Where the mind is free........

Monday, November 15, 2010

A lecture long forgotten- almost

Memories of Ahmedabad back in Calcutta

One to one, lone wolf usually don’t leave an impression in a short span of time. He is slow to interact, slow to make associates. He usually resorts to the technique of knowing the domain the other guy is and uses metaphors from there to make an inroad.

One to many, lone wolf can address an audience provided the audience’s level and profile is known. He finds it extremely difficult to make an impact upon superiors. Superiors usually get used to lone wolf ways after a great deal of initial suspicions because they consider him as a little on the sly and finds it not very easy to place him.

One technique given a self profile such as this is to grab one or any opportunity that he can to speak to an audience. In 2002 while attending the FDP at Ahmedabad a certain young Prof. Saugata Rray engaged Business Policy for us. Business Policy was another name for strategy. Lone wolf has had no introduction to the subject till then although he was involved with the strategic initiatives at Indian Oil to gather departmental opinions on aligning the HR department with business policy when Subir Raha was Director (HR). He later became the CMD of ONGC and was instrumental in the energy security initiatives of India , gaining stake in faraway oil fields such as Sakhalin in far eastern Russia.

Saugata Ray was sophisticated yet a certain air of brashness was a feature as well. He was to be in Calcutta in the weekend and would be back on Monday morning. As a contingency plan he entrusted the class to engage the HLL case and the class entrusted it to me and Ravi Subuddhi.
Monday morning I was ready to engage the class. It was a hot day so I had a bottle of water with me as well from which I took occasional sips more to camouflage the tension than out of thirst. I started with a dividing gesture of the black board. I said that he metaphor I am going to use for the presentation was David takes on Goliath and on one side of the board I wrote ‘David takes on goliath’ and on the next half I wrote ‘The empire strikes back’.

I went on to explain the David part of the story and peppered it with Niru being the root in many Indian languages for water suggesting purity and cleanness as the reason for the choice of the NIRMA name and so on. The class went well, Saugata had expected at best a .ppt on the HLL case. As the hour came to a close the entire class rushed to me in appreciation. They had mistaken my drinking from the bottle as an imitation of Saugata because he used to do the same as well. I did it quite out of a desire to conceal by distress. Through the crowd Saugata himself offered his palm at me saying congratulation.

Little did I know that it would cause such a flurry although I had prepared reasonably well. In April 2008, I was attending a programme on Strategic Management Mergers and Aquisitioons. One of the introductory sessions was engaged by Prof. Saugata Ray and Siby Jose at the end of the session introduced me to Saugata and he replied ‘Yes I remember, he did the HLL case in Ahmedabad’.

He is currently the dean at IIM Cal.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

The death of the Indian family


The death of the Indian family

In the late nineties , I overheard a senior officer of Indian Oil speak about the then ED Mr. A K Arora speak ‘ I know we are all working for the family, but……’ . Later in 2002 as I was reading Hofstede for the doctoral thesis proposal amidst country metaphors for organizations the one for India was ‘the family’. It sort of drew a parallel between the Indian family and the organization. Similarly the French parallel was a pyramid, the German one a well oiled machine, the English one a village market and so on. None evokes the familial than the Indian one.

Much later in 2010 with the movie ‘Outsourced’ which speaks the travails of a US expatriate in India and his slow recognition of the Indian values and adaptation, it gave a new dimension to an international audience about India. Prof. Jayashankar of BRIM in the context of building an institution also similarly spoke about building the pillars and finding rest when one is old was applicable both to an institution and no less to the primary social institution, the family as well.

The family is all sacrifice for the next generation. It thrives on thrift and an economy of its own. Thrift in the sense of no personal spending except when absolutely required and the savings thus gained kept apart for a harder day or for the future generations. In fact ‘economics’ itself came from the Greek oikos for kitchen. The dhabawalas of Bombay thrive on the Indian penchant for having home made food both for its purity and for its saving potential. In its conception as a building, resting and passing on over time without much of a formal authority structure, it is unique. The west laments the loss of family values and no US Presidential campaign is complete with exhortations to return to family values and display of the candidate himself as a family man.

It is not uncommon to hear that if women were freer economically there would not be the family. Thus what was supposedly an economic arrangement as well as a social arrangement can be destroyed if individuals gain economic freedom. The only other reason to hold the family together is the social one. The emotional one can be in turbulence when in the search for economic freedom, the time and energy is compromised more against the family. I am of the opinion that the whole of present day economic arrangement is against the family. The workplace demands more and more from the individual and over time gains a momentum and convenience of its own.

When the woman’s income rises and children are few both by private intention and public persuasion, the tolerance levels are less especially for the woman. The family survives on the woman’s tolerance at least in the Indian context. The divorce laws are stringent in India and time consuming although a section of the judiciary has started commenting on the need for liberal rules in the absence of any hope of coexistence. A recent law, the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence put the first axe on the Indian family. As the name suggests it presumes that violence is against women and only against women and the culprit is the man or the woman’s in laws.

It lacks on two counts. One is the above presumption. The other one is about the word violence. The woman can be violent in very subtle ways. The female psyche is different from the male psyche and presence of other members itself can lead the woman to assume loss of affection. The male psyche is more pragmatic at least in this domain. I am also not discounting the immense power of the female to be the good catalyst to direct all energies in the family in a positive way. In practice the man finds helpless if the woman accuses one under the Domestic Violence Act or merely remains silent. Unscrupulous women can misuse this law.

The dynamics of this law will prompt men not to marry. One solution is the now common ‘living together’, a term denoting a kind of family without the public ceremonies. No obligations on either side to remain for life in abundance or penury. In case of a hint of violence, the one affected can leave. The problem arises when the woman demands alimony when the man leaves. The courts have pronounced that the woman is entitled to alimony. The presumption here is that the man was using the woman for sexual purposes.

This leaves only one option for the man and that is not to marry, not to live together but to have occasional relations for the feminine company however short or long the emotional or urnal extent. Because recently the Supreme court has pronounced that an occasional relation cannot be construed of the nature of marriage or living together. Living together should be so in the eyes of the society. An evening or a weekend spent together is no reason for alimony. Even ‘keeps’ ( a woman kept and provided for by a man to gain sexual favours) are excluded from alimony.

Therefore it is for the women now to decide whether they want to opt as a keep or provide occasional company to men because men would rather opt for either or both of these options to avoid the hassles of Protection of women from Domestic violence Act or living together. That to me sounds like the death bell of the Indian family. On my part I am afraid for my son as many parents are now who are more comfortable with daughters because laws are in their favour. Even that is not long lasting when men opt to have occasional flings and attachments with no strings attached.

For the Christian community in Kerala another source of litigation is also impending as when the sister/s can now claim equal share in the father’s property when the father dies intestate. The custom arose as a deterrent to the land property getting too fragmented. In its place he woman was provided a share also called dowry. Men can await their sister’s wrath very soon or pray that their mothers don’t bear girl children.

That is what happens when centuries old societal norms are overridden by law.