Friday, 29 December 2017

बचपन की मूँगफली

बचपन के दिनों में चिनियाबादाम खाने के सामूहिक उपक्रम की यादें पीछा नहीं छोड़तीं। गली से गुज़रते मूँगफली वाले की हरकारे जैसी आवाज़ मानों हमारे अंदर ऊर्जा का संचार कर देती थी। दौड़कर माँ के पास पहुँचते। तबतक मॉं भी मूँगफली वाले की आवाज़ सुन चुकी होती थी। फिर जैसे हमारे मन की आवाज़ सुनकर बोलती - चिनियाबादाम चाहिये? हम बच्चे कुछ ऊँ-ऊँ करते, तबतक मॉं बीस पैसे निकाल कर बोलती - जाओ छटाँक भर ले लो! छटाँक, यानि एक सेर का सोलहवॉं हिस्सा, लगभग साठ ग्राम।

अब दौड़कर बाहर निकले और पुकारा, चिनियाबादाम! यहॉं आइये। चिनियाबादाम वाला आता और अपनी कॉंख में दबा सींकों से बना स्टैंड, जिसे बाद में हमने इंजीनियरिंग कॉलेज में दोषहीन हाईपरबोला के उदाहरण के रूप में पढ़ा, ज़मीन पर रखता और उसपर अपने सिर वाली टोकरी जमाता। फिर अपनी लकड़ी के डंडे वाला स्वनिर्मित तराज़ू निकालकर दिखाता, मानों कह रहा हो - देख लो बबुआ लोग, डंडी बिल्कुल सीधी है। फिर पूछता - केतना चाहीं? हम उतावली से बोलते - एक छटाँक, मानों कोई महँगी ख़रीदारी कर रहे हों 

फिर शुरु होती थी विक्रय की प्रक्रिया। मूँगफली वाला एक पत्थर का टुकड़ा एक पलड़े पर रखता, और हमेशा की तरह हम पूछते - क्या है? वह भी हमेशा की तरह मुस्कुराकर बोलता - छटाँक का बाट है! फिर दूसरे पलड़े पर मूँगफलियाँ रखी जाती और तराज़ू के पलड़े ऊपर-नीचे झूलते। इसी दौरान हम दो चार चिनियाबादाम उसकी टोकरी से निकाल कर गपक लेते। मूँगफली वाला उदारतापूर्वक हमारी लूट को नज़रअंदाज़ कर देता था, क्योंकि इसका समायोजन उसके पत्थर के छटाँक वाली बाट में पहले से ही किया हुआ होता था। बीस पैसे देकर पुराने अख़बार के मुड़े-कुचैले टुकड़े में मूँगफलियों को सहेजकर पकड़ते, फिर नमक की एक और पुड़िया मुफ़्त लेकर घर आते। चिनियाबादाम वाले के मसालेदार नमक का फ़ॉर्मूला मिल जाए तो पेटेंट कराकर मालामाल हो जाऊँ।

घर में छटाँक भर मूँगफली के चार बराबर हिस्से होते, तीन भाइयों के और एक माँ का। फिर माँ बोलती - मेरा मन नहीं है, तुमलोग ले लो। बड़ी मुश्किल से वह एक दो फलियॉं लेने को राज़ी होती। फिर शुरु होता मूँगफलियाँ खाने का कार्यक्रम! अब सोचकर आश्चर्य होता है कि सिर्फ़ साठ ग्राम चिनियाबादाम, वह भी तीन-चार हिस्सों में बँटी, कैसे एक पूरी दुपहरी काटने का संबल बन जाती थी। शायद हम धीरे-धीरे खाते थे, या खाते कम और गप्प ज़्यादा करते थे। मूँगफलियों के छिलके भी उसी काग़ज़ के टुकड़े पर डाले जाते थे। अत: कार्यक्रम के मध्याह्न के बाद मूँगफली के छिलकों के बीच साबुत मूँगफली ढूँढ कर निकालना भी एक दक्षता का काम बन जाता था। अब छिलकों के लिये भी कोई अलग काग़ज़ रखता है क्या? जैसे-जैसे छिलकों की तादाद बढ़ती, साबुत मूँगफली खोजना एक ऐड्वेंचर स्पोर्ट का रूप लेता जाता था, ऐसा रोमांचकारी, जैसे आजकल "ग्रैंड थेफ्ट ऑटो" या "असेसिन्स क्रीड" भी नहीं। कुछ समय बाद जब बहुत टटोलने पर भी मूंगफलियॉं मिलनी बंद हो जातीं तब इतिश्री मान लेते थे।

