somewhat like suggesting corporatising
the defence forces of the country because running the IR network
requires similar discipline and commitment.
Concluded
(The writer is former Executive Director, Finance, Railway
Board)
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