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DEGENERATION OF A PSU BANKER
(An excellent article
on the true state of a PSU banker sent by Mr. Rajesh Singh )
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Most PSU banks have seen
stupendous growth in business and profits in the last 5 years.
Top rung PSU bank like SBI has seen its business grow by over
three times and profits growing over five fold. The non
performing assets of all these PSU banks have also seen
consistent decline. When the global financial world was in
turmoil in 2007-08 and even many private sector banks were in
deep trouble the PSU banks did reasonably well and public
confidence in the banks have increased manifold. The increase in
business and profits of these PSU banks have increased workload
of the existing employees and all these employees have served
their organization without complaining about the volume
increase. These employees are posted in the remotest corner of
the country and work in most difficult circumstances without any
additional compensation.
The long pending demand of
the salary revision has recently been resolved with Indian
Bankers Association (IBA) with 17.5% hike. However, if we go
into the detailed intricacies the actual hike has been about 9%
for a Chief Manager and slightly over 9% for Assistant General
Managers in State Bank of India. This after the 3 ½ year of
negotiation and parleys with the management. This compares
poorly with the actual hike given to the Central Government
employees and the Public Sector Undertaking and the shortfall is
as high as 40% to 50% as compared to the employees of the
government in other undertakings.
To protest this settlement
majority of the officers in the Senior Management Grade IV & V
in Central Office of SBI have resigned from their membership of
their Association and this trend is trickling down to the 14
Circles of SBI with many of them joining the protestors against
the wage settlement. Joining a PSU bank was a pride for the
students who were graduating from Universities, Engineering and
Management Institutes in 80s and 90s, however slowly the job has
lost its charm with poor salaries and lack of Management vision
and poor leadership from the Association and Unions. Today, the
job carries a lot of risks, working in the branches till late at
night and on holidays with no extra pay and frequent transfers.
Employees are transferred twice or thrice during a year and no
boarding and lodging expenses are paid by the banks.
People who are
enterprising are leaving their job for greener pastures in
Private sector banks who reward their knowledge and skills and
also care for them. Not even a single bank management appear to
be serious in addressing to this issue as their hands are tied
in presence of the bureaucrats and it also appear that they are
not interested in putting up their case forcefully. Everybody
who has some knowledge about this industry is aware that people
are leaving this organization due to poor salaries, difficult
working conditions, lack of depth in the job and long working
hours with no additional compensation. A Chief General Manager
who has retired from SBI in 2000 is getting a pension of Rs.
5000/-, under such circumstances who will like to stay in an
organization which looks so sound and robust from outside but
takes so poor care of its employees. SBI has recently hired
Mckinsey to give a report on why people are leaving the
organization. However, the plight of these bankers are not going to improve until and unless something fundamental happens in their salary structure and work environment. The Finance Minister, should also take note of this alarming trend otherwise PSU banks will loose the dynamism and enterprise of its employees and it will be too late as people who are serving the nation and the social sector desire that people who rule the country also take care of them as the Prime Minister did for the employees of the Defence Services or the Supreme Court did in a recent ruling on employee of defence services who was getting hardly any pension. |