कल एक ठेलेवाले से पावभर मूँगफली ख़रीदी, यह सोचकर कि छटाँक भर से क्या होगा। पचीस रुपये पाव। बचपन में पावभर ख़रीदते तो फिजूलखर्च कहलाते। पर शायद मॉं कुछ और ले लेती, मेरा मन नहीं है का बहाना बनाती। हम पति-पत्नी ने मन भर खाया, उकता गये खाते-खाते। बहुत सारी बची है। आप आएँगे तो परोसेंगे, पुरानी यादों के साथ।



Thursday, 14 December 2017

When Free Market is Not Good Enough

I am a supporter of free market and unrestricted competition. It delivers high quality products at low prices. However, there are areas, especially in the service sector, where, a strong regulator is required to ensure a fair deal to the customer. Anyone, who has had a child suffer in school, a dear one in a hospital or has been at the receiving end of an indifferent mobile phone service provider will agree with me. 

SCHOOL:

Once your child gets into that famous school, you cede all your rights to the school management. Whether the child is molested, bullied, taunted, becomes a drug addict or even murdered, the parent has no say whatsoever. Schools are managed by powerful trusts often run by politicians, big business or by ultra-sensitive missionaries. They are not answerable to anyone. The police often sides with them and your grievances are scorned even by other parents until it is their turn to suffer. You have to put up with incompetent teachers, humiliation of your child at their hands and pay up arbitrary fees and charges. Free competition in the market does not help since you just can't take your child to another school. Even if you could, there would be no guarantee that the other school would be any better.

HOSPITALS:

Arguments that hospitals are doing a noble business and that medicare is naturally expensive are hurled at you when you question their extortionist ways. Nobody, except the government, opens a hospital for charity. A hospital is a business just like a superstore or multiplex. Unfortunately, once a dear one of yours is admitted to a hospital and is tethered to life-support, you can't just shop around for a better or cheaper medicare service. Horror stories of extortion, insensitivity and incompetence apart, a hospital is a service provider that keeps you completely in the dark about the treatment of a patient. As to why eight hundred pairs of gloves were used on a non-surgery patient in just seven days, or how a bill of one lakh Rupees is added up for a four-hour intervention on a dengue patient are never explained. You pay up without question, or they wouldn't release the dead body.

The Medical Council of India is a closed society and a private club. There has seldom been any case of an incompetent or a callous doctor being delicensed in India. When the media or an aggrieved person questions the dubious ways of hospitals, arguments like "to err is human", "hospitals are not doing a charity" and surprisingly and simultaneously, "hospitals and doctors are doing a noble job" fly thick and fast.

If a person wants to withdraw his ailing relative and demands a discharge, all life support is immediately disconnected from the patient. The process of discharge starts after this, which may take half a day or more. Meanwhile, the patient goes into further distress. Such practices amount to blackmail and no free market can address this criminality. Only a tough regulator and quick legal action can discipline the recalcitrant in the long run.

The Delhi Govenment has ordered shutdown of a corporate hospital in a first of its kind action. Statements such as this step will lead to a shortage of hospital beds in the Capital and will raise health care costs are made with impunity. Sorry folks, we will bear with a temporary shortage. And, why should there be an increase in costs? Aren't hospitals doing a noble job and would, therefore, refrain from cashing in on this "opportunity"?

CARS (Or other expensive hardware):

Once you buy a car, you have no option, but to bear with the "authorised service centre" for years of poor service, unnecessary tinkering and even fleecing. Behind those swanky showrooms, hide the real face of free-market business, which treats you as a source of never-ending revenue.

REGULATION, CONSUMER PROTECTION AND LEGAL REDRESS:


A child or a patient is not a mobile phone number that can be "ported" to another service provider. On the contrary, even easy portability has failed to discipline indifferent mobile phone service providers in spite of a fiercely competitive market. Consumer courts have become regular legal arena, where complaints can remain unredressed for years through tiers of appellate courts. Intervention to help a sufferer may be needed in a matter of hours. Do we have a mechanism that can deliver that?

Thursday, 30 November 2017

Call me Mister, Yo Salesman!

I got a call today from a call centre. The caller asked, "Am I speaking with Shubhranshu?"

I said, "No, you are speaking with Mister Shubhranshu."

The caller was stumped for a few moments, stuttered and said, "Of course, Mr. Shubhranshu." Then he went ahead with his monotone selling some insurance policy, or holiday plan or credit card. I don't remember what it was since I had switched off due to his rudeness in addressing me.

These call centre guys and gals are called "executives". Well, they are surely not trained or evolved like executives. I would expect an executive to call me Mister if he calls me in English, or a Ji, if in Hindi, or a Garu or a Moshai, if in Telugu or Bangla respectively. No, Mr. Executive, I am not your friend, nor I am a resident of the US. You may even have a newly acquired American accent drilled into you through some idiotic training plan. I may be a rustic dehati, but show me reverence that a customer deserves. 

You may have the best hotel discounts, the most comprehensive insurance policy or the greatest credit card with complementary lounge accesss at all airports in the world, but do address me with respect if you want to sell your wares.


Else, I am not interested. Don't bother to call me again. I have put you on the Call-me-Mister registry.

Wednesday, 15 November 2017

मेरा राज्य बिहार

भारत के प्राचीन देश में मेरा राज्य बिहार

सबसे पहले यहीं बनी थी प्रजातंत्र सरकार

प्रजातंत्र सरकार विश्व की पथप्रदर्शिका

संस्कृति की मानवता की मार्गदर्शिका


यही बिहार का राज्य रहा जो विश्वगुरु कहलाता था

विक्रमशिला और नालंदाज्ञान से गहरा नाता था

जब किंतु वे नष्ट हुए उबर नहीं पाया अबतक

क्लांतिहीन हो गया राज्य जो ज्ञानपुंज का था रक्षक


नये देश ने उत्साहित हो बागडोर सँभाली थी

जैसे ही इस अँधियारे में राह निकलने वाली थी

तभी डँस गया नाग विषैला फिर घेरा अँधियारे ने

सूखा ठूँठ बस बचा जहाँ फूलों की सुंदर डाली थी


छात्र हुए हैं दिशाहीनशिक्षक कर्त्तव्य से स्खलित हुए

मात-पिता अति चिंतित हैंसंतान-व्यथा से गलित हुए

याद करो मागधवैशाली और जनक के वैभवकाल

गंगा से सिंचित ये धरती क्यों होती रहती बेहाल


लूट-खसोट और धमकी-बलवे दिनचर्या में आम हुए

अपहरणफिरौतीबेदख़ली और कितने क़त्लेआम हुए

भ्रमित-भयातुर जन पशुओं की भाँति दुबके बैठ रहे

जातिवादलालचहथियार प्रजातंत्र के दाम हुए


भ्रष्टाचारनिष्कर्मनिरर्थक शासनकुछ ना होता है

बेबसमूक नागरिक बस अपनी क़िस्मत को रोता है

भई किसान की भूमि सूखी जो वृष्टि ने आँखें फेरीं

हर ग़रीब और हर किसान क़र्ज़ों का बोझा ढोता है


बुद्धमहावीर की धरती तनिक शांति को रोती है

मॉं अपने बच्चे क़िस्मत पर जगती ना सोती है

रक्षक भक्षक बन बैठेअपनी रोटी हैं सेंक रहे

जनता वहीं चिता से लगकर ख़ाली पेटों सोती है

Monday, 6 November 2017

NO FRILLS, AT WHAT COST?

Are the"no-frills" airlines, who charge you for the snacks and meals on board, really saving any money or simplifying their on-board services? Unlike the standard meal casseroles of a "full-service" airline, they actually offer your meals a la carte, much like first or business class of full-service airlines, hardly a no-frills feature.

This is how it goes:

The air-hostess, pushing the trolley, looks up a printout, "Hmm, 21A, Mr. Gupta Sir?" 
Mr. Gupta has dozed off and wakes up with a start, "Yes?"
"Sir, you have prebooked a veg meal, right?"
"No, I had booked a non-veg meal. There must be a mistake."
"No, Sir! The chart here says veg wonly."
Mr. Gupta loses his cool, "No, I want non-veg wonly."
Air-hostess gives up, "Okay, Sir! Non-veg is fifty rupees extra, but I will get you that."
Mr. Gupta is now happy at the fifty bucks profit he just made, "So, what-what do you have in non-veg?"
"Sir, chicken sandwich and chicken roll."
"What? This is a morning flight. Who eats chicken in the morning? Don't you have omelette?"
The air-hostess is now getting restless. She has spent over five minutes on just one passenger and has not even begun to serve him. Says, "Let me check, Sir."
She rushes to the pantry and comes back, " Sir, we have masala omelette and home-style omelette."
Mr. Gupta is now spoilt for choice, a privilege, which only business class passengers enjoy. Exclaims, "Get me masala omelette, then! No, no, wait! Who wants masala in the morning? Get me home-style omelette."

He is served and the hostess looks up the chart once again, "21D, Mr. Subramanian, Sir?"
Mr. Subramanian is deep in his thoughts. She says again, a little louder this time, "MR. SUBRAMANIAN, SIR!"
Mr. Subramanian is jolted out of his meditation and shouts, "Wh.., What happened?"
Air-hostess is taken aback, "S.., Sir! You are a corporate traveller. So, you are entitled to a complimentary snack. What would you like Sir?"
Mr. Subramanian is smiling on getting a free snack, "Get me medu vadai and sambhar, please!"
"Sir, we have only poha and vegetable pasta." She regretfully says. 
Mr. Subramanian's smile turns into a scorn, "Is poha even a snack? And, who wants pasta just before a meeting? No, no, I want medu vada, or idly wonly."
The air-hostess almost jumps out of her boots, "Idly, Sir? Yes, we do have idly. But, no sambhar, Sir. I can give you pudina chatni instead."
Mr. Subramanian, being a gentleman, surrenders, "Wokay, get me idly and pudina chatni, then."

He is served and the meals cart moves on.
Mr. Subramanian harks, "Madam, Do you have filter coffee?"
The air-hostess ignores the call, more due to being called madam than filter coffee not being available on board.

Then someone, who has not prebooked a meal, calls out, "Could I have a chicken roll please?"
"Sir, that would be three hundred rupees. If you had prebooked, you could have got it for just two hundred and seventy-five rupees."
"Okay, I will pay." the chastised and financially devastated passenger says.
"Sir, you need to give me three hundred rupees change." The seller of wares says.
"What do you mean by three hundred rupees change? I could understand if it was two hundred and seventy five." But, he fishes out three hundred from his wallet and the air-hostess smiles in gratitude.

And, this goes on and on, from either end of the aisle, two trolleys being pushed by four air-hostesses. The path to the toilets is blocked nearly for the entire duration of the two-hour flight.


Have they really done some calculations of their real costs of serving a la carte meals, a la business class, on payment? Wouldn't it be much simpler and far cheaper to just serve a single type of free meal to all passengers and earn some goodwill in return as well?

Tuesday, 24 October 2017

अनुस्वार की महिमा

आपने उर्दू ज़बान में नुक़्ते के हेर-फेर से होने वाले अनर्थ के बारे में सुना होगा। हिंदी में अनुस्वार के प्रयोग में वैसी ही सावधानी वांछित है। हिंदी भाषा के विशारद आपको बताएँगे कि किसी को बहुवचन में पुकारने में अनुस्वार लगाना अशुद्ध है। जैसे बच्चों को पुकारना है तो आपको कहना चाहिये, "बच्चो!" न कि "बच्चों!" ग़ौर करें कि सही शब्द में अनुस्वार नहीं लगाया गया है। यह मात्र वर्त्तनी का दोष नहीं है, व्याकरण का है।

यदि आप अपनी बिल्डिंग के निवासियों को सोसाइटी की किसी सभा में बुलाएँगे तो कहेंगे, "भाइयो और बहनो! कल चार बजे की सभा में अवश्य आइयेगा!" न कि "भाइयों और बहनों!" यह अलग बात है कि आप कई महिलाओं को बहन कहना नहीं चाहते। फिर आपका संबोधन होगा, महिलाओ और सज्जनो!" क्या कह आपने? कुछ लोग तो सज्जन कहे जाने योग्य ही नहीं हैं? चलिये छोड़िये, आप कौनसी बात ले बैठे? फिर उन्हें "पुरुषो" से पुकार लीजिये। अब पुरुष से भी कोई समस्या है क्या?

आशा है आप भाषा की यह यह शुद्धता समझ गये होंगे। अब यदि कोई ज़ोर से आपको पुकारे, "मित्रों!" चाहे सड़क चलते पुकार ले, या टीवी-रेडियो पर, तब आप क्या करेंगे? चुपचाप इस भावुकता भरी पुकार को व्याकरण का प्रमाद समझकर अनसुना कर दीजिये और वहाँ से खिसक लीजिये। इसी में आपकी भलाई है। अपना बटुआ भी संभाल लीजियेगा। कोई अनहोनी हो जाये तो यह मत कहियेगा कि मैंने व्याकरण का पाठ ठीक से नहीं पढ़ाया।

Sunday, 13 August 2017

GREEN ACTIVISM or THE UNMAKING OF MAKE-IN-INDIA

During my interaction with a Chamber of Industries in Karur (Tamil Nadu) I came across the President of the Truck and Bus Body Builders' Association, people who build buses and lorries on bare chassis.

I asked the gentleman how his business was doing. He said that the business was down. Upon being asked the reason an alarming story of de-industrialisation and de-employment unfolded like layers of an onion.  It went on like this:

1. Bus body building was down since fewer buses were being brought into circulation.

2. The demand for buses had fallen since the number of intra-city travellers and commuters from nearby villages had come down.

3. The number of commuters had come down since the textile and garment industry in the Coimbatore-Tiruppur-Erode-Karur area was in decline.

4. The textile industry was in decline since they were being priced out in the market.

5. Their prices had gone up since they now had to send their fabric to Rajasthan for dying, which added to their costs. Trucking from Tamil Nadu to Rajasthan and back, attendant handling costs and managerial time was pushing them out of business.

6. They were forced to send the cloth all the way to Rajasthan since the TN State Pollution Control Board decided, one fine day, that the dying industry in the world famous textile belt of the State was a polluting industry. All the dying units were forced to shut down almost overnight sending thousands of labourers into unemployment and misery.

It appeared that most states in India were shutting down textile dying industry on account of pollution. They seemed to ignore that dying was an essential activity. Government's intervention was required to ensure that it was done in environment-friendly ways and not to shut down the industry.

I asked the people around what they would do when Rajasthan also shut down its dying industry, which was eventually inevitable given the shortsightedness of our government agencies, which increasingly work more like activists than enablers.

They said, "We will stop manufacturing, import Chinese or Bangladeshi fabric and trade in it." 

So, the writing on the wall in Tamil Nadu is clear - a few lakh artisans will lose their jobs and their families will be thrown into penury. It may happen in the short span of a few years. Since factories will close down, they will also have surplus electricity. So, they can also shut down some power plants making the air even cleaner and create some more joblessness. 

Soon, the artisans will either migrate to menial labour or, in any case, lose their traditional skills due to disuse. Our economic slavery to China will be complete. But, we will be able to breathe air as healthy as that in Switzerland and drink water as clean as that from Himalayan springs. 

Monday, 7 August 2017

CHAMBER vs CHAMBER

"See me in my office chamber!" Haven't we heard this statement often in government offices? Elsewhere a simple "see me in my office" would suffice, But a babu is more specific. It is his office chamber, no less.

Such qualification of the location is necessary. His office is either the entire building or a floor or a wing on a floor with all its broken furniture, unkempt surroundings, beetle-juice stains, gossiping employees and strewn paper and files. But the officer's office chamber is an oasis in a desert, with split air-conditioners, polished desk, swanky chairs, a PC, a multifunction printer that often performs no function, a laptop kept casually open to impress, a few English newspapers to keep the sahib busy and what have you. All behind a hermetically sealed door to keep the filth out.

What is a chamber anyway? Ask a municipal worker what he understands by a chamber and he will tell you that it is a manhole that is used for inspecting and cleaning the underground sewage gutter. Yes, it has all the features of a sahib' chamber - it has a door or a cover, it is insulated from its surroundings and has local climate control as well. As for the contents and the occupant, well .. ..


Friday, 7 July 2017

Why the Fax Machine Refuses to Die

The fax machine is now oh-so-old-fashioned! With electronic communication, such as email, workflow systems and collaborative platforms becoming commonplace, who would use the facsimile anymore? The answer is, government offices. The fax machine is basically a super high speed Speedpost, which sends a document in a few minutes against a day or two. Does it result in speedier working? Why do we need the printed paper out of the fax machine anyway, if we can print out an email and use it the same way? This has intrigued me for long.

In recent times I, as most of other Sarkari Babus, have been receiving letters through four separate channels, viz. the WhatsApp, email, Fax and Regular Post. The sender gets a letter typed out by his PA, takes a photo with his/her smartphone and sends it pat to the recipients in an instant. Sometimes the PA does the photography too. The sender expects a quick reply by “return WhatsApp”. But he is not sure if the receiver is responsible enough. So, he sends an email, then a fax and then again, the very same paper by surface mail. Then again, he calls up the recipient on phone and asks him if he has received WhatsApp, email and fax.

Why doesn’t a simple email work in the government office? The reason is that a government file understands only paper. So, whether it is a WhatsApp or an email attachment, it must be printed and “placed on file”. Fax is a friendly device since it gives a paper, ready to file. The letter or the document is placed on the “file side” or “letter side” then it is serially numbered. The clerk “puts up” the file to the sahib with his “noting” on the “noting side”. The clerk adds no value, except link some older correspondence placed earlier in the file. But “put up” he must. Without a file “duly” put up, the sahib is crippled. He can’t just pick up a letter and act on it. He must “pass his order” on the noting side and noting side alone. The noting side is where the government speaks.

In spite of multiple exhortations, we Babus have not taken to modern ways of working. The main reason is not our fear of technology. It is our inability to change the way a file is handled in a typical sarkari office. The file has a letter side and a noting side, both linked by manual referencing, “please see para A at F/119 and previous noting of 12-7-16 at ns/12” and so on. This is not amenable to computerisation and workflow. A workflow is efficient if it is linear, with as little branching-off enroute as possible. We must therefore design a workflow, which does not mirror the archaic file system. It must work efficiently from “desk to desk” or user to user. There will probably be no act of "putting up" by a clerk. Referencing to earlier documents should be automatic with hyperlinks and embedding. It requires that all new files be created online, the existing ones being closed as they outlive their purpose.

The fax machine must die. WhatsApp, as an official document handling medium, must die too. Sending documents by WhatsApp may appear a tech savvy act, but it is worse than a fax as there is very little you can do on that small screen. Sending letters by email is passé too, it still has to be printed and placed on the same archaic file.

A good workflow, therefore, requires that the documents be created online, not scanned or photographed. Natively created documents are easy to search and link. There will be no place for Office Superintendents and Section Officers. The Bada Sahib will have to learn how to type and read documents on a screen. There will be no opportunity for dictating a letter to the PA and asking the peon to fax it to the Head Quarters.

We must have a good computerised workflow system for collaborative working, nothing less.

Are we up to it? Not yet, I am afraid.